eightthirty
07-11-2006, 12:33 PM
Millions of Americans who once worried about test scores in their school days are now discovering a new score is following them around as adults -- the credit score.
It's estimated by credit industry experts that roughly 75 percent of the U.S. population that is eligible for credit (i.e. 18 years or older), have a credit rating score at any given time that indicates the individual's credit worthiness to take out a loan, a mortgage, etc.
The credit score system has been around for 45 years and is credited with making lending less discriminatory and credit more widely available. But while the meticulous collecting and sharing of consumers' credit histories has dramatically improved the efficiency of U.S. credit markets, critics say the credit bureau's information -- affecting everything from who insures you to who hires you -- may contain substantive errors and is increasingly being used and shared among companies without consumers' knowledge.
The vast majority of Americans don't know their credit score -- or even how to find out what it is. A July 2003 survey commissioned by the Consumer Federation of America found that only 2 percent of Americans said they knew their credit score. And only 3 percent could, unprompted, name the three main credit bureaus.
Here's a primer on what consumers should know.
» The Credit Reporting System
http://www.bankruptcylab.com/../art/blank.gif Americans' financial habits are monitored by one or more of the three national credit reporting agencies (CRAs): Equifax (http://www.equifax.com/), Experian (http://www.experian.com/), and TransUnion (http://www.transunion.com/). Every month, financial institutions or creditors send the CRAs credit files which include consumers' account numbers, their types of credit (e.g. mortgages, credit card loans, automobile loans), their outstanding balances, collection actions taken against them, and their bill-payment histories.
More than 4.5 billion pieces of data are entered each month into credit records, which in turn become part of the more than 1 billion consumer credit reports issued annually in the United States.
These credit records also include information supplied by the consumer (primarily from filling out credit application forms), as well as public records such as bankruptcies, court judgments, overdue child support, foreclosures and liens. By law, credit bureaus can list negative information for seven years. Many national and international creditors, such as banks and department stores, are registered with all three CRAs. Lenders supply the CRAs with information about their customers and in turn have access to credit records.
http://www.bankruptcylab.com/../art/blank.gif » Your Own Credit Score
The most important item in a consumer's financial resumé today is his or her credit score. The one most widely used is the "FICO" (Fair Isaac Corporation) score, the standard measure for credit risk. This score was developed in 1989 as a joint project by Equifax and the Minneapolis-based Fair Isaac Corporation (http://www.fairisaac.com/), which provides financial services to the world's 10 largest banks, as well as companies in more than 60 countries.
The scoring system awards points for each factor that can help predict the likelihood of a person repaying debts on time. The total number of points -- the credit score -- predicts how creditworthy a person is. The FICO score, a three-digit number between 300 and 850, is a snapshot of a person's financial standing at a particular point in time. The higher a credit score, the more likely a person is to be approved for loans and receive favorable interest rates.
http://www.bankruptcylab.com/../art/chart_fico.gif [FICO scores are calculated from a lot of different credit data in your credit report. The percentages in the chart reflect how important each of the categories is in determining your score. These percentages are based on the importance of the five categories for the general population. For particular groups - for example, people who have not been using credit long - the importance of these categories may be somewhat different.]
The best credit rates are given to people with scores above 770, but a score of 700 -- out of a possible 850 -- is considered good, according to Fair Isaac. The median score is about 725. Generic interest rate calculations on the myfico.com (http://www.myfico.com/) Web site show that when the score dips below the mid-600s, those consumers generally qualify only for "subprime" lending and the interest rate starts to climb significantly.
Fair Isaac Corporation does not maintain a database of FICO scores, as many assume. Instead, when a lender requests a credit rating, the score is generated by one of the national credit bureaus from which the lender has requested the report. Fair Isaac provides the credit bureaus with software containing an algorithm -- a mathematical formula derived from random samples of consumers' credit information -- and that is what is used to calculate the score.
Currently, you can obtain for a fee, your FICO score at myfico.com.
All US Consumers are currently eligible under the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACTA) and the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). FACTA, which was enacted on December 4, 2003, amends the FCRA and requires, among other things, that the three nationwide consumer reporting agencies (CRAs) - Equifax, Experian, and Trans Union - provide to consumers, upon request, a free copy of their credit report once every 12 months.
Visit www.annualcreditreport.com (http://www.annualcreditreport.com) to request your free credit report or request the report by phone or mail:
Toll-free number: 877-322-8228
Mailing address: Annual Credit Report Request Service, P.O. Box 105281, Atlanta, GA 30348-5281
Requests by phone or mail will be processed within 15 days of receipt.
And read the Federal Trade Commission's final ruling on the issue of providing U.S. citizens with free access to their credit reports at: http://www.ftc.gov/os/2004/06/040624factafreeannualfrn.pdf
It's estimated by credit industry experts that roughly 75 percent of the U.S. population that is eligible for credit (i.e. 18 years or older), have a credit rating score at any given time that indicates the individual's credit worthiness to take out a loan, a mortgage, etc.
The credit score system has been around for 45 years and is credited with making lending less discriminatory and credit more widely available. But while the meticulous collecting and sharing of consumers' credit histories has dramatically improved the efficiency of U.S. credit markets, critics say the credit bureau's information -- affecting everything from who insures you to who hires you -- may contain substantive errors and is increasingly being used and shared among companies without consumers' knowledge.
The vast majority of Americans don't know their credit score -- or even how to find out what it is. A July 2003 survey commissioned by the Consumer Federation of America found that only 2 percent of Americans said they knew their credit score. And only 3 percent could, unprompted, name the three main credit bureaus.
Here's a primer on what consumers should know.
» The Credit Reporting System
http://www.bankruptcylab.com/../art/blank.gif Americans' financial habits are monitored by one or more of the three national credit reporting agencies (CRAs): Equifax (http://www.equifax.com/), Experian (http://www.experian.com/), and TransUnion (http://www.transunion.com/). Every month, financial institutions or creditors send the CRAs credit files which include consumers' account numbers, their types of credit (e.g. mortgages, credit card loans, automobile loans), their outstanding balances, collection actions taken against them, and their bill-payment histories.
More than 4.5 billion pieces of data are entered each month into credit records, which in turn become part of the more than 1 billion consumer credit reports issued annually in the United States.
These credit records also include information supplied by the consumer (primarily from filling out credit application forms), as well as public records such as bankruptcies, court judgments, overdue child support, foreclosures and liens. By law, credit bureaus can list negative information for seven years. Many national and international creditors, such as banks and department stores, are registered with all three CRAs. Lenders supply the CRAs with information about their customers and in turn have access to credit records.
http://www.bankruptcylab.com/../art/blank.gif » Your Own Credit Score
The most important item in a consumer's financial resumé today is his or her credit score. The one most widely used is the "FICO" (Fair Isaac Corporation) score, the standard measure for credit risk. This score was developed in 1989 as a joint project by Equifax and the Minneapolis-based Fair Isaac Corporation (http://www.fairisaac.com/), which provides financial services to the world's 10 largest banks, as well as companies in more than 60 countries.
The scoring system awards points for each factor that can help predict the likelihood of a person repaying debts on time. The total number of points -- the credit score -- predicts how creditworthy a person is. The FICO score, a three-digit number between 300 and 850, is a snapshot of a person's financial standing at a particular point in time. The higher a credit score, the more likely a person is to be approved for loans and receive favorable interest rates.
http://www.bankruptcylab.com/../art/chart_fico.gif [FICO scores are calculated from a lot of different credit data in your credit report. The percentages in the chart reflect how important each of the categories is in determining your score. These percentages are based on the importance of the five categories for the general population. For particular groups - for example, people who have not been using credit long - the importance of these categories may be somewhat different.]
The best credit rates are given to people with scores above 770, but a score of 700 -- out of a possible 850 -- is considered good, according to Fair Isaac. The median score is about 725. Generic interest rate calculations on the myfico.com (http://www.myfico.com/) Web site show that when the score dips below the mid-600s, those consumers generally qualify only for "subprime" lending and the interest rate starts to climb significantly.
Fair Isaac Corporation does not maintain a database of FICO scores, as many assume. Instead, when a lender requests a credit rating, the score is generated by one of the national credit bureaus from which the lender has requested the report. Fair Isaac provides the credit bureaus with software containing an algorithm -- a mathematical formula derived from random samples of consumers' credit information -- and that is what is used to calculate the score.
Currently, you can obtain for a fee, your FICO score at myfico.com.
All US Consumers are currently eligible under the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACTA) and the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). FACTA, which was enacted on December 4, 2003, amends the FCRA and requires, among other things, that the three nationwide consumer reporting agencies (CRAs) - Equifax, Experian, and Trans Union - provide to consumers, upon request, a free copy of their credit report once every 12 months.
Visit www.annualcreditreport.com (http://www.annualcreditreport.com) to request your free credit report or request the report by phone or mail:
Toll-free number: 877-322-8228
Mailing address: Annual Credit Report Request Service, P.O. Box 105281, Atlanta, GA 30348-5281
Requests by phone or mail will be processed within 15 days of receipt.
And read the Federal Trade Commission's final ruling on the issue of providing U.S. citizens with free access to their credit reports at: http://www.ftc.gov/os/2004/06/040624factafreeannualfrn.pdf