Connect with us

World

Germany’s finance watchdog to make targeted inspections amid ‘substantial’ AI risks

Avatar

Published

on

By Reuters | Updated: May 12, 2026

FRANKFURT, May 12 (Reuters) – Germany’s banking regulator BaFin warned on Tuesday that cyber risks were “growing” and “substantial” due to ​advances in artificial intelligence, and announced a new ‌division will conduct targeted inspections at financial firms.

The emergence of Anthropic’s Mythos has set up a scramble from the global banking ​industry to gain access and test the technology ​as regulators rush to examine the cybersecurity ⁠risks the new artificial intelligence model raises and ​how prepared financial firms are to tackle them.

“These new ​AI models can identify many vulnerabilities in both new and existing IT systems with remarkable speed,” said BaFin President Mark ​Branson.

“They will be able to exploit the vulnerabilities ​they find ever more rapidly.”

Branson said that the financial industry could ‌afford ⁠to strengthen cybersecurity, calling it “an urgent and essential investment”.

Mythos is viewed by cybersecurity experts as posing significant challenges to the banking industry and its legacy technology ​systems, prompting a ​series of ⁠warnings from regulators and policymakers. A string of U.S. banks have so far ​been given access to Mythos.

Branson said that ​a ⁠new division will make targeted inspections of financial firms.

“Such ‘IT spotlight’ inspections take far less time than fully-fledged ⁠reviews. We ​can therefore complete more of ​them and thus respond more effectively to current developments and incidents,” ​he said.

Reporting by Tom Sims; Editing by Linda Pasquini

© Thomson Reuters 2026