AI Is Exploiting the Mortgage Industry’s Weak Cyber Defenses — And the Threat Is Growing Faster Than Protection

Cybersecurity digital tunnel background

The U.S. mortgage industry is under siege. As artificial intelligence evolves at breakneck speed, cybercriminals are using it to launch increasingly sophisticated attacks against lenders, servicers, and financial institutions that hold mountains of consumer data. And experts warn the industry’s defenses are nowhere near strong enough to keep up.

The past two years have seen a wave of high‑profile breaches: servicing giant Mr. Cooper, consumer‑direct lender loanDepot, title insurance heavyweight Fidelity National Financial, wholesale lenders Fairway Independent Mortgage Corp. and Nations Direct Mortgage, and title titan First American Financial. Even major vendors serving top banks such as JPMorgan Chase, Citi, and Morgan Stanley have been struck.

But those are only the attacks we hear about—many others go unreported.

AI Has Shifted the Threat Landscape Overnight

According to cybersecurity expert Michael Nouguier of Richey May, AI has “absolutely” changed the nature of attacks in the mortgage sector. The two primary entry points, he explains, are email and poor systems management.

And with AI, email scams have become dangerously convincing.

“We used to train people to look for misspellings, broken English and grammatical errors,” Nouguier says. “Now everybody just writes their emails in ChatGPT, so it’s perfectly orchestrated.”

The result? Even seasoned professionals are being duped. Nouguier recounts a client whose compromised email led to a $19,000 payment to a cybercriminal instead of a vendor—an error that could have easily hit six figures.

The bigger problem: while attacks using AI are soaring, the mortgage industry’s adoption of AI‑based protection tools is crawling behind.

Regulation Lags Behind AI—And Politics Are Complicating It

As mortgage companies experiment with AI to streamline workflows, improve decision‑making, and cut costs, lawmakers are scrambling to determine how the technology should be governed. State legislatures want strong guardrails. The federal government—especially under President Trump—has pushed back, arguing that overregulation could stifle innovation.

Recently, Trump even proposed blocking states from enforcing their own AI laws, instead favoring a unified federal approach.

But states aren’t backing down. Colorado, Tennessee, and Florida have already rolled out AI‑related laws aimed at protecting consumers from privacy violations, discrimination, and unauthorized likeness replication. More are on the way.

Industry leaders say the current patchwork of state-by-state rules makes compliance harder and more expensive. A centralized federal standard, they argue, could streamline innovation and protect consumers more consistently.

Mortgage Servicers Struggle With Scale of AI Risks

Mortgage servicers handle billions in loan data—data that must be precise. One error can multiply across tens of thousands of borrowers.

“When we get something wrong, we don’t get it wrong once,” says Toby Wells of Cornerstone Servicing. “We get it wrong tens of thousands of times.”

Because of that, many servicers are intentionally cautious about deploying AI broadly. Instead, they focus on smaller integrations with low risk while the regulatory dust settles.

The Mortgage Industry Is Critical Infrastructure—And AI Threats Are Outpacing Governance

Cybersecurity executives like Kyle Draisey of Sagent say the mortgage industry should be considered part of America’s critical infrastructure. After all, companies like Sagent and Black Knight support trillions of dollars in servicing portfolios—systems as important as the electrical grid or air traffic control.

A recent Dun & Bradstreet survey found that nearly 80% of financial and insurance professionals see AI‑driven cyber risk as their top threat. Yet more than a third admit their companies are not prepared to handle it.

Draisey believes that collaboration is the missing piece. Other critical sectors use Information Sharing and Analysis Centers (ISACs) to coordinate threat intelligence. The financial industry already has one—with a mortgage subcommittee—but no equivalent exists specifically for AI.

He argues it’s time to create one.

“Cybersecurity is a team sport,” Draisey says. “Let’s pull back the curtain. We should share how we’re implementing responsible and secure AI so everyone benefits.”

What Professionals Need to Know—and How to Stay Ahead

The message is clear: AI is not just another tool. It’s a new attack surface, and mortgage companies—large and small—must rapidly upgrade their cyber readiness. That means investing in training, strengthening systems, revisiting vendor relationships, and staying compliant with evolving regulation.

For professionals across real estate, lending, insurance, and financial services, this evolving landscape underscores a crucial point: education is no longer optional. Understanding cybersecurity, AI governance, and digital risk is becoming a core competency in every licensed profession.

At Cameron Academy, we’ve seen firsthand how professionals who stay ahead of technology trends are the ones who grow fastest in their careers. Whether you’re in mortgage, real estate, insurance, or another licensed field, continuous learning is your best defense—and your biggest advantage.

To read the original reporting and dive deeper into the story, visit Scotsman Guide:
AI Exploits Mortgage Industry’s Underfunded Cyber Defenses

More Articles

Getting licensed or staying ahead in your career can be a journey—but it doesn’t have to be overwhelming. Grab your favorite coffee or tea, take a moment to relax, and browse through our articles. Whether you’re just starting out or renewing your expertise, we’ve got tips, insights, and advice to keep you moving forward. Here’s to your success—one sip and one step at a time!

The AI Tipping Point: How Artificial Intelligence Is Rewriting the Real Estate Playbook

Artificial intelligence has shifted from a novelty to a defining force in real estate, transforming everything from listing creation to virtual staging while raising new legal and ethical risks. As AI adoption accelerates, experts warn that the agents who embrace automation and new tools now will gain a major competitive edge, while those who delay could fall behind in a rapidly evolving industry.

Want Job Security in the Age of AI? Get a State License

As AI and automation reshape the workforce, one form of career protection remains as powerful as ever: earning a state license. From real estate to trades to finance, licensed professionals stay in high demand because their work requires proven competence, accountability and human judgment—qualities technology can enhance but never replace. With trade enrollment surging, investor interest growing and licensing on the rise across the country, credentials have become a reliable path to stability, mobility and long-term earning potential.

AI Tools Are Transforming Agent‑Buyer Connections Ahead of 2026

A new wave of AI platforms is redefining how real estate agents identify buyer intent, spark conversations, and nurture relationships. From conversational home search engines to predictive opportunity alerts and relationship‑intelligence systems, these tools are helping agents connect sooner and smarter—reshaping daily workflows as the 2026 market approaches.

Texas Investors Fuel San Francisco’s Real Estate Revival

Texas money is riding hard into San Francisco, snapping up distressed downtown buildings at prices not seen in decades. From Union Square to California Street, major players like Lone Star Funds are betting big on the city’s rebound, signaling that the market may have finally hit bottom and that a new wave of opportunity is taking shape for savvy real estate professionals nationwide.

Holiday Spending Hits $1 Trillion—But CRE Experts Warn It May Be an Illusion

The 2025 holiday season is expected to break the $1 trillion sales mark, but economists say the milestone masks deeper consumer caution, income‑driven spending gaps, and weakening unit sales. Urban Land Magazine’s latest analysis shows how these mixed signals are shaping a selective, uneven landscape for U.S. commercial real estate heading into 2026—where strong locations thrive, weaker assets struggle, and affluent shoppers continue to dictate market performance.

Housing Market Predictions for 2026: Are Home Prices Finally Ready to Cool Off?

As 2025 ends, the housing market is inching toward balance with slower price growth, rising inventory, and steadier mortgage rates. Experts predict modest 1% to 2% home‑price growth in 2026—not a crash, but a calmer, more predictable market shaped by regional differences. With the Fed easing rates and inventory climbing in key cities, 2026 may become the most buyer‑friendly year in recent memory, especially for those prepared to act when the right home appears.