With travel restricted, T&E payment fraud comes under more scrutiny

While the global coronavirus outbreak may be grounding corporate travel to a near standstill, leading travel companies and fintechs are continuing to hone AI-based payments platforms to reduce the problem of corporate travel fraud.

While the global coronavirus outbreak may be grounding corporate travel to a near standstill, leading travel companies and fintechs are continuing to hone AI-based payments platforms to reduce the problem of corporate travel fraud.

And with many companies suffering a loss of business due to the spread of COVID-19, they are even more mindful of how their budgets are being spent. For a long time, the corporate world has turned a blind eye to the odd employee fiddling their expenses. But when corporate travel picks up again, companies will likely be scrutinizing every receipt they receive.

Data collected by academics has shown that expense fraud is a bigger problem than many realize. When the University of Portsmouth’s Centre for Counter Fraud Studies surveyed corporate travel fraud two years ago, it found that one in ten U.K. employees admitted to having submitted erroneous expenses claims, with such activity costing U.K. businesses in the region of £2 billion every year.

However, many organizations believe that technology could make a significant difference. Last month, travel company TripActions launched its own corporate travel management and payments solution called TripActions Liquid. Companies that sign up to this platform are able to sync their corporate cards with online and mobile platforms which provide visibility into all transactions made on a business trip in real-time.

Bloomberg News

“It’s the first real-time reporting of all travel spend,” said Michael Sindicich, general manager of TripActions Liquid. “It also completely automates the reconciliation process. At the end of every month, finance teams typically spend hours or days matching up credit card statements with the purchases from different trips people have been on. Controlling that spend is nearly impossible for the company because they only get visibility into the transactions, a couple of weeks after they’ve happened.”

Streamlining corporate travel payments in this manner is developing into a niche but increasingly popular sector of the payments marketplace. Travelport also has a business travel payments platform available in partnership with U.K. fintech Conferma.

Advertisement

Conferma predicts that the use of such platforms can minimize fraudulent behaviour because they are more convenient for employees as well as companies, thus encouraging travelers to act more honestly. Paul Raymond, director of strategic relationships at Conferma, pointed out that many companies currently expect employees to pay for business expenses out of their own pocket before reimbursing them later, a process which often takes weeks.

CORONAVIRUS IMPACT: ADDITIONAL COVERAGE
Gary Siegel
March 2, 2020 12:14 PM

Policymakers may not wait until their mid-month meeting and could act with other central banks.

4 Min Read
M&A wrap: Houlihan Lokey, Lincoln, Jefferies, William Blair, Piper Sandler, BV, Jack Welch, GE, Gilead, KKR, Palladium, Odyssey, Coronavirus
March 2, 2020 11:47 AM

Stock market volatility continues, as investors gauge the impact of the coronavirus on the global economy. We turn to dealmakers from Riverside, Merrill Corp. and Paul Hastings for insights on how the virus will affect the middle market. Houlihan Lokey, headquartered in Los Angeles, tops the list of most active investment banks in PE-backed deals. Audax, in Boston, ranks as No. 1 in PE firms doing U.S. deals.

8 Min Read
With investors piling into Treasurys — the global safe haven asset of choice — benchmark 10-year yields hit a record low of 1.14%.
By Katherine Greifeld
March 2, 2020 11:19 AM

The bloodbath in risk assets has intensified on deepening concerns about the economic fallout from the spread of the coronavirus.

2 Min Read

“Relying on the ‘Bank of Employees’ impacts the perception an employee has of the business,” said Raymond.

As well as enabling companies to view an employee’s business trip transactions in real-time, such platforms are also incorporating artificial intelligence to enable company managers to set controls for how the card is used. For example, if a company opts to prevent the card being used at a liquor store, the inbuilt AI algorithms in the TripActions Liquid platform will automatically block that spending.

“It knows when an employee is on a work trip and can be configured to decline any transactions that are out-of-policy or outside of the dates and location of travel,” said Sindicich.

While now is a difficult time for any companies in the travel sector, such platforms do still appear to be of interest to the corporate world as they attempt to keep expenses to a minimum, with the prospect of a coronavirus-induced global recession around the corner.

Having launched a successful beta trial of its product over the past few months to 25 companies, TripActions is now reporting increasing demand within the corporate world.

“Everyone who touches accounting knows that travel payment reconciliation is an issue, but it was always one of those ‘necessary evils’ you had to deal with,” said Vik Shah, corporate controller at Zoom, one of the companies on the beta trial. “It’s been a major time saver, we’ve been able to reduce travel payment reconciliation time from weeks to minutes each month."