HKMA Deploys AI in 2026 Anti-Fraud Push Targeting Digital Payments
Lawrence Jengar Feb 12, 2026 10:12
Hong Kong's central bank launches AI-powered anti-fraud campaign with electronic lai-see warnings as CNY phishing scams surge via messaging apps.
Hong Kong's central bank is weaponizing artificial intelligence against financial scammers, launching a Chinese New Year campaign that directly addresses the growing threat of digital payment fraud through messaging platforms.
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority unveiled its "Unite to Fight Scams" initiative on February 12, featuring an AI-generated music video where Deputy Chief Executive Arthur Yuen battles a cartoon fraudster called "Lachachu." Beyond the creative marketing, there's a practical warning: scammers are now distributing fake Chinese New Year stickers and electronic red packets containing phishing links designed to steal personal data and funds.
The timing matters. Electronic lai-see transfers via the Faster Payment System and e-wallets have become standard practice during Lunar New Year celebrations. Fraudsters know this, embedding malicious QR codes and hyperlinks in what appear to be festive greeting cards shared through WhatsApp and WeChat.
Part of a Broader Crackdown
This campaign builds on aggressive anti-fraud measures Hong Kong regulators implemented throughout 2025. In April, the HKMA partnered with Hong Kong Police and the banking association to expand Scameter data usage—a database flagging suspicious accounts—while conducting thematic reviews of banks' anti-fraud systems.
The "Money Safe" service, which rolled out across all Hong Kong retail banks by December 31, 2025, now requires face-to-face verification before customers can access protected funds. It's an old-school solution to a digital-age problem, but regulators clearly decided friction beats fraud.
In January 2026, the HKMA also deepened collaboration with the Privacy Commissioner's office specifically to combat personal data misuse in financial scams—a recognition that stolen credentials often enable the actual theft.
What Users Should Know
The HKMA stressed it will never contact individuals about personal financial matters or request sensitive information via SMS or hyperlinks. The authority also released official "Horse Butler" animated stickers through verified channels only—WhatsApp users can find them through WhatSticker, while WeChat users should download exclusively from the HKMA's official account.
For crypto and fintech users accustomed to scanning QR codes for payments, the warning applies doubly. The same social engineering tactics targeting traditional banking customers work just as effectively against digital asset holders. If someone sends you an unexpected red packet link this Lunar New Year, treat it like an unsolicited DM offering guaranteed returns—delete it.
Image source: Shutterstock