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  Credit Score - The FICO Score

 



Credit Rewards Introduction

Increasing competition for customers caused different credit organization to issue cards with various offers for rewards programs, offering cash back and points that can be exchanged for goods and services such as air miles, hotel stays or car rental. With all obvious advantages reward credit cards may not always be the best option among the variety of credit cards. Read more...

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A credit score is a number that represents an estimate of an individual's financial creditworthiness as calculated by a statistical model. A credit score attempts to quantify the likelihood that a prospective borrower will fail to repay a loan or other credit obligation satisfactorily. A credit score is based on a subset of the information in an individual's credit report. Lenders such as banks and credit card companies use credit scores to manage the risk posed by lending money to consumers. Examples of such uses include determining who qualifies for a loan, assigning an interest rate, assigning credit limits, and managing accounts that are already open (for example, treatment of accounts that are in default). The use of credit or identity scoring prior to authorizing access or granting credit is an implementation of a trusted system.



Beating Credit Card Debt

Your credit card debt can be paid off even in the most difficult cases. And you can shift your life of financial independence and stability. It does take some time, knowledge and patience. Knowledge of how the credit card system works, strict and in-time payments, spendings schedule, and hard work, possibly in the form of an extra job, will be rewarded with the ability to put your credit card debt behind you. Read more...

The FICO score

FICO , an acronym for Fair Isaac Corporation (traded publicly under the symbol FIC) often refers to the best-known credit score in the United States which is calculated using mathematical formulae developed by this company. This score is one of the most important factors in obtaining credit in the United States . For institutions that use scores as a factor in their lending decisions, scores below certain numbers (typically set by each lender's risk management department) may result in denial of credit, or credit being offered at a higher interest rate.

The three major credit reporting agencies in the United States , (Equifax, Experian and Trans Union) calculate their own versions of this score, which goes by different trademark names at each credit bureau: Beacon at Equifax; Empirica at Trans Union, and Fair Isaac Risk Score at Experian. These versions, while all developed for the agencies by Fair Isaac, are believed to differ slightly. Fair Isaac also offers multiple variations on their popular score, for example "Classic" FICO or "Next Gen" FICO.

It is worth mentioning that each of these credit reporting agencies also have developed their own separate proprietary versions of a credit score intended to compete with Fair Isaac's score. Although not the "gold standard", these scores (for example Trans Union 's "TransRisk" score or Experian's "ScoreX" score) are much less expensive than the FICO score; and often out-perform the FICO score at its intended purpose which is to determine the risk level of a prospective borrower. The cost savings of a non-FICO score are very tempting to banks and credit card companies who need an accurate risk assessment on millions of accounts every year. Only time will tell if these cheaper and possibly superior alternative scores will displace Fair Isaac from its dominant position in the U.S. market for credit scores.

Nearly all large banks also build and use their own proprietary statistical models for credit scoring purposes, often in conjunction with the FICO score or other outside scores.



Bankruptcy Introduction

Bankruptcy means the legal process that allows individual or business to discharge or reorganize some, or even all, of their debts. Discharging your debts means that you no longer have to pay your creditors anything. Bankruptcy provides a plan that allows a debtor, who is unable to pay his debts, to resolve it through the division of his assets. Another aim of bankruptcy is to allow some debtors to free themselves from the financial obligations, after their assets are distributed, even if their debts have not been covered in full. Bankruptcy is for anyone who cannot pay back all debts even through loosing all individual property. Read more...

The statistical models that generate credit scores are subject to federal regulations. The Federal Reserve Board's Regulation B, which implements the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, expressly prohibits a credit scoring model from considering any prohibited basis such as race, color, religion, national origin, sex, or marital status. Regulation B also stipulates that credit scoring models must be empirically derived and statistically sound. Furthermore, if an adverse action is taken as a result of the credit score (e.g. an individual's application for credit is denied) then specific reasons for the denial must be provided to the individual. A statement that the individual "failed to score high enough" is insufficient; the reasons must be specific.

There exist several generally accepted algorithms for extracting the primary contributing factors to a low credit score. One or more of these algorithms is typically used to supply a list of reasons when a loan applicant has been denied credit, in order to satisfy the Regulation B requirement that specific reasons are disclosed. Some consumers feel these adverse action reasons are somewhat disingenuous, as the only determining factor for credit denials is a numeric score -- the "reasons" are summed up only for the consumer.

As mentioned above, each credit bureau also has one or more of its own generic credit scores, available both to consumers on their websites and to lenders. For ease of use, these scores tend to be mathematically scaled so that they fall in the same general range as the FICO score. These scores are used by some businesses to assess creditworthiness (otherwise they would not be offered), however the FICO score remains the dominant score in use today.

Credit Scores available online

FICO scores are available online, on websites such as https://www.membershipme.com/ offers scores from all three bureaus. This is significantly more than potential creditors pay for the same information.

Makeup of the FICO score

credit cards - credit score (factors)

FICO scores and its variants are designed to measure the risk of default, by taking into account various factors. Although the exact formula for calculating the FICO score is a closely guarded secret, Fair Isaac has disclosed the following components and the approximate weighted contribution of each:



Credit Bureaus

Credit Bureaus access information about your payments right from the companies you are applying for credit card credit with, or from state agencies (the legal court system). To create your credit report they use this historical information about some of your financial transactions. This consumer report reveals complete information about you, including where you live and work, whether your bills were paid on time and if you`ve ever been sued, arrested or filed for bankruptcy. Read more...

  • 35% punctuality of payment in the past
  • 30% capacity used, i.e., ratio of current revolving debt (e.g. credit card balances) to total available revolving credit (e.g. credit limits)
  • 15% length of credit history
  • 10% types of credit used (installment, revolving, consumer finance)
  • 10% recent search for credit and/or amount of credit obtained recently

The above percentages provide very limited guidance in understanding a credit score. For example, the 10% of the score allocated to "types of credit used" is undefined, leaving consumers unaware what type of credit mix to pursue. "Length of credit history" is also a murky concept; it consists of multiple factors, two being the oldest account open, the average length of time an account has been open.

Further, Fair Isaac does not use the same "scorecard" for everyone. The scorecards are segmented so that there are over 100 different actual scoring models that are applied to different individuals based on different ranges of input values (some scorecard segmentations include: age, depth of credit history, etc.). The implications of this segmentation are that while the approximate weighted contribution above may be an average across all scorecards, individuals will receive different scores or weightings based on the scorecard segmentation that they fall into.

Current income and employment history do not influence the FICO score, but they are also weighed when applying for credit. For instance, an unemployed individual will not usually be approved for a home mortgage, regardless of his or her FICO score.

There are other special factors which can weigh on the FICO score.

  • Any monies owed because of a court judgement, tax lien, or similar carry an extra negative penalty, especially when recent.
  • Having above a certain number of consumer finance company credit accounts also carries a negative weight (critics say that this causes a vicious cycle, locking people into continuing to use consumer finance companies).
  • The number of recent credit checks also can weigh down the score, although the credit agencies allow for credit checks made within a certain window of time to not aggregate, so as to allow the consumer to shop around.


Identity Theft Claimed Seven Million Victims

Practically all victims of identity theft don`t reveal this kind of crime for a year or even more. That may happen only after something goes really wrong, because smart thieves used to shield their actions by giving different address when they apply for credit card in a victim`s name. Typically, federal laws cover all losses to consumers, but even in common cases, it takes more than two years to clear victim`s names. Read more...

Range of scores

FICO scores range from about 300 to 850 and exhibit a left-skewed distribution with a US median around 725. A score above 720 is considered to be "good credit," and a score below 600 is considered to be poor.

Free annual credit reports

As a result of the FACT Act (Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act), each U.S. resident is entitled to one free copy of their credit report from each credit reporting agency each year. For those with internet access, this information is available at the U.S. government-operated http://www.annualcreditreport.com . However, this report does not contain credit scores. Mostly useless consumer "credit scores", not used by any businesses, are offered for purchase at the time these reports are generated. Many other commercial websites offer free credit reports; usually these sites attempt to steer consumers to pay services.

Non-traditional uses of credit scores

In September 2004, a Texas utility company began setting individualized electricity prices based on credit score.

Recently, some of the agencies which generate credit scores have also been generating insurance scores, which insurance companies then use to rate the quality of potential customers.



15 Tips To Protect Against Identity and Credit Card Theft

Try to do everything to protect your SSN (social security number). The SSN is a key to your good credit reputation and banking accounts and is the general aim of financial criminals. Read more...

 
 
 
 
 
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