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Two great
articles on Credit Scores and The Myths of Credit Scoring.
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THE POWER OF CREDIT
SCORES
Ever wonder why you can go online & be approved
for credit within 60 seconds? Or get pre-qualified for a car without
anyone even asking you how much money you make? The answer is credit
scoring.
Your credit score is a number generated by a
mathematical algorithm based on information in your credit report,
compared to information on tens of millions of other people. The
resulting number is a highly accurate prediction of how likely you
are to pay your bills.
If it sounds arcane & unimportant, you couldn’t
be more wrong. Credit scores are used extensively, & if you’ve
gotten a mortgage, a car loan, a credit card or auto insurance, the
rate you received was directly related to your credit score. The
higher the number, the better you look to lenders. People with the
highest scores get the lowest interest rates. Scoring Categories
The scale runs from 300 to 850. The vast majority
of people will have scores between 600 and 800. A score of 720 or
higher will get you the most favorable interest rates on a mortgage,
according to data from Fair Isaac Corp., a California-based company
that developed the credit score. What’s the big deal?
The difference in the interest rates offered to a
person with a score of 520 & a person with a 720 score is 3.45
percentage points, according to Fair Issac’s website. On a $100,000,
30-year mortgage, that difference would cost more than $85,000 extra
in interest charges, according to Bankrate.com’s mortgage
calculator. The difference in the monthly payment alone would be
about $235. Key factors of you score
Just what goes into the score? Pretty much
everything in you credit report, with different kinds of information
carrying differing weights, says Fair Isaac consumer affairs manager
Craig Watts. The model looks at more than 20 factors in five
categories.
1. How you pay your bills
(35 percent of the score): The most
important factor is how you’ve paid your bills in the past, placing
the most emphasis on recent activity. Paying all your bills on time
is good. Paying them late on a consistent basis is bad. Having
accounts that were sent to collections is worse. Declaring
bankruptcy is worst.
2. Amount of money you owe & the amount of
available credit (30 percent): The second most important area
is your outstanding debt – how much money you owe on credit cards,
car loans, mortgages, home equity lines, etc. Also considered is the
total amount of credit you have available. If you have 10 credit
cards that each have $10,000 credit limits, that’s $100,000 of
available credit. Statistically, people who have a lot of credit
available tend to use it, which makes them a less attractive credit
risk. Carrying a lot of debt doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll have a
lower score. It doesn’t hurt as much as carrying close to the
maximum. People who consistently max out their balances are
perceived as riskier. People who never use their credit don’t have a
track history. People with the highest scores use credit sparingly &
keep their balances low.
3. Length of credit history (15 percent):
The third factor is the length of your credit history. The longer
you’ve had credit – particularly if it’s with the same credit
issuers – the more points you get.
4. Mix of credit (10 percent): The best
scores will have a mix of both revolving credit, such as credit
cards, & installment credit, such as mortgages & car loans.
Statistically, consumers with a richer variety of experiences are
better credit risks. They know how to handle money.
5. New credit applications
(10 percent): The final category is your
interest in new credit – how many credit applications you’re filling
out. The model compensates for people who are rate shopping for the
best mortgage or car loan rates. The only time shopping really hurts
you score is when you have previous recent credit stumbles, such as
late payments or bills sent to collections. What doesn’t count in a score? Age, race, job or length of employment at your job, income, education, marital status, whether or not you’ve been turned down for credit, length of time at your current address, whether you own a home or rent.
Credit scores are not perfect
Looking to buy a home, condo or homesite? Make
sure you know what will truly hurt and help your case with lenders
-- and don't fall for the misinformation mortgage lenders can
spread. There's a lot of misinformation being propagated about what does and doesn’t hurt your credit score, and much of it is coming from sources who should know better: mortgage lenders.
No, no, no. For the umpteenth time: Closing
accounts can never help your credit score, and may hurt it.
Every time I write this, I get more e-mail from
people who say their mortgage lenders told them exactly the
opposite. It’s true that having too many open accounts can hurt your
score. But once you’ve opened the accounts, you’ve done the damage.
You can’t repair it by shutting the account, and you may actually
make things worse. The credit score looks at the difference between your available credit and what you’re using. Shut down accounts, and your total available credit shrinks, making your balances loom larger, which typically hurts your score.
Rather than closing accounts, pay down your credit card debt. That’s something that actually can and usually will improve your score.
Unfortunately, I heard this one from a mortgage broker who is otherwise pretty smart. He was confused about which type of inquiries hurt your score and which don’t. Applying for new credit is generally what hurts your score. Ordering a copy of your own credit report or credit score doesn’t count. Those mass inquiries made by credit card lenders, who are trying to decide whether to send you an offer for a pre-approved card, also aren’t going to hurt you, either -- unless you actually take them up on their offers.
If you want to minimize the damage from credit
inquiries, make sure that when you shop for a mortgage you do so in
a fairly short period of time. The FICO score treats multiple
inquiries in a 14-day period as just one inquiry and ignores all
inquiries made within 30 days prior to the day the score is
computed. For most people, one inquiry will generally knock no more than 5 points off a score (and scores typically run from 300 to 850, so that’s not a big percentage).
The current FICO formula ignores any reference to
credit counseling that may be in your file. That’s been true for the
last three years, after researchers at Fair, Isaac, the company that
created the FICO scoring system, noticed that people getting credit
counseling didn’t default on their debts any more often than anyone
else. Your ability to get a loan could still be hurt by credit counseling, however. Your current lenders may report you as late, because you’re not paying what you originally owed or because your credit counselor isn’t sending your payments in on time. Late payments do hurt your credit score.
Your FICO isn’t the only
score you need to check
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