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KGI: 2025 Market Outlook

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Balancing Global Dynamics

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 4 December 2024 – Today, KGI has released its 2025 Market Outlook, covering regions including Mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, the U.S., Singapore, and Indonesia.

(From left) Cusson Leung, Chief Investment Officer at KGI; James Chu, Chairman at KGI Securities Investment Advisory; James Wey, Head of International Wealth Management at KGI; Kenny Wen, Head of Investment Strategy at KGI

Reflecting on this year, the cooling of inflation and the labor market in the United States has brought the economy to a roughly balanced risk between employment and inflation. With Trump re-entering the White House, his policy propositions are poised to impact global economic development and shape the trend of medium and long-term interest rates. In China, domestic investment confidence remains weak. With the potential risk of the United States significantly increasing tariffs, Chinese exports may be affected. In response, China will introduce relevant measures to address these challenges.

Under this backdrop, we recommend the “ACE” strategy for 2025:

  1. Alternatives: Gold and cryptocurrencies — assets with lower correlation to traditional stocks and bonds.
  2. Credit Selection: Prioritize high-rated bonds, focusing on opportunities in corporate bonds.
  3. Elite Stocks: Prefer U.S. and Japanese stocks, maintain a preference for large-cap over small-cap, and pay attention to sector rotation.

Kenny Wen, Head of Investment Strategy at KGI, says: “Regarding asset allocation, based on our assessment of the global economy and geopolitical factors for 2025, investors can consider the ACE strategy: A is for Alternatives, which refers to diversifying into alternative assets to reduce portfolio volatility, with gold being a viable option. C is for Credit Selection, meaning carefully selecting investment-grade bonds to enhance potential income. Lastly, E is for Elite Stocks, where we prefer large-cap stocks, particularly from the U.S. and Japan.”

Macro and the U.S. Market
Within developed markets, the U.S. economy may slow down more significantly than the current market consensus estimate. In other regions, the recovery in the Eurozone and the UK was weaker than expected, but the trend of year-on-year growth is still improving. It is expected that the overall performance will still lag behind the U.S., but the gap is narrowing. In China, the market is currently focused on whether the Central Economic Work Conference in December can propose effective fiscal “stimulus” policies; otherwise, achieving 5% economic growth in the future remains challenging.

In the U.S., the manufacturing recovery has been weak, mainly due to overall weak capital expenditure. On the other hand, for the service sector, has shown unexpectedly strong performance, which has been key to the U.S. economy outperforming other mature markets over the past six months. However, with declining savings rates and increasing financial burdens, credit consumption momentum will weaken, potentially dragging on the U.S. economy in 2025.

Trump’s four major policies—tax cuts, increased tariffs, immigration restrictions, and financial deregulation—have an uncertain execution order, which may adversely affect inflation. Starting with restrictions on immigration and the implementation of tariffs, these policies are visible. Therefore, throughout the year, the four policies mentioned above may be announced in the first half, increasing the volatility of financial markets. However, higher economic risk for the United States is still in the second half of the year, and whether there will be improvement in the fourth quarter depends on the policy changes at that time.

The U.S. has returned to a roughly balanced dual-risk target of employment and inflation, with core inflation expected to continue declining in 2025. However, Trump’s increased tariffs and anti-immigration policies could lead to a resurgence in goods and services inflation, posing a risk of rising inflation again in 2026. The U.S. has returned to a state of full employment, with the unemployment rate for non-temporary jobs slowly rising, which may negatively affect the consumer spending.

In terms of U.S. stock investment, after two consecutive years driven by the AI wave, the overall U.S. stock market is no longer cheap. However, we see opportunities for sector rotation in the future, mainly reflected in estimated earnings improvements, particularly in finance, materials, industrial, and healthcare sectors. From a timing perspective, we believe the positive post-election stance can be maintained in the first quarter, but starting in the second quarter, the risks of Trump’s policies and economic downturn expectations will be reflected; risks will further increase in the second half, with the first half overall better than the second half.

As for bond investment, under Republican full control, bond investment may be adversely affected. For example, worsening fiscal deficits will increase bond issuance costs, rising inflation will lead to higher yields on medium- and long-term bonds, and poor fiscal discipline and long-term inflation risks will push up neutral interest rates and bond term premiums. Therefore, medium- and long-term government bonds are less favored in 2025, while some short-term government bonds or high-credit-quality corporate bonds, with relatively higher yields, can provide good interest income. Overall, 2025, with increased inflation risk and potential monetary policy reversal, is not favorable for bond investment.

James Chu, Chairman at KGI Securities Investment Advisory, says: “The global economy’s overall growth in 2025 is expected to be similar to that of 2024. Although the U.S. economy is showing a downward trend, it remains relatively strong among developed markets. The biggest variable for economic performance in 2025 remains the implementation of policies following Trump’s return to office; the impact of these policies on the economy might be difficult to assess immediately, but they are certainly unfavorable for inflation. The Federal Reserve is expected to cut interest rates by 75-100 basis points, potentially reaching a low of 3.75-4.0% in 2025, with rate hikes possibly resuming in 2026. In terms of investment, after being driven by the AI wave for two consecutive years, U.S. stocks are no longer cheaply valued, but there are opportunities for sector rotation. It is expected that in 2025, the S&P 500 will still see mid to high single-digit profit growth, with annual returns estimated between 6-12%, which is a decline compared to the previous two years. In terms of timing, we believe the first quarter should maintain the current post-election bullish trend. Starting in the second quarter, the market is expected to reflect the risks associated with Trump’s policies and the anticipated economic downturn, which may lead to market volatility. Risks are expected to increase further in the second half of the year, with overall performance anticipated to be better in the first half than in the second half.”

Mainland China and Hong Kong Markets
Looking back at the first three quarters of the year, the Chinese economy grew 5.3% YoY in Q1, beating the expected 4.8%, but the momentum slowed down afterwards. In Q2 and Q3, the growth rates came in at 4.7% and 4.6% respectively. This brought GDP growth for the first three quarters to 4.8%, below the government’s target of around 5%. China’s economic growth has been trending down quarter by quarter, indicating strong downward pressure on its economy. Hence the Chinese government has introduced a package of counter-cyclical policies in recent months, which include not only monetary policies such as reducing reserve requirement ratios (RRRs) and interest rates cut, but also a relatively large-scale debt-swap program to ease the stress on local governments’ budgets, to release the resources for supporting the economy.

5% GDP growth for 2025 facing lingering challenges
In fact, although the debt relief program looks sizable, but fiscal “stimulus” is lacking. China needs fiscal policy along with stimulus measures that are large and direct enough to make a difference in the medium to long term. We are expecting that China will continue to advance its medium-term policy stimulus (more rate cuts and other individual measures are possible by year-end; any large-scale incremental fiscal program might have to wait until after next year’s Two Sessions). Moreover, the upcoming focus will be December’s Central Economic Work Conference (CEWC), at which the policy setting for next year will be determined. Investors are more concerned about the impact of Donald Trump’s retaking the White House on China-U.S. relations and the Mainland economy. Tariffs have moved to the center stage while foreign affairs, finance and technology, etc. have receded slightly. If Trump insists on raising tariffs on all Chinese imports to 60%, the impact on China’s trade and economy will be significant. In short, China’s economy next year will be driven by two opposing forces: U.S. policy and stimulus efforts of the Central Government.

Overall, as confidence is yet to be restored, might have to do with China’s not-yet-returned animal spirits. In addition, the continued sluggish employment performance has led to the limited growth in wages (especially for new employees). All this is making people reluctant to spend like they did in the past. Given such stubborn structural problems, we believe that achieving a 5% economic growth rate in China in 2025 will be challenging.

Target price for the HSI in 2025: 23,200 points
Looking ahead to 2025, While the China-U.S. relationship is poised to be the primary risk factor for the Hong Kong stock market in 2025, from an optimistic perspective, the declaration by President Trump regarding a potential 60% tariff on Chinese imports may serve as a part of bargaining strategy, leaving the final tariff rates and their scope uncertain. Additionally, considering that the Ministry of Finance has indicated that further economic stimulus measures are yet to be introduced, our outlook for the market remains cautiously positive. Considering the unusually exuberant market sentiment during the HSI’s recent decline from the peak, when daily trading turnover exceeded HK$600bn at once, we believe that the index has the potential to return to the 23,200 points in 2025. In terms of market valuation, the market forecasts EPS of HK$2,210 for 2025, reflecting a YoY growth of 5.1%. Thus, the forwarded P/E corresponding to the 23,200-point level would be 10.50x, slightly above the 10-year average of 10.26x. Should the index close at 19,700 points by year-end, this would indicate a potential upside of approximately 17.8%.

This scenario is based on the following key assumptions: (1) the scale of economic stimulus measures aligns with expectations and focuses on private consumption, (2) EPS growth for the HSI maintains above 5%, and (3) the China-U.S. conflict is confined to trade-related issues only.

Three investment themes for 2025

  1. Benefiting from new policies
  2. Low geopolitical sensitivity
  3. Actively expanding business overseas

Top Picks

Name Target Price
Benefiting from new policies
CMB (3968) 43.0
PAI (2318) 57.5
Low geopolitical sensitivity
CSCI (3311) 11.9
Tencent (700) 507.0
China Mobile (941) 80.9
Actively expanding business overseas
Trip.com (9961) 625.3
BYD (1211) 319.1

Prepared by KGI

Kenny Wen, Head of Investment Strategy at KGI, says: “In light of various external uncertainties, such as the recent escalation in the Russia-Ukraine situation and Trump’s threats to significantly increase tariffs, there are potential negative impacts on China’s economy. Coupled with insufficient domestic demand, achieving a 5% economic growth rate next year may be challenging. We should closely monitor the Central Economic Work Conference in December and the Two Sessions in March next year, by then to gain more insights on, how would central government’s assess economic performance and the timeline for introducing stimulus policies. Regarding the Hong Kong stock market, while the economic and corporate earnings growth prospects in mainland China remain conversative, the Hang Seng Index’s attractive valuation and the underweight positions of foreign institutional investors suggest that the market may continue to experience significant fluctuations. Once investor confidence returns and capital flows into the market, the Hang Seng Index could potentially break through the 23,200 level seen in October this year. We recommend focusing on three main themes: (1) benefiting from new policies, (2) low geopolitical sensitivity, and (3) actively expanding business overseas.”

Taiwan Market
We are optimistic that Taiwan’s stock market in 2025 will continue the bullish trend observed in 2023 and 2024. This optimism is primarily based on the steady global economic expansion and the AI arms race, which is expected to sustain strong momentum in technology stock earnings.

While we remain optimistic about the continuation of the bullish trend in Taiwan’s stock market in 2025, the annual gains may not surpass the impressive performances of the past two years. The current AI-driven surge has already resulted in a significant increase of over 90% for the TAIEX, with the forward price-to-earnings ratio reaching as high as 21 times. Compared to previous bull markets driven by technological paradigm shifts, the current gains and valuations are approaching historical peaks. Following a 28% increase in 2023, Taiwan’s stock market once reached a maximum gain of nearly 30% so far in 2024.

We expect Taiwan’s stock market in 2025 to generally follow a U-shaped trend, with a bullish bias in the first and fourth quarters and potential corrections in the second and third quarters.

James Chu, Chairman at KGI Securities Investment Advisory, says: “Under a scenario where the U.S. economy achieves a soft landing, interest rate cuts are expected to boost risk assets. This, combined with China’s economic stimulus measures and the steady trend of artificial intelligence, supports a bullish outlook for Taiwan’s stock market in 2025. The tech industry continues to thrive, primarily driven by AI, with Taiwan maintaining its leading position in the global semiconductor sector and a comprehensive AI supply chain, which is expected to drive significant earnings growth in 2025. However, following Taiwan’s stock market with a maximum gain of nearly 30% in 2023 and 2024, and with earnings growth projected to slow from 36% in 2024 to 18% in 2025, the potential for sustained index gains may be limited. Instead, the focus may shift to individual stock performance. Domestic investors have effectively countered foreign selling pressure in recent years, providing continued support against downside risks in 2025. Meanwhile, the Trump administration’s aggressive economic and trade policies could increase market volatility but also present strategic buying opportunities.”

Singapore Market
Looking ahead to 2025, significant changes are anticipated in the global macroeconomic landscape, with the U.S. expected to overhaul key policies related to international trade, foreign affairs, immigration, and more under Trump’s administration. Rising tensions among major economies are likely. However, Singapore, with its strategic position as a trade, logistics, and wealth hub, is well-positioned to navigate these shifts. Since the onset of the trade war in 2017, Singapore has leveraged its strengths and geographical advantages to achieve consistent growth. As we move into the coming year, Singapore is poised to face both new challenges and fresh opportunities. Chen Guangzhi, Head of Research at KGI Singapore, says: “We believe Singapore will capture growth opportunities amidst the backdrop of the new round of global trade tensions and ensuing rising geopolitical risks in 2025”

Indonesia Market
We are optimistic about 2025, targeting higher economic growth of 5.5%, which is above the 10-year average of 5.1%. This growth will be driven by increased consumption and investment, a rise in civil servant salaries, infrastructure development in the Nusantara Capital City (IKN), and downstream exports, contingent on robust global commodity prices. Yuganur Wijanarko, Senior Analyst at KGI Indonesia, says: “We maintain a positive outlook for 2025, and despite upcoming challenges, anticipate significant improvements in consumer confidence and domestic demand.”

DISCLAIMER
All the information contained in this document is not intended for use by persons or entities located in or residing in jurisdictions which restrict the distribution of this document by KGI Asia Limited (“KGI”), or any other affiliates of KGI. Such information shall not constitute investment advice, or an offer to sell, or an invitation, solicitation or recommendation to subscribe for or invest in any securities, insurance or other investment products or services nor a distribution of information for any such purpose in any jurisdiction. In particular, the information herein is not for distribution and does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of any offer to buy any securities in the United States of America, or to or for the benefit of United States persons (being residents of the United States of America or partnerships or corporations organised under the laws of the United States of America or any state, territory or possession thereof). All the information contained in this document is for general information and reference purpose only without taking into account of any particular investor’s objectives, financial situation or needs and may not be redistributed, reproduced or published (in whole or in part) by any means or for any purpose without the prior written consent of KGI. Such information is not intended to provide any legal, financial, tax or other professional advice and should not be relied upon in that regard.

All investments involve risks. The prices of securities fluctuate, sometimes dramatically. The price of a security may move up or down, and may become valueless. It is as likely that losses will be incurred rather than profit made as a result of buying and selling securities.

Bond investment is NOT equivalent to a time deposit. It is NOT protected under the Hong Kong Deposit Protection Scheme. Bondholders are exposed to a variety of risks, including but not limited to: (i) Credit risk – The issuer is responsible for payment of interest and repayment of principal of bonds. If the issuer defaults, the holder of bonds may not be able to receive interest and get back the principal. It should also be noted that credit ratings assigned by credit rating agencies do not guarantee the creditworthiness of the issuer; (ii) Liquidity risk – some bonds may not have active secondary markets and it would be difficult or impossible for investors to sell the bond before its maturity; (iii) Interest rate risk – When the interest rate rises, the price of a fixed rate bond will normally drop, and vice versa. If you want to sell your bond before it matures, you may get less than your purchase price. Do not invest in bond unless you fully understand and are willing to assume the risks associated with it. Please seek independent advice if you are unsure.

You are advised to exercise caution and undertake your own independent review, and you should seek independent professional advice before making any investment decision. You should carefully consider whether investment is suitable in light of your own risk tolerance, financial situation, investment experience, investment objectives, investment horizon and investment knowledge.

No representation or warranty is given, whether express or implied, on the accuracy, adequacy or completeness of information provided herein. In all cases, anyone proposing to rely on or use the information contained herein should independently verify and check the accuracy, completeness, reliability and suitability of the information. Simulations, past and projected performance may not necessarily be indicative of future results.

Information including the figures stated herein may not necessarily have been independently verified, and such information should not be relied upon in making investment decisions. None of KGI, its affiliates or their respective directors, officers, employees and representatives will be liable for any loss or damage of any kind (whether direct, indirect or consequential losses or other economic loss of any kind) suffered or incurred by any person or entity due to any omission, error, inaccuracy, incompleteness or otherwise, or any reliance on such information. Furthermore, none of KGI, its affiliates or their respective directors, officers, employees and representatives shall be liable for the content of information provided by or quoted from third parties.

Members of the KGI group and their affiliates may provide services to any companies and affiliates of such companies mentioned herein. Members of the KGI group, their affiliates and their directors, officers, employees and representatives may from time to time have a position in any securities mentioned herein.
Hashtag: #KGI #MarketOutlook

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

KGI

KGI is one of the region’s leading financial institutions since 1997. Our scope of business encompasses wealth management, brokerage, fixed income, and asset management. We are committed to offering a broad range of financial products and services to corporate, institutional, and individual clients throughout Asia. Backed by KGI Financial Group, we have a robust Asia footprint covering Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Indonesia, and Thailand.

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SEMICON Southeast Asia 2026 Officially Launches in Kuala Lumpur, Highlighting Shifts in Global Semiconductor Supply Chains

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The official ceremony underscores Southeast Asia’s growing role in the global semiconductor value chain through collaboration, innovation and ecosystem-wide partnerships

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA – Media OutReach Newswire – 5 May 2026 – SEMICON Southeast Asia (SEMICON SEA) 2026 was officially launched today at the Malaysia International Trade and Exhibition Centre (MITEC), bringing together policymakers, manufacturers, suppliers, researchers, investors and emerging talent from across the global semiconductor ecosystem for three days of industry dialogue, technology showcases and business engagement.

The opening ceremony was officiated by YB Datuk Seri Johari Abdul Ghani, Minister of Investment, Trade and Industry (MITI), and attended by SEMI leadership, the Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA) led by the Chief Executive Officer Datuk Sikh Shamsul Ibrahim Sikh Abdul Majid, and senior executives from global semiconductor companies.

Held under the theme ‘Transform Tomorrow’ in strategic partnership with MITI and MIDA, SEMICON Southeast Asia 2026 is expected to welcome more than 20,000 innovators, policymakers and technology experts. The three-day event focuses on key industry priorities including manufacturing scale-up, advanced packaging, intelligent manufacturing and workforce development, as companies respond to demand driven by artificial intelligence, high-performance computing and advanced electronics.

Datuk Sikh Shamsul Ibrahim Sikh Abdul Majid, Chief Executive Officer of MIDA, said Malaysia is approaching the next phase of semiconductor growth as an active builder rather than a beneficiary of global trends.

“The semiconductor industry is at an inflection point, and Malaysia intends to be at the centre of what comes next. Under the MADANI Economy Framework and the New Industrial Master Plan 2030, we are not simply maintaining our position in the global semiconductor supply chain, we are deliberately reshaping it. The NIMP 2030 sets a clear direction for the E&E sector to move beyond assembly and test into design, advanced packaging and innovation-driven manufacturing, and MIDA is here to make that transition real. The RM28.5 billion secured by the E&E sector in 2025 is proof that global confidence in Malaysia has not wavered. What we are now building is the ecosystem to match that confidence, through supply chain integration, local capability development and the kind of high-value partnerships that platforms like SEMICON Southeast Asia are uniquely placed to catalyse,” said Datuk Sikh Shamsul Ibrahim.

“SEMI’s role has always been to bring together the global semiconductor ecosystem, and that responsibility becomes even more important as the industry grows in scale and complexity. Today, innovation is no longer confined to a single segment. It requires closer alignment across design, manufacturing, materials and supply chains. SEMICON Southeast Asia provides a platform to bridge these different parts of the ecosystem, enabling stakeholders to engage in more meaningful collaboration and move from discussion to execution,” said Ajit Manocha, President and CEO of SEMI.

“As demand continues to be driven by artificial intelligence, high-performance computing and advanced electronics, the ability to coordinate across regions and capabilities will be critical. SEMICON Southeast Asia 2026 is not only about showcasing technology, but about strengthening the partnerships needed to support long-term industry growth and resilience.”

The event features key leadership programmes including the Executive Leadership Summit, MIDA Strategic Semiconductor Forum and Seminar, Sustainability and Energy Summit, TechZoomers Challenge and TalentCONNECT, reflecting SEMICON Southeast Asia’s role not only as an exhibition platform, but as a convening point for leadership, capability and execution across the region’s semiconductor ecosystem.

Marking over a decade of strategic collaboration, MIDA and SEMI today reinforce 12 years of a transformative partnership dedicated to elevating Malaysia’s standing in the global semiconductor value chain. This enduring alliance remains anchored on three core pillars designed to future-proof the nation’s industrial landscape:

  • Ecosystem Integration: Harmonising domestic and international supply chains to ensure seamless operational synergy.
  • Enterprise Capability: Empowering local businesses to scale their technical expertise and compete on a global stage.
  • Talent Advancement: Cultivating a high-skilled workforce as the essential bedrock of Malaysia’s long-term economic resilience and competitive edge.

SEMICON Southeast Asia 2026 runs from 5–7 May 2026 at MITEC, Kuala Lumpur, with participation from companies and organisations across Asia, the United States and Europe.

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

About MIDA

MIDA is the government’s principal investment promotion and development agency under the Ministry of Investment, Trade and Industry (MITI) to oversee and drive investments into the manufacturing and services sectors in Malaysia. Headquartered in Kuala Lumpur Sentral, MIDA has 12 regional and 20 overseas offices. MIDA partners with investors at every stage of their journey, supporting sustainable growth and long-term value creation for Malaysia. For more information, please visit and follow MIDA on X, Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, TikTok and YouTube.

About SEMI

SEMI® is the global industry association connecting over 4,000-member companies and 1.5 million professionals worldwide across the semiconductor and electronics design and manufacturing supply chain. We accelerate member collaboration on solutions to top industry challenges through Advocacy, Workforce Development, Sustainability, Supply Chain Management and other programs. Our SEMICON® expositions and events, technology communities, standards and market intelligence help advance our members’ business growth and innovations in design, devices, equipment, materials, services and software, enabling smarter, faster, more secure electronics. Visit , contact a regional office, and connect with SEMI on and to learn more.

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TrendAI™ and Anthropic Advance AI-Powered Vulnerability Detection and Risk Mitigation with Claude Opus 4.7

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Collaboration bridges gap between vulnerability discovery and real-world risk reduction

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 5 May 2026 – TrendAI™, the enterprise AI security leader from Trend Micro Incorporated (TYO: 4704; TSE: 4704), today announced a collaboration with Anthropic to support the expanded deployment of Claude Opus 4.7 for security research. Through this collaboration, organizations can reduce real-world risk faster: leveraging AI-accelerated threat intelligence to identify, prioritize, and mitigate exploitable vulnerabilities before they impact the business.

TrendAI™ is participating in Anthropic’s Cyber Verification Program, which provides credentials to engage in the defensive use of frontier AI models.

Rachel Jin, Chief Platform and Business Officer, Head of TrendAI™: “AI is dramatically accelerating vulnerability discovery, but remediation timelines haven’t kept pace. Our collaboration with Anthropic ensures that organizations get the best vulnerability threat intelligence and the ability to reduce risk across their environments before attacks take place.”

TrendAI™ launched AESIR (AI-Enhanced Security, Intelligence, and Research), an AI-powered internal security research platform that combines machine-speed automation with human expert oversight, in 2025. AESIR uses Claude Opus 4.7 to reason like an attacker, determining what’s reachable, what’s controllable, and what’s exploitable across complex software ecosystems. At scale, this means autonomously discovering and proving real vulnerabilities. TrendAI Vision One™ builds on these insights by prioritizing, mapping attack paths, and enabling swift mitigation—including virtual patching—across hybrid environments.

TrendAI™ is operating at the intersection of the two most critical dynamics in cybersecurity today: the AI models driving the new threat landscape, and the AI-powered defenses needed to match them. AESIR has already uncovered and, with ZDI, collaborated on patching for critical CVEs across industry-leading AI platforms including NVIDIA, Tencent, agentic frameworks, and MCP tooling.. The TrendAI State of AI Security Report projects between 2,800 and 3,600 AI CVEs in 2026 alone; AESIR was built precisely to operate at that scale.

To learn more about how TrendAI™ is advancing AI-powered security, visit: https://www.trendmicro.com/en_hk/research/26/a/aesir.html

The collaboration between TrendAI™ and Anthropic pushes the industry forward by combining AI-driven code intelligence and real-world risk prioritization. The ability to determine which vulnerabilities pose real-world risk, prioritize them, and mitigate them before they are exploited has become critical. With TrendAI Vision One™, organizations can operationalize findings by determining asset exposure, identifying attack paths, and applying controls like virtual patching and exploit detection. This reduces risk quickly, even when code fixes require more time. This is crucial for production environments, where vulnerabilities are often discovered after deployment.

Hashtag: #trendmicro, #trendvisionone, #visionone, #aisecurity, #anthropic, #ClaudeOpus


, the global AI security leader and enterprise business unit of , empowers organizations with full AI visibility and consolidated security that inspires confidence, drives innovation, and eliminates risk. Trusted by the largest enterprises and governments across 185 countries, TrendAI™ secures the entire organization, from identities, to infrastructure, to data. Global Fortune 500 companies rely on TrendAI™ to cut risk and stop threats up to three months earlier, powered by world-leading threat and attack intelligence. AI Fearlessly.

About Anthropic

Anthropic is an AI safety and research company dedicated to building reliable, interpretable, and steerable AI systems. Its Claude family of models, including Claude Opus 4.7, enables advanced capabilities across a wide range of applications, including code understanding and security analysis.

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BIK Behavioural Verification technology as the response to the growing wave of digital fraud in the African financial market

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WARSAW, POLAND – Newsaktuell – 5 May 2026 – Biuro Informacji Kredytowej (BIK), Credit Information Bureau, the leading organization in Poland for credit data exchange and anti-fraud systems, has formed a strategic alliance with Fair Score Africa. Fair Score Africa is an Award Winning pioneer in credit repair and re-integration, alternative credit scoring and in tackling financial exclusion, based in South Africa. This collaboration aims to implement the Polish-developed BIK Behavioural Verification Platform in seven key African markets, with the goal of reducing financial fraud. Amidst the rapid digitalization of financial services across Africa, an increase in fraudulent activities is threatening transaction security and emerging as a significant challenge to the stability of developing economies.

In today’s digital economy, trust has emerged as the most valuable asset, surpassing money as the key currency. The collaboration between BIK and Fair Score Africa unites a robust, well-established security infrastructure developed in Poland with the dynamic growth of African markets, where mobile payments and digital banking are rapidly becoming central to everyday financial transactions. This partnership is focused on the deployment of BIK’s proprietary Behavioural Verification Platform in seven leading African countries: South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria, Botswana, Ghana, Namibia and Zambia.

The collaborative initiative directly addresses the rapidly expanding issue of financial fraud in Africa’s fast-growing markets, which are home to a population exceeding 427 million. According to the Interpol report Africa Cyberthreat Assessment, published in June 2025, cybercrime now constitutes more than 30% of reported fraud cases in both West and East Africa. Between 2019 and 2025, the continent has suffered financial losses exceeding USD 3 billion as a result of identified cyber incidents.

Security measures relying solely on passwords, one-time SMS codes, and other traditional identity verification methods are no longer sufficient and fail to provide effective protection against increasingly sophisticated threats.

The BIK Behavioural Verification Platform (BVP) is an innovative response to the escalating challenge of digital fraud within the financial sector. Designed to proactively safeguard both individuals and institutions, the BVP leverages advanced behavioural analytics to identify each user’s unique patterns of interaction. By monitoring how customers engage with their devices during online and mobile banking sessions, the platform operates in real time to detect anomalies that may indicate fraudulent activity. This enables the prevention of unauthorized transactions and the submission of credit applications without customer consent, ensuring enhanced protection for all parties involved.

Using state-of-the-art Machine Learning algorithms, the platform continually updates each user’s behavioural profile, adapting dynamically to emerging threats. All data is processed in a context-free manner, strictly adhering to international privacy standards. The BIK Behavioural Verification Platform delivers robust security for end users and supports financial institutions in significantly reducing fraud-related losses across the entire ecosystem.

The BIK solution streamlines institutional anti-fraud operations while maintaining a seamless customer experience. Developed and proven in the Polish financial market, the BIK Behavioural Verification Platform is now emerging as a new standard for digital protection, combining effectiveness, user convenience, and resilience against modern cyber threats. Its adaptable nature enables deployment across international markets, setting a benchmark for security and operational excellence globally.

“Our collaboration with BIK directly responds to a pressing need across the African market, where we are witnessing a swift rise in financial crime, especially through mobile platforms. BIK’s behavioural verification technology offers a crucial enhancement to our security landscape-improving fraud detection without compromising the user experience. We believe this forms the basis for secure and sustainable growth across the region” – says Dr. Danny Zandamela, CEO of Fair Score Africa, and adds:

“We position the partnership with BIK as a long ‑ term commitment, the outcome of which is the ability to provide local financial institutions with a critical technology that protects against the evolving threat landscape across the African continent. In future, it may serve as an authentication layer for national citizen ‑ identification systems through integration with, for example, the Ghana Card or Nigeria’s NIN, which are the respective equivalents of the Polish national identity card” -adds Dr. Zandamela.

“At BIK, we are proud to be building one of the world’s most advanced anti-fraud ecosystems, renowned for its exceptional scope and technological sophistication. By expanding this digital shield to our partners’ markets in Africa, we are not simply sharing technology – we are exporting trust and confidence in the financial sector. By analyzing each customer’s distinctive behavioural patterns, our technology can safeguard their finances even in situations where login credentials have been compromised by cybercriminals. We are demonstrating that cutting-edge technology developed in Poland is fully scalable and ready to protect financial sector clients across continents” – says Mariusz Cholewa, PhD, CEO of BIK, President of ACCIS.

BIK – the only Credit Information Bureau in Poland, member of ACCIS, associating the largest group of credit registers in the world. BIK supports the security of financial institutions and their clients by providing a safe system for exchanging credit and economic information and innovative anti-fraud solutions. The sectoral solutions in BIK portfolio are: BIK Anti-Fraud Platform, Cyber Fraud Detection Platform, Behavioural Verification Platform, ESG BIK Platform. BIK collects and provides data on the credit history of individual customers and entrepreneurs from the entire credit market, as well as data from the area of non-bank loans. BIK possesses the highest competencies in market analysis and modern technologies. It combines the features of a modern technology company with the attributes of a public trust institution.

Fair Score Africa – the company is an innovative FinTech in credit repair, credit re-integration, alternative credit scoring and financial inclusion, developing mobile‑ and behavioural‑data‑driven risk assessment tools that enable the secure scaling of financial services across African markets. Fair Score’s Score Improvement Program is able to improve the credit risk profile of individual consumers through targeted interventions that improve the behaviour of consumers in the credit economy, making them more responsible participants of that arena. In this way, lenders are also able to engage these consumers through a redefined credit risk outlook in their assessments. The Score Improvement Program has recently been awarded as being the Best Credit Assessment Initiative – Africa for 2026 by The Digital Banker in Singapore.

Hashtag: #BIK

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

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