Regulators Worldwide
State Bank of Vietnam
Central bank overseeing monetary policy and the payment systems in Vietnam.
Financial Transaction Services Company
Plays a key role in facilitating electronic payment transactions and developing payment gateway solutions.
State Bank of Vietnam - Payment Services Department
Department within the SBV specifically responsible for regulating payment services and electronic wallets in Vietnam.
Securities and Exchange Commission of Thailand
Regulates securities markets, including aspects relevant to fintech and payment systems.
Financial Supervisory Commission, Republic of China (Taiwan)
Oversees financial markets including banking, securities, and insurance, relevant for payment service providers.
Bank of Thailand
Central bank overseeing monetary policy, payment systems, and electronic money regulations.
Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan)
Central bank responsible for monetary policy and banking supervision, including payment systems.
Monetary Authority of Singapore
Central bank overseeing monetary policy, payment systems, and financial regulation.
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What Are Financial Regulators (and Why They Matter for Merchants and Providers)
Financial regulators are public authorities that oversee banks, payment institutions, and financial services to ensure stability, transparency, and consumer protection. They set the rules for licensing, compliance, capital requirements, and operational standards that payment providers and merchants must follow when handling money.
For merchants, regulators define who is allowed to process payments and under what conditions. Working with regulated providers reduces the risk of fraud, sudden service interruptions, or frozen funds. It also affects customer trust, since regulated entities must meet standards around security, disclosures, and dispute handling.
For payment providers, regulators are gatekeepers to markets. A license from a respected authority—such as a national central bank or financial conduct authority—determines where a provider can operate and which services it can offer. Strong regulatory oversight is often required to partner with banks, card networks, and large merchants.
In practice, regulation shapes the entire payments ecosystem. From onboarding requirements and transaction monitoring to cross-border operations, financial regulators influence how smoothly money moves. Understanding who regulates your partners is essential for long-term stability and compliant growth.
Financial Regulation FAQ
A financial regulator sets and enforces rules for financial institutions, including licensing, capital requirements, conduct standards, and consumer protection. Its role is to ensure financial stability, prevent abuse, and protect users of financial services.
National central banks, financial conduct authorities, and payment regulators have the greatest impact. Examples include authorities that oversee payment institutions, electronic money issuers, and acquiring banks in each jurisdiction.
Merchants can verify a provider’s license through the regulator’s public register. Providers should clearly disclose their regulatory status, license number, and jurisdiction.
Reputation is driven by enforcement rigor, clarity of rules, and international recognition. Regulators with strict oversight and consistent enforcement tend to be more trusted by banks, card networks, and global merchants.
No regulator can eliminate all risk. However, regulated providers must follow rules on safeguarding client funds, reporting, and audits, which significantly reduces the risk of misuse or sudden loss.
Regulators determine where providers can operate, how funds can move across borders, and what compliance checks apply. Regulatory alignment often makes cross-border payments faster and more predictable.
Most merchants are not directly regulated as financial institutions. However, they must comply with certain regulatory requirements through their providers, such as identity verification, reporting, and transaction monitoring.
A local license allows a provider to operate in one jurisdiction. A passportable license, common in some regions, allows providers to operate across multiple countries under a single regulatory framework.