Spanish authorities seek details on pre-Black Friday payment network crash

Reuters

Published Nov 24, 2023 12:31

Updated Nov 24, 2023 17:35

By Jesús Aguado

MADRID (Reuters) -The Bank of Spain has asked for detailed information after recent disruptions to the country's payments network and is closely monitoring the situation together with the government, two sources with knowledge of the matter said on Friday.

Spain's largest payments platform Redsys crashed last weekend and again on Nov. 23, ahead of Black Friday, which is one of the busiest periods of commercial activity.

The online Spanish platform acts as an intermediary between banks, shops and buyers to ensure the security of transactions. It says it handles more than 45 million payments per month.

A source close to the central bank said it had not opened a formal case into Redsys, which is owned by Spanish banks including Santander (BME:SAN), BBVA (BME:BBVA) and Caixabank and handles their electronic payments business.

The Spanish government was also looking into the disruptions, a source at the Economy Ministry said, without giving further details.

Customers complained on social media about failed ATM withdrawals and credit card payments on Nov. 18. Redsys responded by saying disruptions had been resolved and were due to internal communication lines, ruling out any external attack.

Redsys suffered further disruptions on Nov. 23.

On Friday, the company said that the technical incidents that took place on both days had been resolved and the service restored.

Redsys further said that both incidents were one-offs and independent of each other.

"This is the first time that such an incident has occurred in the more than 12 years that the company has been providing this kind of service in Spain," it said.

Last Saturday's incident affected 2.5% of the electronic payment transactions carried out that day in Spain, while Thursday's incident affected 1.7%, according to Redsys.