Showing posts with label Credit Score. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Credit Score. Show all posts

Friday, October 5, 2018

FICO Scores Hit Record High

FICO Scores Hit Record High

Bajak and Associates


Lesson learned?  Whether they saw their credit decimated by the housing crisis and the Great Recession or merely watched loan standards tightened beyond their ability to qualify, Americans seem to have taken to heart the importance of their credit scores.  The result, FICO says, is that consumer credit scores have reached a new high, an average of 704 points.

How Credit History Impacts Your Credit

Kenneth Harney, in an article for the Washington Post's Writers' Group, quotes FICO Vice President of Scores and Analytics Ethan Dornhelm that Americans are "making more judicious use of credit." This means higher scores on the FICO model that weights them not only in terms of on-time payments but on the length of the credit history, the amount and type of credit a consumer has available, and how much of that available credit is being used.

The 704 point average score, on scale that runs from 300 to 850, is a substantial improvement from the average of 686 in 2009.  Harney points out that a lot of the improvement, 5 points, has been added in the last two years, one of the fastest two-year runups in FICO history.

A score of 704 is considered good, meaning a consumer is a fairly safe bet for performing on a loan as agreed, and usually gets that borrower a fairly good interest rates and other terms.  The best deals are usually reserved for those with scores of 750 or better. However, while FICO scores for most categories of borrowers are rising, Harney points out that the averages for people taking out mortgages are sliding, down from 745 in the years after the crash to about 733.  This, of course, is not a reflection on borrowers but rather an indication that mortgage lenders are relaxing their standards, accepting slightly lower scores in their underwriting.

There are variations in average scores by age. Persons 18 to 29, a range that includes some Millennials and most adults of Generation Z, have an average score of 659.  They will typically have not only credit histories but thinner credit files, many any negative report will weigh more heavily on the score. The average score for people ages 40 to 49 is 690, and for those 60 and older, it's 747.

There are a lot of factors that help account for the overall higher scores.  First, fewer people have truly awful ones.   Those with scores under 500 now constitute 4.2 percent of the total, down from 7.3 percent in 2009 and the share with scores from 500 to 549 has dropped from 8.7 percent to 6.8 percent.

On the other end of the spectrum, 22 percent of those with a FICO number are considered "super-scorers," with a score over 800.  Forty-two percent have scores between 750 and 850.

Some help may have come from a change in reporting by the three major credit bureaus that we noted a few weeks ago. So-called collection reports, defaulted accounts that are sold to a third-party, have been handled differently since the first of this year.  They must be associated with a contract or agreement to pay and marked as paid when they are.  Medical accounts have to be at least 180 days past due before being reported and all collection accounts must have sufficient information to link them to that consumer.  The number of credit files with collection accounts were reported by the Federal Reserve as dropping from 12 percent last year to 9 percent at present.

Dornhelm says that lessons from the housing crisis are clearly affecting scores and consumer behavior.  He thinks more Americans have access to and better understand their credit scores and how to manage them, including managing the amount of their debt.


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Source: Jann Swanson, Mortgage News Daily

Friday, June 23, 2017

12M Consumers May Get Credit-Score Boost

12M Consumers May Get Credit-Score Boost

Have a Bad Credit Score? It Could Soon Get Better—but Is It Enough to Buy a Home?

The three largest credit-reporting agencies will begin cleaning up credit reports in July, which could help lift the credit scores of about 12 million consumers.
In a survey by the Federal Trade Commission, one in four people say they spot errors in their credit reports, most commonly concerning tax liens and civil judgments. Up to half of tax lien data on a credit report is inaccurate or incomplete, says Eric J. Ellman, senior vice president for public policy and legal affairs at the Consumer Data Industry Association. Civil judgments—which means a court has ruled a person owes money—also tend to be ripe with errors or omissions on a credit report, experts say. Consumers can dispute the errors, but the process can be cumbersome.
Beginning July 1, Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion will automatically exclude tax lien and civil judgment records from credit reports if they are missing a person’s name, address, Social Security number, or date of birth. Claims that do contain this key information, however, will remain on credit reports.
Six percent of Americans with a credit score—or 12 million— likely will see their score go up once the new policy takes effect. About 11 million could see an increase of about 20 points. “A lot of people who have liens or judgments against them already have crummy credit to begin with,” says Keith Gumbinger, vice president at HSH.com, a mortgage resource website. “A 10- or 20-point increase isn’t going to make a difference for a lot of borrowers.”
But borrowers who are on the cusp of qualifying for a home loan may stand to benefit the most. For example, Gumbinger says, a would-be buyer with a credit score of 570 who receives a 10-point uptick may be able to qualify for an FHA loan. FHA loans require a minimum 580 credit score.

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