Deloitte hacked, says 'very few' clients affected

Reuters  |  LONDON/TORONTO 

By Paul Sandle and Jim Finkle

LONDON/(Reuters) - Global accounting firm [DLTE.UL] said on Monday it was the victim of a attack that affected the data of a small number of clients, providing few details on the breach.

said in a statement that attackers accessed data from the company's email platform, confirming some details in a report by the Guardian newspaper, which broke of the hack on Monday.

The attack appeared to target the firm's U.S. operations, was discovered in March and could have begun as early as October 2016, according to the Guardian. Deloitte's statement did not confirm those details.

The breach at Deloitte, which says its customers include 80 percent of the Fortune 500, is the latest in a series of breaches involving organizations that handle sensitive financial data that have rattled lawmakers, regulators and consumers.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Wall Street's top regulator, and Equifax Inc , one of the largest credit-monitoring bureaus, this month reported that confidential filings and sensitive personal data were compromised by hackers.

"These are targeted attacks on financial opportunity," said Shane Shook, an independent consultant who helps financial firms investigate attacks. "This trend is going to continue to grow."

The firm said it contacted government authorities immediately after it became aware of the incident, and notified each of the "very few clients" that had been affected.

is a "Big Four" firm that provides accounting, auditing and consulting services, including advice on mergers and acquisitions. It also runs a security business that helps customers defend their networks and investigate breaches.

The Guardian said had contacted six clients. The company did not name the clients, confirm the number of clients it had contacted or say what type of data was stolen.

"No disruption has occurred to client businesses, to Deloitte's ability to continue to serve clients, or to consumers," the statement said.

said it had implemented a "comprehensive security protocol," after the incident was discovered, using internal and external experts to help respond.

Mark Rasch, a former federal crimes prosecutor, said it is too soon to say how serious the attack was because so little is known about what happened.

Still, he said the attack was "a big deal" because holds sensitive information about its customers across business units that provide accounting services, review data on potential acquisitions and perform security services.

A U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation spokeswoman declined to comment, citing agency policy to neither confirm nor deny investigations.

(Reporting by Paul Sandle and Jim Finkle; editing by Jane Merriman and Meredith Mazzilli)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, September 26 2017. 00:40 IST