Regulated Intelligence Brief

SEC Charges RYVYL and Executives in Payment Processing Fraud

The SEC has filed fraud charges against payment processing company RYVYL, Inc. and its executives Fredi Nisan and Benzion Errez. This action highlights ongoing enforcement focus on payment technology companies and executive accountability.

Regulated Intelligence Brief  ·  Rule Making  ·   ·  GiGCXOs Editorial
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The SEC has filed charges against RYVYL, Inc. and two of its executives, Fredi Nisan and Benzion Errez, in what appears to be a significant enforcement action in the payment processing space.

What We Know From the Litigation Release

The SEC's Litigation Release LR-26541, published April 28, 2026, names RYVYL, Inc. along with individuals Fredi Nisan and Benzion Errez as defendants. RYVYL operates in the payment processing and financial technology sector. The company has been publicly traded and subject to SEC reporting requirements.

The specific allegations and sanctions will be detailed in the underlying complaint filed with the court. When the SEC goes after both the firm and its execs, it's rarely for minor paperwork errors. It's usually about something the regulator thinks is fundamental.

Why This Matters for Compliance Teams

Payment processing and FinTech companies operate at the intersection of multiple regulatory regimes. When the SEC brings charges against both an entity and its executives personally, it sends a clear message about individual accountability.

Here's what this means for your compliance program:

  • Executive liability is real. The SEC continues to pursue individuals, not just corporate entities. Your officers and directors need to understand their personal exposure.
  • Public company obligations don't bend. If you're in the payment tech space with SEC reporting obligations, your disclosure controls better be airtight.
  • Regulatory attention on FinTech persists. The SEC has made clear that innovation doesn't exempt companies from securities laws.

Practical Steps for Firms

If your firm operates in payment processing, FinTech, or adjacent spaces, this is a moment to review your house:

  • Audit your disclosure controls and procedures under Exchange Act Rules 13a-15 and 15d-15
  • Ensure your certification processes under SOX Section 302 and 906 are substantive, not ceremonial
  • Review your insider trading policies and compliance with Regulation FD
  • Document your supervisory procedures for any securities-related activities

We don't have all the facts yet, but the playbook is familiar: if you're running a FinTech, the SEC expects you to have the same controls as any public financial firm.  That means no shortcuts.

The Bottom Line

This enforcement action is a reminder that payment technology companies with public equity don't get a pass on securities law compliance. The SEC names individuals when it believes executives were personally involved in or responsible for violations. That's not a theoretical risk. It's the enforcement reality.

I've seen firms convince themselves that being 'innovative' buys them regulatory slack.  It doesn't. In the meantime, treat this as a prompt to verify your own controls are functioning as designed.

Jay Proffitt

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Key Takeaways

What specific charges did the SEC bring against RYVYL and its executives?

The litigation release identifies RYVYL, Inc., Fredi Nisan, and Benzion Errez as defendants but the specific allegations are contained in the underlying complaint. We'll need to review the full complaint for details on the exact charges and alleged conduct.

Does this affect other payment processing or FinTech companies?

Not directly, but it reinforces that the SEC is actively enforcing securities laws against FinTech companies and their executives. Firms in this space should ensure their disclosure controls, reporting, and compliance programs meet the same standards required of any public company.

What should a CCO at a FinTech company do in response to this news?

Use this as an opportunity to review your firm's disclosure controls, certification processes, and compliance with SEC reporting requirements. Confirm that executives understand their personal liability exposure and that your supervisory procedures are documented and followed.

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The content in this blog is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice, regulatory guidance, or an offer to sell or solicit securities. GiGCXOs is not a law firm. Compliance program requirements vary based on business model, customer base, and regulatory classification.

Published in Regulated Intelligence Brief — AI-powered compliance intelligence for broker-dealers, RIAs, FinTech, and digital asset firms.
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