Fidelity reports data breach exposing 77,000 customers' personal data

Fidelity reports data breach exposing 77,000 customers' personal data
The investment giant said Social Security numbers, driver's licenses, and other sensitive information was compromised by a third party using newly established accounts.
OCT 10, 2024

Fidelity Investments has confirmed a significant data breach affecting tens of thousands of its customers, exposing sensitive personal information, including Social Security numbers and driver’s licenses.

The breach, which occurred in August, was disclosed in regulatory filings with the attorney generals of Maine, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts.

According to its filing submitted to Maine’s attorney general on Wednesday, Fidelity stated that the breach took place between August 17 and August 19, when an unnamed third party gained access to the data through two customer accounts.

It remains unclear how an external actor could have gained access to its broad database of customer information by setting up user accounts.

“We detected this activity on August 19 and immediately took steps to terminate the access,” Fidelity said in a letter giving notice to its impacted customers. The firm emphasized that no Fidelity customer accounts were accessed as part of the incident.

The Boston-based investment giant completed its investigation and confirmed that personal information was compromised, impacting 77,099 individuals.

A separate data breach notice filed with New Hampshire’s attorney general revealed that the attackers “accessed and retrieved certain documents” related to customers through fraudulent requests to an internal database. This database contained images of various documents tied to Fidelity customers and other individuals.

Meanwhile, a data breach report maintained by the government of Massachussets shows Fidelity reporting an incident that impacted 2,768 residents of the state, which compromised Social Security Numbers, financial accounts and drivers licenses.

As of Thursday afternoon, the company's website had not made any public declarations about the incident. The firm has not provided specific information on whether any of the stolen data has been misused.

Separately, Fidelity recently announced it would restrict third parties' access to retirement accounts via credential sharing, particularly fintech firms that use it to access, manage, and trade within their clients' employer-sponsored retirement accounts.

Fidelity, one of the largest asset managers globally, serves over 51 million individual investors and manages approximately $14.1 trillion in customer assets as of June 2024. It remains unclear whether the company plans to release additional details or updates on this breach.

 

Latest News

$10B Merit sharpens growth focus with new M&A lead
$10B Merit sharpens growth focus with new M&A lead

With deep experience and wide connections, the top-ranked RIA 's latest hire from Captrust extends its streak of strategic executive recruitments.

Nationwide president and COO John Carter to step down
Nationwide president and COO John Carter to step down

The leading annuity and insurance top executive is stepping down after a distinguished 40-year career in the industry.

Bond heavyweights lead the way in active fixed income comeback
Bond heavyweights lead the way in active fixed income comeback

After a two-year drought, US bond funds saw the most new investment last year, with inflows led by big names like Pimco and Dodge & Cox

Carson Wealth kicks off 2025 deal calendar with $1B Chicago office acquisition
Carson Wealth kicks off 2025 deal calendar with $1B Chicago office acquisition

The latest buyout transaction taps into an industry-wide need for succession-planning options, says Carson Group CEO.

Retirement conundrum: crippling health care costs or start dumping assets?
Retirement conundrum: crippling health care costs or start dumping assets?

Investors fearing unaffordable healthcare may spend-down assets, study reveals.

SPONSORED Three key trends that will drive advisors’ planning in 2025

AssetMark Group CEO explains why the great wealth transfer, succession planning, and personalization will be key for advisors in the new year.

SPONSORED Why RIAs might consider investing more in trust services

A trust delivery model not only increases the value of an advisor and a firm but is also a natural addition to any firm’s succession plan.