Rapports

Analyse des paiements

L'analyse des paiements fournit des informations granulaires sur vos données de transaction. Comprenez les performances des méthodes de paiement, des acquéreurs et des régions géographiques.

Identifiez les tendances, optimisez les entonnoirs de conversion et prenez des décisions éclairées pour améliorer l'efficacité et la rentabilité du traitement de vos paiements.

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Rapports
Capacités
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L'aperçu

Payment analytics serves as the foundational layer for interpreting raw transaction data within the payment stack. By aggregating data points from various sources, including acquirers, gateways, and card schemes, merchants can gain a granular view of their financial operations.

The process involves deconstructing complex datasets to isolate variables such as Merchant Category Codes (MCC), Bin types, and issuer geographic locations. This level of visibility is necessary for identifying inefficiencies in the authorisation process and understanding the cost structures associated with different payment methods.

Businesses use these insights to monitor the performance of their routing logic and to evaluate the success of authentication protocols like Strong Customer Authentication (SCA).

While raw data often resides in disparate silos across multiple PSPs, a centralised analytics framework allows for a unified assessment of transaction flows, settlement periods, and dispute ratios. This data facilitates more informed discussions with financial partners regarding processing fees and service level agreements.

Comment ça marche

  1. Data aggregation and ingestion

    Normalised transaction data is collected from all connected acquirers and payment service providers. This includes technical meta-data such as decline codes, authorisation timestamps, and scheme responses.

    By centralising these disparate feeds, the system creates a single source of truth for cross-platform performance comparisons and treasury reconciliation tasks.

  2. Segmentation and attribute mapping

    Transactions are categorised based on specific attributes including geographic region, device type, and payment method. The system maps specific BIN ranges to identify card levels, such as commercial or consumer, alongside the issuing bank's territory.

    This segmentation allows merchants to observe patterns within specific customer groups or regional markets.

  3. Conversion and funnel analysis

    The system tracks a payment's journey from the initial checkout intent through to final settlement. It identifies at which stage drop-offs occur, whether during 3DS authentication, gateway processing, or due to issuer-side declines.

    Monitoring these stages helps in diagnosing technical friction points within the checkout flow.

  4. Authorisation and decline auditing

    Machine learning or rule-based filters categorise declines into soft and hard categories. By analysing specific error codes like 'insufficient funds' versus 'do not honour', merchants can determine where to apply retry logic or account updater services to recover potentially lost revenue.

  5. Reporting and export functionality

    Historical and real-time data is presented through dashboards or exported via API for internal business intelligence tools. This ensures that financial controllers and developers can access the specific metrics they require, such as net settlement values or rolling reserve statuses, for accurate financial forecasting.

Pourquoi c'est important

Optimising card authorisation rates

Understanding why transactions fail is essential for maintaining a healthy conversion rate. Payment analytics allows merchants to isolate specific declines related to technical errors or authentication failures.

By identifying patterns in issuer behaviour, businesses can adjust their processing parameters or routing strategies to suit the preferences of specific card schemes, potentially reducing the frequency of false positives in fraud detection systems.

Managing processing and scheme costs

Payment processing involves complex fee structures including interchange, scheme fees, and acquirer markups. Analytics provide visibility into the total cost of acceptance for different payment methods.

By analysing the distribution of card types and geographic origins, merchants can identify if they are being charged correctly for cross-border transactions and determine if local acquiring or alternative payment methods could reduce expenses.

Improving dispute and risk management

Tracking chargeback and retrieval ratios is a mandatory requirement for maintaining compliance with scheme rules. Payment analytics provides an early warning system for fraud spikes or unusual refund patterns.

This allows risk teams to adjust their filters or investigate specific MIDs before a merchant exceeds the thresholds set by card networks, which could otherwise lead to fines or account termination.

Cas d'usage

International e-commerce expansion

A merchant expanding into European markets uses analytics to compare the performance of local debit schemes against international credit cards, ensuring their payment mix aligns with regional consumer preferences and local authorisation benchmarks.

SaaS subscription renewal management

A recurring revenue business monitors decline codes on Merchant Initiated Transactions (MIT). They use analytics to identify the best time of day to retry failed authorisations based on historical success rates for specific card issuers.

High-volume retail sales events

During peak periods, a retailer monitors gateway response times and success rates in real-time. If a specific processor shows increased latency, they can divert traffic to a more stable acquirer to prevent checkout abandonment.

Fintech platform reconciliation

A multi-vendor marketplace uses reporting tools to reconcile daily settlements across multiple currency accounts. This ensures that funds received from acquirers match the expected amounts after deducting fees and reserves.

En chiffres

2–5%
Authorisation rate variance

Industry observations suggests that optimising routing and retry logic based on analytics can lead to an uplift in authorisation rates within this range for high-volume merchants.

20–40%
Cross-border cost reduction

Businesses using analytics to identify geographic volume often find that switching from cross-border to local acquiring reduces processing fees by this typical industry margin.

<0.9%
Dispute threshold monitoring

Merchant accounts are generally expected to maintain a chargeback-to-transaction ratio below this level to avoid monitoring programmes from major card schemes.

Ready to route with Analyse des paiements?

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

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What you get with Analyse des paiements

  • Surveiller la performance des méthodes de paiement par volume et valeur
  • Analyser les taux d'approbation chez les différents acquéreurs et MIDs
  • Suivre les taux de réussite des transactions par localisation géographique et segment de clientèle
  • Identifier les heures de pointe des transactions et les schémas de paiement saisonniers
  • Évaluer l'impact des nouvelles fonctionnalités ou intégrations de paiement
  • Exporter des rapports personnalisés pour une analyse plus approfondie et une revue interne
  • Compare the cost of acceptance between interchange-plus and blended pricing models.
  • Review historical settlement timelines to improve corporate cash flow and treasury projections.
  • Assess the effectiveness of fraud tools by monitoring false positive and conversion rates.
  • Audit technical performance of network tokens compared to standard card-on-file transactions.
See Analyse des paiements on your acquiring stack.

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

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Questions about Analyse des paiements

Comment l'analyse des paiements aide-t-elle à réduire les refus ?

L'analyse des paiements identifie les schémas de raisons de refus, permettant aux marchands d'ajuster les règles de routage ou de résoudre des problèmes spécifiques avec les acquéreurs ou les paramètres de fraude.

La compréhension de ces tendances permet une optimisation proactive pour des taux d'approbation plus élevés.

Puis-je comparer les performances entre différents acquéreurs ?

Oui, la plateforme permet une comparaison directe des taux d'approbation, des raisons de refus et des coûts de traitement entre tous vos acquéreurs intégrés. Cela aide à optimiser votre configuration d'acquisition pour de meilleures performances et une meilleure rentabilité.

Les données sont-elles en temps réel ou historiques ?

L'analyse des paiements fournit des données à la fois en temps réel pour des informations immédiates et des données historiques pour l'analyse des tendances et la planification stratégique à long terme.

Cette double approche prend en charge à la fois les ajustements opérationnels et la prise de décision stratégique.

Can payment analytics help in detecting and preventing friendly fraud?

Yes, by tracking dispute and chargeback data alongside customer behaviour, merchants can identify patterns associated with friendly fraud.

For example, if certain products or customer segments show a high frequency of 'product not received' claims despite confirmed delivery data, the risk team can adjust their rules.

Analytics also allow for the monitoring of retrieval requests, providing an early indication that a customer may be questioning a transaction before it escalates to a formal chargeback.

How does 3D Secure 2.0 impact transaction data and reporting?

Under PSD2 and SCA regulations, moving to 3DS2 introduces new data points. Analytics can show the split between frictionless flows, where the customer is authenticated without interaction, and challenge flows.

Monitoring these metrics is vital as a high challenge rate can lead to abandonment. Analytics help ensure that the exemption flags used by the merchant are being respected by the issuer, avoiding unnecessary friction for the cardholder.

What role does BIN analysis play in payment reporting?

The Bank Identification Number (BIN) is the first six to eight digits of a card number. Analysing this data allows a merchant to identify the card brand, the issuing bank, the country of origin, and the card category (e.

g. , prepaid, debit, credit, or corporate).

This information is critical for understanding why certain transactions might have higher fees or lower authorisation rates, and it can be used to inform routing decisions or to apply surcharges where permitted.

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