
Finviz Bank is warning on behalf of corporate customers that he faced data violation after a former employee reached sensitive files after the end of his employment.
“On May 31, 2024, Finviz experienced a data protection incident, including a former employee, which reached the finvice data after the end of his employment,” written in a data brech notification sent by Finquiz by the US First Finance (AFF).
American First Finance (AFF) is a company that offers consumer financing products including installment loans and lease-to-on programs for a diverse category of products and services. Customers use AFF to apply and manage for loans with the company that handle the account setup, repayment process and customer aid.
Finviz Partners Serving as a bank with American First Finance which generates and funds these loans.
According to a filing with Office of Main Attorney GeneralAmerican First Finance revealed that Finviz Bank Data Breach affected its customers’ data of 689,000. The filing included a notification letter prepared by Finviz on behalf of the US First Finance, confirming that the bank itself was the source of the incident.
Finviz said the files with customer information, including full name and other personal data elements, were accessed during the breech, but re -prepared the complete list of data breech notification.
The company did not disclose how the former employees were able to reach this data, as they were no longer employed or the total number of people affected by the finviah breech.
On searching, the bank began an investigation with the external cyber security professionals to assess the scope of the exposure.
Finviz says it has strengthened internal control to reduce the risk of similar events and offer 12 months free credit monitoring and identity theft security services for those affected.
Bleepingcomputer contacted Finviz Bank to learn more about Breech, but a finance spokesman said they do not comment on the ongoing litigation.
However, the company recently shared a link for a quarterly SEC filing (June 30, 2025 Form 10-Q), In which the company notes that around 600,000 people were affected, a number quoted by the American First Finance.
The company is now facing several class-action cases related to data breech.


