Posts Tagged ‘FICO score’

FINALLY! The Industry and the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Address the Problem of Widely Varying Credit Scores.

Wednesday, August 3rd, 2011

Boy, is this study overdue!

The new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will undertake a study, with information provided by the credit bureaus, to address the problem of wide variations of credit scores that have been noted by so many consumers.

This short article describes the study to be done.

My only problem with the article is that it seems just a bit…pansy. Here’s my opinion of the real situation: the article below mentions the fact that the bureaus weight and process the information differently for different end-users of the credit scores. All true. What the article does not address is the fact that this rule holds true for the “consumer disclosures” (industry phrase for consumer credit report) which the bureaus provide to consumers. So, the calculations (industry term is “algorithms”, which is a mathematical term which basically means “formula”) for the consumer reports are different than the calculations for the various lenders, potential employers, insurers, etc. who may pull the report in connection with a loan, job or insurance application.

In other words, consumers consistently get the “white-washed” credit score. Potential lenders, etc. can and often do get something quite different.

Here’s the article, from Yahoo Finance. I hope you enjoy it.

Personal finance experts extol the benefits of periodically reviewing your credit report and score. In fact, credit reports are so important that federal law requires the three major credit reporting agencies to make credit reports available for free (see annualcreditreport.com for more details). While federal law generally does not require credit reporting agencies to give consumers their credit scores, there are many ways to get your score for free. And it’s consumers’ access to their credit score that has created a problem.
Consumers can purchase their credit score in several ways. They can get access to their credit score from one of the three major credit reporting agencies when they get their credit reports.
Consumers can also get their credit scores as part of purchasing either credit monitoring or identity theft protection services. And here’s the problem–the credit score consumers receive is not the same credit score lenders receive when evaluating an application for credit.
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act addressed this discrepancy. The Act requires the newly formed Consumer Protection Financial Bureau to “conduct a study on the nature, range, and size of variations between the credit scores sold to creditors and those sold to consumers by consumer reporting agencies that compile and maintain files on consumers on a nationwide basis? and whether such variations disadvantage consumers.”
Last month, the CPFB released its first report on the differences between credit scores sold to creditors and scores sold to consumers. And the conclusion was eye-opening: “When a consumer purchases a score from a [credit reporting agency], it is likely that the credit score that the consumer receives will not be the same score as that purchased and used by a lender to whom the consumer applies for a loan.”
There are several potential reasons why scores may vary:
1. Educational Scores: The scores consumers purchase are often what the CPFB calls “educational scores.” While these scores may provide consumers with some indication of how potential lenders will view their credit worthiness, educational scores vary from the industry standard FICO score.
2. Industry Scores: Even if a consumer purchases his or her FICO credit score, it may vary from industry specific FICO scores. Not all FICO scores are the same, and certain industries (e.g., auto and home loans) use variations of the FICO scoring formula designed specifically for those industries.
3. Custom Scores: As if educational and industry scores were not confusing enough, some of the larger industries use custom formulas specific to their business. These scores typically start with a FICO score, and then make adjustments to the score based on a proprietary scoring formula known only to that company.
4. Credit Reporting Agency Variations: The three major credit reporting agencies generally have different information on file for each individual in their databases. As a result, even if the same scoring formula were applied to the data on file, the credit reporting agencies would typically generate different credit scores based on the information they have on file. As a result, a consumer purchased credit score would likely vary from what a lender sees if the scores are generated from different credit reporting agencies.
So just how big is the difference in scores? It’s that questions that the CPFB is studying. In conjunction with the credit reporting agencies, the CPFB is conducting a study to determine the scope of the variances between credit scores provided to consumers and those provided to lenders.
To undertake this study, each of the three national credit reporting agencies will provide data on 200,000 consumers to the CPFB. The data will not include any information that could identify the consumer files selected for the study. According to the CPFB report, the “purpose of the data analysis will be to determine with greater precision and understanding the nature, range, and size of variations between the credit scores most frequently sold to creditors and those most frequently sold to consumers.”
For now, however, consumers will have to accept that there is no “true” credit score. In fact, given educational scores, industry scores, custom scores, and variances in credit history among the three national credit reporting agencies, most consumers likely have many credit scores. And while educational scores can provide insight into the credit worthiness of a consumer, it’s best to take the score with a healthy grain of salt.

Credit Card Companies Abuse Authorized Users of Credit Cards with Derogatory Credit Reporting

Monday, April 18th, 2011

This is a link to a YouTube video I recently did, explaining that many credit card companies are now going after authorized users of credit cards, not just the cardholders themselves, to try to collect debts.  Authorized users are not responsible for these debts and derogatory credit-reporting of an authorized user of a credit card is false and inaccurate credit reporting.  Cut & paste the link below into your browser–the vid is only a few minutes long and explains things well.  I hope this helps.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PuPevWmou00&feature=feedwll&list=WL

CEO of Fair Isaac Co. Gives Advice on Credit Scores

Tuesday, January 11th, 2011

Here’s a short article from Yahoo Finance in which the CEO of the Fair Isaac Co. discusses how to improve your credit score, as well as the types of things which can severely damage your score. Enjoy!

Many people have questions about the credit scores generated by Fair, Isaac & Co. Today on Tech Ticker, Aaron Task and I figured we’d take our questions straight to the source: Mark Greene, chief executive of Fair, Isaac & Co., creator and proprietor of the FICO score.

“The FICO score is a measure of a consumer’s financial health and creditworthiness,” Greene says. It’s simply a number, ranging from 300 to 850 — the higher the better. The average FICO score in the U.S. is about 700, and pretty much every bank in the country uses a FICO score when making lending decisions. But while the scores are important, they’re not the be all and end all.

“Scores are meant to be one of several things bankers use in doing what we call sound underwriting,” Greene says. Lenders should also be taking into account borrowers’ background references, their capacity to repay loans, and collateral.

FICO creates the score simply by feeding numbers into its formula: “It’s based on pure, statistical evidence, with no judgment or evaluation or emotion.” The main factors Fair, Isaac takes into consideration are:

• How much total indebtedness a consumer has

• How long they’ve had the debt. “Newer relationships are riskier than things you’ve been paying over a long period of time,” Greene says.

• How much available credit is being used: “If you’re close to the edge on your credit cards, that’s a danger signal.”

• The mix of an applicant’s credit portfolio — is it all credit cards (bad) or a mixture of credit cards, a mortgage, and a car loan (better)?

Greene outlines three key ways through which people can improve their scores. First, pay your bills on time. Second, don’t get close to the edge: “Don’t use more credit than you really need.” And third, don’t apply for new credit unless you absolutely have to.

It may sound obvious, but the easiest way to avoid a sharp downgrade in your FICO score is to stay current on your mortgage and stay solvent. “One thing people should know is that a foreclosed home or personal bankruptcy is the most severe harm that you can do to your credit score,” Greene says. FICO scores can fall by as much as 150 points when borrowers walk away from mortgages or declare bankruptcy; it can take up to seven years to rehabilitate the rating.

Greene helps clear up what may be some misconceptions about the way credit scores are calculated. For example, is it true that every time you apply for a loan it hurts your score?

“It depends on the kind of product you’re shopping for,” says Greene. With car loans, for example, Fair, Isaac understands that people shop for rates. “If you apply for five different car loans within a couple of days, we understand that you’re looking to buy one car at the best rate. And there’s no adverse impact on your credit score.”

On the other hand, when people apply for five different credit cards in the space of a week, they’re usually seeking to open multiple accounts simultaneously. “In those situations we will take a few points off someone’s FICO score because we’re worried they’re sending a signal that they need too much credit.”

Is it also true that people who have little or no debt may find themselves with lower credit scores? That can be the case. “Warren Buffett used to say that he didn’t have a particularly high credit score,” says Greene.

Consumers can obtain their FICO score from the company at myFico.com. Greene also points to a just-launched website, scoreinfo.org, that helps people understand how credit scores factor in this new era of financial regulation. As of January 2011, you have the right to receive your score any time a lender makes certain kinds of decisions — e.g., if you’re denied credit or given credit on less than the most favorable terms a lender offers.

In the U.S. economy today, people may frequently find that a credit score is being used by companies to make decisions that have nothing to do with credit. Credit scores have become part of the application process for jobs, car insurance, and health insurance. Greene notes that the credit score can be useful in non-lending contexts: “People who are good with their finances frequently turn out to be good drivers.” But he reiterates that they were designed for a purely financial use.

IMPORTANT Information on Credit Scoring–the Bureaus Compile the Scores and, in most cases, THEY ARE BASED ON INCOMPLETE OR INACCURATE INFORMATION!

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Hello Readers,

Welcome to the “Dog Days,” so named because the “Dog Star” is high in the nighttime sky and very visible. My grandmother used to tell me that “Dog Days” were so named because dogs went blind with the heat of the late summer, but, upon further inquiry, I regret to report that my dear grandmother was misinformed.

On the subject of “misinformed,” you need to know that credit scoring is actually performed by the bureaus, using “algorithms” supplied by Fair Isaac. For those of us who did not major in mathematics, traditionally an “algorithm” referred to a set process or function through which you could put a number to obtain a result. A very simple algorithm might be “3x,” and then you would supply the specific number. So, if you supplied the number “4″, then the algorithm would give a product of 12.

Obviously, when calculating something by a highly complex computer system, the algorithms become more and more complex.

The essential point that you need to understand, however, is that the “algorithms” are the functions or processes through which your personal credit information is put to create a credit score. However, it is not nearly as scientific as most people believe. Below is a short article reprinted from the New York Times which identify, correctly, the credit bureaus as the ones who create the score, using algorithms licensed from Fair Isaac Co. This really is a classic example of “garbage in, garbage out,” because if the bureaus do not include positive accounts (which happens all the time) or if they include false or inaccurate negative accounts, your credit score takes a big hit.

Enjoy the article and enjoy the “Dog Days”. Here it is.

It is not FICO that comes up with a borrower’s score — it just sells the algorithms. The companies that do are the big three credit bureaus, TransUnion, Equifax and Experian. They gather input about the prospective borrower’s lending history from various lenders like credit card companies and auto dealers, plug them into a formula and derive a credit score.
You would think, given the critical importance of an accurate score, that there would be rules about the information that is submitted to them. There aren’t. Lenders can submit information about your credit history to one of the bureaus, all of them or none of them. Some of them turn over information right away; some take months; some don’t do it at all. Some are sticklers for accuracy; others are sloppy. The point is that the credit score is derived after an information-gathering process that is anything but rigorous.
And finally, they don’t take into account the many, many mistakes that are found in credit reports. My own credit reports, which I looked up for this column, are a case in point. Although my score was O.K. — the low 700s — the reports themselves were full of unpleasant surprises. They listed credit card accounts I didn’t have, and failed to list at least one big one that I did have. Two of them noted that five years ago, I was late on a car payment. (I was?) My daughter’s old Brooklyn address was listed as my former address. According to Experian, I was still writing for Fortune magazine. It said I no longer lived in a house that I just bought two months ago. TransUnion, meanwhile, listed The New York Times as my former employer. Currently, TransUnion said, I am an employee of Rite Aid.
Rite Aid? I know, I know — it is supposed to be up to me to catch their mistakes (which is also why they don’t have to care about the mistakes.) But what I find incredible is that we have imbued credit scores with these magical predictive powers — and yet the companies coming up with the scores can’t even get the borrower’s address and employer right. It would be funny if it didn’t matter so much.