- What: Hackers conducted an espionage operation on a global stock exchange
- Impact: Sensitive data was exfiltrated over a long period
Malware & Threats Hackers Target Global Stock Exchange in Espionage Operation The attackers had access to a senior executive’s email account for 150 days and exfiltrated data for months. By Eduard Kovacs | June 3, 2026 (8:46 AM ET) Flipboard Reddit Whatsapp Whatsapp Email Hackers gained access to the email account of a senior executive at a major global stock exchange and exfiltrated data for months. The attack, investigated by Broadcom’s Symantec and Carbon Black threat-hunting team, began in October 2025, and the threat actor retained access to the compromised Outlook mailbox until March 2026. The security experts estimate that the dwell time was roughly 150 days. The goal of the operation was most likely espionage, but Symantec and Carbon Black did not share any information about who may have been behind the attack or which stock exchange was targeted. “For an espionage actor, a senior executive’s mailbox is a high-value intelligence target. An Outlook profile may yield details of external negotiations, internal deliberations, the executive’s calendar, travel pattern, and their contacts,” the researchers said. “Organizations such as exchanges and regulators may hold non-public information about listings, enforcement actions and market-moving events. Months of unfettered access to that mailbox lets an attacker build a near-complete picture of the target’s working life and the organization’s near-term direction without ever having to move laterally elsewhere on the network,” they added. The initial access vector remains unknown, but the first signs of malicious activity were seen on October 10, 2025, when malware had already been running on the compromised host, disguised as Adobe and OneDrive applications. Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading. Command-and-control (C&C) channels were established on November 12, when the attacker also began collecting and exfiltrating data. To avoid raising suspicion, they used Dropbox and OneDrive to exfiltrate files, transferring only small batches at a time. “The cumulative effect over the five months observed is a complete, near-continuous theft of the user’s Outlook mailbox, broken into incremental archives small enough not to draw attention from security software,” the researchers explained. The attacker continuously worked on persistence, regularly re-registering tasks disguised as Adobe, Lenovo, and OneDrive system services to maintain access. Symantec and Carbon Black made indicators of compromise (IoCs) available to help other organizations detect potential attacks. Related : US Disrupts Russian Espionage Operation Involving Hacked Routers and DNS Hijacking Related : Sophisticated Deep#Door Backdoor Enables Espionage, Disruption Related : US Disrupts Russian Espionage Operation Involving Hacked Routers and DNS Hijacking Written By Eduard Kovacs Eduard Kovacs (@EduardKovacs) is senior managing editor at SecurityWeek. He worked as a high school IT teacher before starting a career in journalism in 2011. Eduard holds a bachelor’s degree in industrial informatics and a master’s degree in computer techniques applied in electrical engineering. Daily Briefing Newsletter Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing for the latest cybersecurity threats, trends, and expert insights. More from Eduard Kovacs Android Update Patches Exploited Zero-Day, 123 Other Vulnerabilities Anthropic Expanding Mythos Access to 150 New Organizations Oracle WebLogic Vulnerability Exploited in the Wild Dashlane Brute-Force Attack Leads to Limited Encrypted Vault Downloads Vulnerability in Popular Conference Software Granted Attackers a 100% Talk Acceptance Rate Romanian Hacker Sentenced to Prison in US for Selling Access to State Network LA Metro Cyberattack Linked to Iranian State-Sponsored Hackers Anthropic Releases New Claude Sandbox, Security Guidance Plugin Latest News Kirki, Burst Statistics WordPress Plugin Flaws in Attackers’ Crosshairs Security of 100 AI Agents Tested and Ranked – What You Need to Know IMA Diligence Services Data Breach Impacts 525,000 People Organizations Warned of Exploited Linux Kernel Vulnerability ‘HTTP/2 Bomb’ Exploit Knocks Web Servers Offline in Seconds Microsoft Tries to Calm Legal Threat Fears After Zero-Day Disclosure Backlash Trump Signs Executive Order That Invites Vetting of Top AI Models for National Security Risks Two New Reports Offer Competing Explanations for Cybersecurity’s Growing Crisis Trending Daily Briefing Newsletter Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing to stay informed on the latest threats, trends, and technology, along with insightful columns from industry experts. Webinar: Third-Party Risk in Practice June 4, 2026 Organizations are investing heavily in third-party risk management, but breaches, delays, and blind spots continue to persist. Join this live webinar as we examine the gap between how organizations think their third-party risk programs are performing and what’s actually happening in practice. Register Virtual Roundtable: CISO Forum 2026 Mid-Year Review June 10, 2026 Explore how attackers are using AI to scale threats and how security teams can respond with AI-driven defenses. Protecting against unmonitored use of generative AI (Shadow AI) in business units and building and enforcing AI governance frameworks. Register People on the Move Rapid7 announced that Wael Mohamed will assume the role of Chief Executive Officer, replacing current Chief Executive Officer Corey Thomas, who will become Executive Chairman of the Board. Anurag Jain has been appointed Senior Vice President of Engineering at CodeHunter. CTERA has appointed Tal Sarfaty as Senior Vice President of Cybersecurity. More People On The Move Expert Insights The Zero-Knowledge Threat Actor and the End of Responsible Disclosure AI can help attackers generate malware, create malicious payloads, bypass simple security checks, and convert vague malicious intent into functional code. (Etay Maor) Raising the Cybersecurity Stakes: Ante up for the Agentic Era CISOs are now facing machine-speed attacks and asking, “How do I agent?” The industry must provide remediation at scale. (Nadir Izrael) Caught Off Guard: Securing AI After It Hits Production As enterprises rush AI projects into production, security teams are increasingly being forced into reactive mode. (Joshua Goldfarb) Cyber Resilience is the New Business Continuity Plan The organizations best prepared to face disruption are those that align security, continuity and risk management around what the business cannot afford to lose. (Steve Durbin) Enhancing Data Center Security Without Sacrificing Performance For AI data centers, where the stakes are the highest and performance constraints are the tightest, security and performance are no longer a zero-sum game. (Nadir Izrael) Flipboard Reddit Whatsapp Whatsapp Email