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Report Reveals How Strengthening Digital Resilience Supports Economic Continuity

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Mastercard released its inaugural Cyber Pulse report, offering a comprehensive view of the evolving cyber threat landscape across Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EEMEA) over the last year.
The report combines regional threat intelligence from Mastercard’s Cyber Insights platform with organizational cyber health assessments from RiskRecon, a tool which allows companies to evaluate the level of security of their internet-facing assets. This also includes advanced threat intelligence from Recorded Future – acquired by Mastercard in December 2024 – which continuously analyzes data to identify emerging cyber threats and risk patterns.
With visibility across evolving threat activity and the practical impact on businesses and governments, the report translates cyber risk into insights that matter for operational resilience, economic continuity, and long‑term trust in the digital economy.
Global research underscores just how material cyber risk has become for businesses in our region. Analysis cited IBM cost of data breach report 2025 shows that the average cost of a data breach in the Middle East is nearly US$7.29 million per incident – 64% higher than the global average – reinforcing why cyber resilience today is firmly a leadership and board-level concern.
The findings show that cybercrime across the region increased in early 2026 following a period of geopolitical instability, underscoring the need for organizations to move beyond awareness and towards sustained cyber readiness and resilience. The report also identifies that financially motivated and disruptive activity accounts for 71% of observed cybercrime across EEMEA, reinforcing the need for stronger cyber readiness across sectors.
“Cyber resilience is synonymous with business resilience and operational wellbeing. Our first Cyber Pulse report highlights the importance for organizations adopting a proactive and integrated approach to cybersecurity alongside consistent vigilance. At Mastercard, we are committed to empowering our partners and customers with the intelligence, tools, and expertise they need to navigate the complex cyber landscape, secure their digital assets, and build a more secure digital future for everyone who engages in the digital economy,” said Selin Bahadirli, Executive Vice President Services, EEMEA, Mastercard.
The Mastercard Cyber Pulse Report notes that business systems, customer information, and physical infrastructure are the primary targets for attackers, accounting for 66% of all targets. Most attackers aim to disrupt operations, commit fraud, and cause physical damage. Certain sectors are also at higher risk of cyberattacks. In the EEMEA region for example, the public, technology, and financial sectors account for 44% of all targeted industries. These sectors are attractive targets due to the concentration of high‑value data and their importance to economic and digital ecosystems.
Common attack methods such as malware, ransomware, and email-based social engineering continue to dominate across EEMEA. While baseline cyber health remains relatively strong in some markets, application security and web encryption emerge as consistent areas for improvement. To help remedy this, the report provides specific recommendations for businesses including improving application security and vulnerability management.
Cyber resilience matters not only for large institutions, but for the millions of micros, small, and medium‑sized businesses that depend on secure, reliable access to the digital economy. Strengthening cyber resilience is therefore a critical enabler of sustainable growth, inclusion, and long‑term economic participation.
Globally, Mastercard has already surpassed its goal of bringing 50 million micro, small, and medium‑sized enterprises into the digital economy, and is now advancing a new ambition to connect and protect 500 million individuals and small businesses by 2030 – reinforcing our long‑term commitment to inclusive and resilient growth.
This commitment is underpinned by sustained investment in trust and security. Since 2019, Mastercard has invested approximately $12.6 billion in cybersecurity innovation. In 2025 alone, the company processed 175 billion transactions, leveraging its insights and advanced data science to detect vulnerabilities faster and with greater precision, enhancing protection across the ecosystem.
Through its comprehensive suite of cyber advisory services, global partnerships, and intelligence‑led capabilities; this includes Recorded Future, which delivers real‑time insight into cyber threats enabling businesses and governments to identify emerging risks earlier, prioritize response, and make more informed decisions in an increasingly complex digital environment.
Combined with products such as RiskRecon, CyberQuant, and Cyber Insights, Mastercard enables organizations to assess their cyber exposure, understand how threats may evolve, and translate intelligence into practical actions that strengthen trust, continuity, and resilience.

Read: Ruto Secures Ksh20.8B EU Investment for Kenya’s Digital Economy

>>> Motorists to Receive Traffic Offence Notices via SMS Under New NTSA Digital System

Written by
BT Reporter

editor [at] businesstoday.co.ke

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