Cybercrime
,
Fraud Management & Cybercrime
,
Fraud Risk Management
Synthetic Entities, AI-Driven Scams, Stablecoin Misuse Pose Key Threats in 2026
Artificial intelligence-powered scams reached new heights in 2025. In the coming year, those threats will evolve further, with synthetic entities, stablecoin abuse and deepfakes driving fraud campaigns. Banks and lenders need better data, reporting and regulations to stay ahead of fraudsters, experts told Information Security Media Group.
See Also: Top 10 Technical Predictions for 2025
Over the past 12 months, generative AI has helped fraudsters scale attacks in ways previously unseen. Voice cloning and visual deepfakes allowed scammers to reach victims worldwide, while lax cryptocurrency oversight created openings for massive cross-border fraud. Synthetic entities emerged as the next phase of identity crime, blurring the lines between real and fake operations.
“The level of AI and deepfakes that were used in those operations … is helping these pig butchering operations scale up and scam people – half the population of the world – at least once a week,” said Frank McKenna, chief fraud strategist at PointPredictive.
Peter Tapling, vice chair of the Faster Payments Council, warned that fraudsters are leaning into cryptocurrency scams. “Bad guys have figured out they no longer need to walk into a bank branch with a gun … all they have to do is ask a billion people, ‘Hey, could you send me money?’ And some non-zero percentage of them will.”
Steve Lenderman, head of fraud prevention at isolved, said synthetic identities are a growing blind spot: “The owner is now going to be a synthetic identity with a synthetic entity … It’s all fake, like, none of it is real, and it just becomes this giant magnitude of chaos.”
In this discussion with Information Security Media Group, panelists also discussed:
- The growth of synthetic entity fraud in commercial spaces;
- Stablecoin and crypto misuse for laundering and cross-border fraud;
- AI’s role in enabling deepfakes and industrial-scale scams.
McKenna has advised more than 200 banks, lenders and finance companies worldwide to help them achieve reductions in fraud. He provides fraud management tips through his daily blog, FrankonFraud.com.
Tapling leads PTap Advisory LLC, a services firm that helps organizations understand how to use technology to help support their business strategy. He was the founding CEO of Authentify, which introduced out-of-band authentication to financial services.
Lenderman has worked in the financial crimes sector for more than 25 years. He assists clients with fraud prevention using AI to fight fraud and financial crimes and for regulatory compliance. Lenderman has been involved in investigating and identifying synthetic identities and entities and is considered an industry expert. He is a CyberEdBoard member.

