Audit Phase: V-ECON (Economic Forensics)
Research Date: 2026-05-01
Status: Based on training-data sources through April 2026. Live web search was unavailable; evidence gaps are noted throughout.
WorldPay is a payment processing and technology company — not a retailer, grocer, food importer, or physical goods trader. No public evidence has been identified of WorldPay sourcing, purchasing, or importing Israeli agricultural products (Medjool dates, avocados, citrus, herbs, or potatoes) from any supplier, including Mehadrin, Hadiklaim, Galilee Export, or any successor to Agrexco. No commercial relationship between WorldPay and any Israeli agricultural aggregator or exporter appears in corporate filings, NGO supply-chain databases (Who Profits, Corporate Occupation), UK Companies House records, or US SEC filings reviewed for this audit.
No public evidence identified. WorldPay does not operate as an importer of goods and maintains no documented import entity structure in any jurisdiction reviewed.
No public evidence identified. Not applicable to WorldPay’s business model.
WorldPay’s supply chain exposure relevant to this audit is limited to its upstream technology vendor relationships, several of which involve Israeli-founded or Israeli-headquartered firms. These relationships are commercial software and API integrations rather than goods sourcing.
Forter (fraud prevention): WorldPay’s developer documentation includes a Worldpay Payment Webhook integration at api.forter-secure.com/webhooks/worldpay8, constituting confirmed primary-source evidence of a live API integration between WorldPay’s transaction processing infrastructure and Forter’s fraud decision engine. A joint public announcement confirmed a partnership between WorldPay and Forter specifically to address cryptocurrency exchange fraud910. Forter is co-headquartered in New York and Tel Aviv, with substantial R&D operations in Tel Aviv. Relationship status: Active as of the most recent documentation access date.
Riskified (fraud prevention): Riskified (NYSE: RSKD) maintains a partner network listing13, and WorldPay’s product documentation references third-party fraud decisioning integrations1112. Riskified is headquartered in Tel Aviv and New York with primary R&D in Tel Aviv. However, no confirmed primary Worldpay–Riskified joint announcement was independently reviewed in training data; Riskified’s partner page does not specifically name WorldPay in reviewed materials. Relationship status: Unverified — not confirmed by a primary bilateral source.
ThetaRay (AML compliance): ThetaRay maintains a partner program page16; however, no primary source confirming WorldPay or Global Payments as a named ThetaRay customer or partner was identified in training data. A YouTube reference associates ThetaRay with ClearBank, not WorldPay42. ThetaRay is an Israeli-founded company (Petah Tikva / New York). Relationship status: No public evidence identified of a WorldPay–ThetaRay relationship.
Trulioo (identity verification): A confirmed joint press release documents a WorldPay–Trulioo collaboration on identity verification for the “Agentic Commerce Era”14. Trulioo is a Canadian company (Vancouver); this relationship does not represent Israeli supply-chain exposure.
OpenAI (agentic commerce): WorldPay announced participation in OpenAI’s Agentic Commerce Protocol15. OpenAI is a US company; no Israeli exposure arises from this relationship.
No public evidence identified that WorldPay itself sells, imports, labels, or distributes goods from any origin, including goods from Israeli-occupied territories. WorldPay provides payment infrastructure and does not manufacture, brand, or distribute physical goods in any publicly documented capacity.
While WorldPay does not itself sell goods, its payment processing services are available to merchants who may sell products originating in Israeli settlements. Evidence in this area is indirect and derived from third-party technology detection data rather than contractual confirmation:
Psagot Winery: Psagot Winery is located in the Psagot settlement in the Occupied West Bank29. Its wines are commercially available through US distributors including KosherWine.com30 and WineWarehouseStore.com31. A third-party technology intelligence report (StoreLeads) lists e-commerce stores using WorldPay in Israel33; the prior research layer identifies specific Israeli e-commerce sites (including iwinebroker.com) as WorldPay users based on observable checkout-script detection. Whether those sites actively sell Psagot or other settlement-origin wines is an additional inferential step not confirmed by a primary source. Relationship status: indirectly supported by third-party script detection data33; no direct contractual confirmation is available.
Barkan Winery: Barkan Winery is Israel’s second-largest winery and is associated with the Barkan Industrial Park in the West Bank2932. Its wines are internationally distributed by Royal Wine Corp32. No primary source confirming WorldPay as the payment processor for Barkan’s direct sales channel or its US distributors was reviewed. Relationship status: No public evidence identified for a direct WorldPay–Barkan processing relationship.
Adanim Tea / IsraelCart: IsraelCart.com lists Adanim Tea as a product39. A direct WorldPay–IsraelCart payment processing relationship is unverified; no primary or confirmed secondary source was identified in training data.
No public evidence identified of any DEFRA, EU, or US customs enforcement action against WorldPay regarding country-of-origin labeling. WorldPay is not subject to goods-labeling regulations in any documented public record, consistent with its role as a payments infrastructure provider.
No public evidence identified. WorldPay has no disclosed policy on sourcing or labeling of goods from occupied territories. No ESG or sustainability report from WorldPay or its parent Global Payments was identified in training-data reviewed materials that addresses this topic.
WorldPay’s ownership has undergone significant transformation between 2023 and January 2026:
Career portal listings19 show active technical job openings (electronics engineer, cyber systems engineer, Java developer) under the Global Payments / TSYS brand in Israeli cities, which is consistent with an active technical workforce but does not confirm a formally designated “R&D center.” The T.S.Y.S. Production Services Ltd. entity17 is registered and consistent with operational presence; however, its specific operational functions are not described in the registry entry. The classification of Global Payments’ Israeli offices as “R&D centers” is not confirmed by a primary corporate filing reviewed in training data.
GTCR’s retention of 15% equity in the post-merger Global Payments/WorldPay entity3 means GTCR’s fund structures simultaneously hold WorldPay equity and previously held Israeli industrial assets through other portfolio companies:
No public evidence identified of WorldPay, Global Payments, GTCR, or FIS holding Israeli sovereign bonds, Israel-focused investment funds, or Israeli government securities in any publicly disclosed filing reviewed in training data.
Any entity requiring domestic ILS settlement — including WorldPay — must interface with Israel’s domestic clearing infrastructure, which is dominated by the major Israeli banks. Key contextual facts about those institutions:
Isracard is the dominant domestic clearer for Mastercard transactions in Israel262728. WorldPay is a major global Mastercard acquirer. The inference that WorldPay’s Israeli Mastercard transactions route through Isracard is operationally reasonable given Isracard’s market position but is not confirmed by a primary bilateral agreement reviewed in training data.
A third-party technology intelligence report (StoreLeads) identifies e-commerce stores in Israel using WorldPay payment technology33, consistent with WorldPay having an active merchant base in the Israeli market. This data is derived from observable checkout-script detection and reflects WorldPay’s functional market presence, though it does not constitute a registry of merchant contracts.
No public evidence identified of WorldPay or Global Payments characterizing the Israeli market as a “strategic growth market,” “regional hub,” or any other specific designation in annual reports, investor presentations, or press releases reviewed in training data. Israel is not broken out as a named geographic segment in any Global Payments annual report section reviewed.
WorldPay was not founded in Israel. Its origins trace to Streamline, a UK payment processing business established in the 1990s, subsequently acquired by NatWest, then Royal Bank of Scotland, spun off as Worldpay Group plc (listed on the London Stock Exchange), acquired by Vantiv (US) in 2018, then by FIS in 2019, partially sold to GTCR in 20234, and ultimately acquired by Global Payments Inc. in January 2026135. No Israeli-origin operations, technology, or brand identity form any part of WorldPay’s founding or developmental history.
No public evidence identified of any Israeli state ownership stake, Israeli government board appointees, Israeli government contracts, or Israeli critical-national-infrastructure designation for WorldPay or its immediate parent Global Payments. Bank Hapoalim, referenced in prior research as a banking counterparty, is a privately listed commercial bank — not a state-owned enterprise25. Its UN Human Rights Council listing22 relates to its settlement-financing activities, not to any state ownership of WorldPay.
No public evidence identified of golden shares, founder shares, charter restrictions, government consent provisions, or other governance mechanisms tying WorldPay’s board, ownership, or operational decisions to the Israeli state or any Israeli public institution.
WorldPay and Global Payments do not appear by name on the USCPR 2025 BDS boycott list36 based on reviewed training-data materials. BDS movement documentation3738 focuses on financial institutions and technology companies with direct Israeli military or settlement construction contracts; no WorldPay-specific BDS campaign action was identified in reviewed sources. This observation reflects the absence of evidence in reviewed materials and should not be taken as a definitive clearance.
No public evidence identified of WorldPay or Global Payments disclosing a revenue figure specifically attributed to Israel as a named geographic market. Global Payments reports revenue in broad geographic segments — North America; Europe; and Other — in its annual filings; Israel is not broken out as a named sub-segment in any reviewed filing. The Israeli market’s financial materiality to WorldPay cannot be quantified from public disclosures.
No public evidence identified of any Israeli government designation, industry report, or academic assessment characterizing WorldPay or Global Payments as a key employer, sector anchor, critical infrastructure provider, or strategically significant company within the Israeli domestic economy. The staffing and entity registration evidence1719 is consistent with WorldPay’s parent being an active participant in Israel’s fintech labor market, but no formal economic significance designation has been identified in reviewed materials.
T.S.Y.S. Production Services Ltd.17, as a registered Israeli corporate entity, would be subject to Israeli corporate tax obligations; however, the quantum of any tax payments is not publicly disclosed. No Israeli tax-authority disclosure or corporate filing quantifying WorldPay’s or Global Payments’ Israeli tax contributions was identified in training data.
https://investors.globalpayments.com/news-events/press-releases/detail/498/global-payments-completes-acquisition-of-worldpay-and ↩↩↩
https://investors.globalpayments.com/news-events/press-releases/detail/469/global-payments-announces-agreements-to-acquire-worldpay ↩↩
https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/gtcr-completes-sale-of-payments-tech-firm-worldpay-to-global-payments-302658108.html ↩↩↩↩↩↩
https://www.gtcr.com/gtcr-to-acquire-majority-stake-in-worldpay/ ↩↩
https://www.fisglobal.com/about-us/media-room/press-release/2026/fis-completes-strategic-acquisition-of-global-payments-issuer-solutions-business ↩↩↩
https://docs.worldpay.com/apis/pushtoaccountglobal/domesticpayments/israel ↩
https://docs.worldpay.com/apis/pushtoaccountglobal/reference/cutofftimes ↩
https://docs.forter.com/worldpay-payment-webhook ↩
https://www.forter.com/blog/worldpay/ ↩
https://www.digitaltransactions.net/worldpay-enlists-forter-to-arm-for-a-potential-surge-in-online-crypto-trading-fraud/ ↩
https://www.worldpay.com/en/insights/guides/fraud-management-tools-important-for-security ↩
https://corporate.worldpay.com/news-releases/news-release-details/reducing-fraud-and-amping-authorizations-worldpay-and-capital ↩
https://www.riskified.com/partners/ ↩
https://corporate.worldpay.com/news-releases/news-release-details/worldpay-and-trulioo-collaborate-embed-trust-agentic-commerce ↩
https://corporate.worldpay.com/news-releases/news-release-details/worldpay-unlock-new-commerce-channels-merchants-openai-agentic ↩
https://thetaray.com/partners/ ↩
https://www.northdata.com/%D7%AA.%D7%A1.%D7%99.%D7%A9.+%D7%A9%D7%99%D7%A8%D7%95%D7%AA%D7%99+%D7%99%D7%A6%D7%95%D7%A8+%D7%91%D7%A2%22%D7%9E,+%D7%AA%D7%9C+%D7%90%D7%91%D7%99%D7%91-%D7%99%D7%A4%D7%95/ICA-512693656 ↩↩↩↩↩↩
https://company.globalpayments.com/locations ↩
https://tsys.wd1.myworkdayjobs.com/TSYS/27/refreshFacet/318c8bb6f553100021d223d9780d30be ↩↩↩↩
https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/resonetics-announces-acquisition-of-sti-laser-industries-300736243.html ↩↩
https://www.gtcr.com/gtcr-and-carlyle-backed-resonetics-announces-acquisition-of-agile-mv/ ↩
https://www.hrw.org/report/2018/05/29/bankrolling-abuse/israeli-banks-west-bank-settlements ↩↩↩
https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/israel-s-largest-bank-bank-hapoalim-admits-conspiring-us-taxpayers-hide-assets-and-income ↩
https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/bank-hapoalim-agrees-pay-more-30-million-its-role-fifa-money-laundering-conspiracy ↩
https://www.fintechfutures.com/bankingtech/hapoalim-first-bank-in-israel-to-sign-up-for-swift-gpi ↩↩
https://en.globes.co.il/en/article-1000000460 ↩
https://corporate.payu.com/resource-hub/payment-methods-encyclopedia/isracard/ ↩
https://digital.isracard.co.il/globalassets/isracard/financialreports/eng_euro_11.pdf ↩
https://www.timesofisrael.com/west-banks-wines-have-some-israelis-toasting-the-settlements/ ↩↩
https://www.kosherwine.com/psagot-wines.html ↩
https://winewarehousestore.com/collections/psagot-brand-wines ↩
https://storeleads.app/reports/technology/WorldPay/country/IL ↩↩↩
https://www.worldpay.com/en/contact-us-partner ↩
https://businessofpayments.com/2025/06/30/newsletter-april-2025/ ↩
https://uscpr.org/activist-resource/boycott-divestment-and-sanctions/ ↩
https://www.gov.il/BlobFolder/reports/global_bds_disrupt_complicity_weekend_of_action_2025-09-18_to_2025-09-21/en/mashlat_half2_2025_global_bds_disrupt_complicity_weekend_of_action_2025-09-18_to_2025-09-21.pdf ↩
https://bdsmovement.net/news/new-un-published-report-exposes-complicity-states-enabling-genocide ↩
https://www.israelcart.com/producers/adanim-tea/ ↩
https://www.gornitzky.com/loan-facility-agreement-signed-to-finance-the-final-payment-for-the-purchase-of-the-israeli-credit-card-company-max-it-finance/ ↩
https://www.riskified.com/press/ixopay-and-riskified-announce-partnership-to-boost-fraud-prevention-and-enhance-enterprise-payment-orchestration/ ↩
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ngT_9JRuVS8 ↩
https://sverica.com/sverica-announces-resonetics-has-acquired-sti-laser-industriessverica-announces-resonetics-has-acquired-sti-laser-industries/ ↩