Acquisition

Traitement multi-devises

Cardflo permet aux commerçants de traiter les transactions dans plusieurs devises. Cette capacité prend en charge les ventes mondiales et améliore l'expérience client en affichant les prix et en traitant les paiements dans les devises locales.

Notre plateforme gère les complexités de la conversion et du règlement des devises, facilitant l'accès aux marchés internationaux pour les entreprises à haut risque et les grandes entreprises.

Catégorie
Acquisition
Capacités
10
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L'aperçu

Multi-currency processing enables a merchant to accept payments in various global denominations while receiving settlement in their preferred base currency.

This functionality sits within the acquiring layer of the payments stack, requiring the merchant to hold a Merchant Identification Number (MID) with an acquirer that supports multiple currencies.

When a customer initiates a transaction, the gateway communicates with the acquirer to determine the exchange rate and authorisation requirements.

The process involves two primary stages: the presentment currency, which the cardholder sees at checkout, and the settlement currency, which the merchant receives in their bank account.

Efficient multi-currency setups minimise the impact of foreign exchange (FX) volatility and reduce the likelihood of cross-border transaction declines.

By utilising local acquiring networks, businesses can often avoid the high fees associated with international card schemes, ensuring that the currency displayed during the authorisation matches the cardholder’s billing currency to prevent unnecessary conversion costs at the issuer level.

Comment ça marche

  1. Currency Presentment at Checkout

    The merchant identifies the cardholder’s location via IP address or BIN lookup. The gateway then presents the transaction amount in the local currency of the shopper.

    This step is critical for maintaining price transparency and ensuring the customer understands the exact amount that will appear on their bank statement.

  2. Authorisation and FX Conversion

    Upon submission, the authorisation request travels through the gateway to the acquirer. If the transaction currency differs from the merchant's settlement currency, a conversion occurs based on the mid-market rate plus a specified spread.

    The issuer then authorises the transaction in the requested local denomination.

  3. Clearing and Scheme Processing

    The transaction details are sent to the card schemes, such as Visa or Mastercard, for clearing. The schemes calculate the interchange fees and scheme fees based on the cross-border nature of the payment.

    Accurate currency coding during this stage is essential to avoid additional surcharges or miscalculated fees.

  4. Settlement and Reconciliation

    The acquirer settles the funds to the merchant account. Depending on the configuration, the merchant may receive funds in the original transaction currency or converted into their functional currency.

    The resulting report provides an ARN and breakdown of the exchange rates used for accounting and reconciliation purposes.

Pourquoi c'est important

Authorisation Rate Optimisation

Issuers are more likely to approve transactions that are presented in the cardholder's home currency. When a transaction is processed as a domestic-like payment through local acquiring, it reduces the risk of fraud flags associated with international activity.

This alignment between the presentment currency and the BIN country helps in minimising soft declines related to geographic discrepancies, ultimately improving the successful capture rate for global sales.

Operational Transparency and FX Management

Handling multiple currencies requires precise reconciliation to manage foreign exchange risk. By controlling the conversion process rather than leaving it to the cardholder's bank, merchants can better predict the final settlement amount.

This reduces the number of retrieval requests and disputes that arise when customers do not recognise the converted amount on their statements, protecting the merchant's relationship with the acquirer and scheme.

Cas d'usage

International E-commerce Operations

Retailers selling to customers across Europe, North America, and Asia use multi-currency processing to display local pricing, reducing cart abandonment caused by currency confusion or unexpected bank fees.

SaaS Subscription Models

Software providers use multi-currency capabilities to charge recurring fees in the customer's native currency, ensuring consistent billing amounts and reducing dunning issues caused by fluctuating exchange rates.

Travel and Hospitality Services

Global booking engines process payments in the currency of the destination or the traveller's home country, providing a familiar checkout experience for high-value transactions.

High-Volume Digital Goods

Digital marketplaces aggregate sellers and buyers globally, requiring a platform that can handle diverse currencies to facilitate split settlements and complex payouts.

En chiffres

2-5%
Authorisation Rate Variance

Industry data suggests a typical increase in authorisation rates when merchants present prices and process transactions in the cardholder’s local currency versus a foreign denomination.

1% to 3%
Average FX Spread

This represents the standard range of foreign exchange markups applied by acquirers and gateways during the conversion from transaction to settlement currency.

15-20%
Cart Abandonment Reduction

Benchmarks indicate that international shoppers are less likely to abandon a checkout process when the final total is displayed in their native currency.

Ready to route with Traitement multi-devises?

Talk to our team about a live rollout on your acquiring stack.

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What you get with Traitement multi-devises

  • Traiter les transactions dans plus de 150 devises.
  • Conversion dynamique des devises au point de vente.
  • Options de règlement dans diverses devises principales.
  • Mises à jour des taux de change en temps réel.
  • Réduction des frais de change grâce à un routage stratégique des acquéreurs.
  • Rapprochement simplifié pour les transactions multi-devises.
  • Integration with multiple Merchant Identification Numbers for regionalised currency handling strategies.
  • Mitigation of issuer-led currency conversion fees for improved customer satisfaction and retention.
  • Support for alternative payment methods that require specific local currency configurations.
  • Compliance with PSD2 and SCA requirements across different currency zones and jurisdictions.
See Traitement multi-devises on your acquiring stack.

A short scoping call, then a written plan for your MIDs.

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Questions about Traitement multi-devises

Comment le traitement multi-devises profite-t-il à mon entreprise ?

Le traitement multi-devises vous permet de proposer des produits et services à une clientèle mondiale dans leur devise locale.

Cela peut augmenter les taux de conversion et la satisfaction client en éliminant la nécessité pour les clients de calculer les taux de change ou d'encourir des frais de transaction étrangère de la part de leurs banques.

Quelles devises Cardflo prend-il en charge pour le traitement ?

Cardflo prend en charge le traitement dans plus de 150 devises différentes. Notre plateforme s'intègre à divers acquéreurs dans le monde, assurant une large couverture et la capacité d'accepter des paiements provenant de divers marchés internationaux.

Cette flexibilité est cruciale pour étendre la portée de votre entreprise efficacement.

Y a-t-il un coût supplémentaire pour le traitement multi-devises ?

Les coûts pour le traitement multi-devises peuvent varier en fonction des devises spécifiques et des acquéreurs utilisés. Cardflo s'efforce d'optimiser ces coûts grâce à un routage intelligent et à des prix compétitifs de la part de notre réseau de partenaires.

Nous offrons des structures de frais transparentes adaptées aux besoins de votre entreprise.

How is the exchange rate determined for international transactions?

The exchange rate is generally based on the daily wholesale rates provided by major financial institutions or the card schemes themselves. Acquirers typically add a small percentage, known as an FX spread, to the base rate.

This spread covers the risk of currency fluctuations between the time of authorisation and the time of settlement. Merchants should monitor these rates within their gateway reports to ensure the conversions align with their expected margins.

Does multi-currency processing increase the risk of chargebacks or disputes?

Properly implemented multi-currency processing can actually reduce disputes. If a customer is charged in their own currency, the amount they see at checkout matches the amount on their bank statement.

Problems arise when a merchant displays one currency but processes in another, leading to hidden bank fees for the customer. Transparency in the transaction currency helps avoid 'amount unrecognised' disputes and retrieval requests, as the cardholder is not surprised by FX adjustments.

Are there specific technical requirements for handling multiple currencies via API?

Yes, the merchant’s API request must include the ISO 4217 currency code for every transaction. The gateway must be capable of mapping these codes to the appropriate acquirer route.

Additionally, the merchant’s internal systems must be able to store and reconcile these different currency values, ensuring that the accounting software handles the exchange rate differences between the transaction date and the settlement date for tax and reporting purposes.

Commencer

Prêt à accélérer ?

Parlez-nous de votre activité. Nous vous mettrons en relation avec les bons partenaires acquéreurs et la bonne route, généralement en moins d'une semaine.

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