Index

Up: Payment System Observability See also: Aggregators, Marketplaces

Payment Service Providers (PSPs)

Definition

PSP Observability is the "Control Tower" view of payment processing. PSPs aggregate thousands of merchants. Their risk is Systemic: if the PSP's master risk ratios breach network thresholds, the entire portfolio is threatened.

Why it matters

PSPs operate on thin margins and high volume. A single fraudulent merchant processing $1M in bad volume can wipe out the profit of 1,000 good merchants. Worse, it can cause the acquiring bank to "turn off" the PSP.

Signals to monitor

  • Portfolio-Wide Dispute Rate: The aggregate ratio across all sub-merchants.
  • Concentration Risk: The % of volume coming from the Top 10 merchants.
  • Sector Health: Risk performance by MCC (e.g., "How is our Travel portfolio performing?").
  • Onboarding Leakage: The fraud rate of merchants aged < 30 days.

Breakdown modes

  • Merchant Bust-Out: A merchant processing clean volume for 3 months to build credit, then hitting the limit with fraud and vanishing.
  • Collusion: A ring of fake merchants and fake buyers extracting cash from the PSP.
  • Bank Action: The Acquiring Bank imposing a "Blanket Reserve" on the PSP due to aggregate risk.

Where observability fits

  • Decomposition: Clicking down from "Portfolio Alert" -> "Sector Alert" -> "Specific Merchant."
  • Shadow Monitoring: Tracking merchants who are technically "active" but have stopped processing (often a precursor to abandonment or takeover).
  • Float Management: Tracking the exact location of funds across the clearing cycle.

Note: observability does not override processor or network controls; it provides operational clarity to navigate them.

FAQ

What is a "Master MID?"

The aggregated merchant ID used by the PSP to process on behalf of sub-merchants. The card network often sees only this ID.

How do PSPs protect themselves?

Reserves. Holding funds from merchants to cover potential trailing liabilities.

Can a PSP ignore a small merchant's fraud?

No. Networks track "Excessive" merchants individually too. If a PSP harbors too many bad actors, the PSP itself is penalized.

See also