What Black Friday Means for your Credit

Black_Friday_Target

In just a few weeks we’ll all be bombarded with pre-Black Friday ads and promotions as we flip through the channels or tune into your favorite radio station. But before you put together your list and get ready to face the shopping anarchy on November 27th, there are some shopping precautions you may want to take.

In this week’s credit blog, we’re going to look at the facts, the deals, and the safest shopping methods for your 2015 Black Friday.

The Facts

First, let’s get some of the Black Friday facts straight. In 2013 $12.9 Billion dollars was spent on retail sales on Black Friday. $1.964 Billion was spent on online retail. In 2012, $59 billion dollars was spent on Black Friday weekend (Thurs-Sun). That averages out to about $423 per individual shopper. The average holiday shopper will spend around $804 for the entire holiday season. According to these statistics, more than half of holiday shopping is done on Black Friday.

The “Deals”

Are those “Outrageous Doorbusters” really THAT outrageous? On Black Friday you will see doorbuster sales in every store you go. You may even camp out in line to secure your item. Just remember retailers aren’t here to give you a deal. Retailers are here to make money and turn a profit. Once you’re in the store and you get that doorbuster, prepare to be pounded with a plethora of add on items that seem to fit so well with you “deal”. Once you walk out of the store chances are you’ve spent more than you’ve planned and bought things you didn’t need.

Opening Store Cards

You’ve stood in line for an hour waiting to get into the store. You’ve shopped for an hour, and now you’ve been standing in line for another hour waiting to check out. Suddenly a new lane opens up and the cashier says “Anyone opening up a new store card can come to this line.” Sounds tempting doesn’t it? They may even offer you another 20% off on your purchase on top of the line cut.

While you time and possibly money will be saved, your credit score will take a hit. Taking on new debt and a new inquiry will cause your credit score to drop. On top of that, most consumers will pay off the debt in increments. This will cause you to pay interest on the purchase. Now that great deal you just got doesn’t happen to be a deal at all and you may wind up paying even more than you thought.

No Payments Until 1 Year

Retailers will try to get you to buy large purchases with the promise of delayed payments. “Buy now and you won’t pay until next year!” What they won’t tell you is once your payments begin, you’ll still have to pay interest for that entire year you weren’t paying. Suddenly, this doesn’t sound too great. If you do fall victim to this scheme, make sure you pay off the entire purchase BEFORE your payments start. This way you can avoid all those pesky interest fees.

Shop Safely

Last year Target fell victim to a massive security data breach. Millions of Black Friday shoppers had credit card info and valuable personal information stolen. Data breaches seem to be showing up more and more in today’s tech filled world. If you fall victim to one, your credit could suffer for the rest of your life.

The simplest solution to this: Pay in cash! If you are going out shopping this Black Friday, it might be a good idea to swing by the bank and take your shopping budget with you. This way you can protect yourself against cyber criminals and stay within your budget as well.

 

For more do’s and dont’s of credit, consult our credit blog here!

For more information on data breaches, check out Data Breaches: Why you Should Worry

5 Ways to Build Your Credit Score

When it comes to improving your credit score, consumers are left in the dust. Most individuals have basic knowledge of what can destroy their credit. Few know the steps to increase their credit score. Here’s 5 tips that will help build your credit score to where you would like it to be.

1. Positive Trade Lines of Credit

Without positive trade lines of credit, you cannot have a good credit score. Your credit score is determined upon the following factors: payment history, amounts owed, length of credit history, new credit, and types of credit used. The more positive trade lines of credit you have, the better. Does that mean you should go out and apply for loads of credit? Not exactly.

FICO chart to build your credit

The more credit you apply for, the more inquiries you will acquire on your credit report. The more inquiries on your credit report, the lower your score. Also, anytime you take on new debt, your scores will initially see a drop. It is not until a few months of on time payments that you will start to see them increase again.

Individuals with no or few trade lines of positive credit may not be able to get approved for new credit. If this is the case, you may want to seek out secured credit cards. Secured credit cards are credit cards that the consumer backs themselves. These cards report to all three credit bureaus and will generate positive credit after a few months of use. Secured credit cards are a great tool to help build your credit.

If you already have trade lines of credit, it is critical to make sure they are paid on time. This includes: student loans, credit cards, car payments, and mortgages, among others. (We’ll get more into this further in the article)

2. Become an Authorized User

Everyone knows that one person who has immaculate credit. Maybe it’s a close family member or one of your best friends. They never miss a payment and are never denied. If it is alright with your friend or relative, it would be beneficial for you to become an authorized user on one of their accounts.

Becoming an authorized user will build your credit as it will show a positive trade line on your credit report. You can essentially “piggy back” your way to better credit with the help of a friend or relative’s account.

Becoming an authorized user on the account will not require you to get your own card or make any payments. Your name will just be attached to the account. Just make sure your have the OK from your friend/relative. However, if they miss a payment and the account becomes derogatory, it will negatively affect your credit as well.

3. Pay Down Accounts

Keeping your credit utilization down will allow your scores to go up. It is recommended to keep your credit utilization rates as low as possible (but not at zero). The closer you come to the high balance on your account, the more your scores will decline. If an individual with maxed out credit cards has no derogatory accounts, his score will negatively reflect that.

Build your credit utilization

A recent study shows the highest credit scores belong to individuals with 1-10% credit utilization. It is also worth noticing that consumers with 0% credit have an average score lower than consumers with 31-40%. The idea is to use your credit cards, but pay them off and use them minimally. Also take into consideration that the more debt on your account, the more interest you will wind up paying over time.

4. Avoid Derogatory Accounts

Derogatory accounts are negatively reporting items on your credit report. These accounts devastate your credit score. Most derogatory accounts will start off as just one late payment. If not handled correctly, late payments can change to charge offs or collections.

It is essential to your credit to always pay on time! Set reminders or use autopay features to ensure that you are always current. Just one derogatory account will drop your credit score dramatically, making it difficult to build your credit score.

5. Seek Credit Repair

If your credit report is flooded with derogatory accounts or incorrect information, you need to contact Better Qualified. Even if satisfied or current, derogatory accounts can remain on your credit report for 7 to 10 years. Better Qualified will attack derogatory accounts and correct false information. It’s what we do! Give us a call at (888) 533-8138, or fill out the form to the right for a free credit analysis. Even after our dispting process, Better Qualified will continue to advise you towards building your credit score.

 

Educate yourself a little more and read our credit blog. Be sure to check out the don’ts of credit with the 7 Mistakes That Will Destroy Your Credit

 

7 Mistakes That Will Destroy Your Credit

Building your credit score takes time, patience, and loads of hard work. Wrecking it, on the other hand, is a cakewalk.

Cardkey

With just a couple errors you can see your credit score plummet into the danger zone, where it can remain for YEARS if not taken care of. Once your score drops, you can be stuck in credit score limbo. The sad thing is, most consumers aren’t even aware of the damaging effects their decisions can have on their score…. until now!

Here are 7 key mistakes to avoid when it comes to your credit score:

1. Making Late Payments

This one seems obvious. Just 1 or 2 late payments can be devastating to your credit score. According to a recent Credit Karma Analysis, consumers with excellent scores (750 or higher) pay 99.9% on time. Consumers with fair scores (640 to 699) still pay 99% on time. With that being said, about a third of Americans have a debt that is in a collection.

What can you do?

With today’s fast pace world, it’s easy for a bill to slip your mind here and there. Be sure to set reminders on your phone or sign up for an autopay feature to make sure you’re always current with your payments.

2. Applying for Tons of Credit/Constantly Pulling Scores

Just last month I was at the car dealership looking for a new vehicle. I had barely even looked at any cars and already the dealer was asking for my social security number to pull my credit score. He told me the banks would “fight over each other” to give me the best rate for my new ride. While this might sound intriguing to most people, to me it sounds like my credit score is going to be run 30 times. Needless to say, I didn’t let them run my credit and kept shopping until I found the car I desired.

Consumers don’t realize their scores will drop around 3-5 points every time a hard inquiry hits your credit report. This includes applying for loans, obtaining new lines of credit, and checking credit scores. Let’s take my trip to the Chevy dealer for example, and let’s say they had 5 banks run my credit. Boom! Each of my scores could have just dropped 25 points!(and that’s if I only went to one dealership).

When you have a bunch of hard inquiries on your credit, it will bring your scores down and appear you are desperate for credit. This is something lenders and creditors do not like to see. On top of that, any new credit lines will initially decrease your score. Only after several months of on time payments will it bounce back and start generating positive credit.

What can you do?

Limit your inquiries. Don’t create a hard pull for your credit when you don’t need it! Most places like car dealerships want to run your credit as soon as you walk through the door just to get you approved. Shop around first and make sure you know what you want at the price you desire(This goes for homes too). Once you find something that fits your needs, then pull your score. Make sure they only pull it a couple times. Remember they want your business. Most places will still work with you when you refuse to let them shogun your credit. Try to have only 1 to 2 hard inquiries a year.

3. Closing Old Credit Cards

When it comes to credit cards, the longer your history, the better. Some consumers tend to treat their old credit cards like old furniture. “We’ve had it for years, it’s brought us lots of good times, but it’s old. We want that shiny new account!” Closing old credit cards just because of their age will instantly decrease your score. In fact, 15% of your credit score is calculated based upon the length of your credit history. The more accounts that get closed, the more credit utilization is dependent on your open accounts.

What can you do?

Instead of closing old credit cards, leave them be until they become inactive. It’s best to cancel newer credit cards rather than old ones. As said above, older credit cards carry more weight when it comes to calculating your credit score.Fico Chart

4. Maxing Out Credit Cards

Your credit card activity is a big factor when it comes to being approved by lenders. Based upon activity on your report, lenders can tell how well a consumer uses credit. When your accounts are reporting as maxed out lenders tend to get a little weary.

The more money you charge on your card, the less likely it is you will be paying the debt. When a card becomes maxed out it can take an eternity to pay it off. You can find yourself be paying boatloads of dough just on interest. This is when most consumers find themselves missing payments. After a few missed payments and the account may get sold to a collection (which with be devastating to your credit).

What Can You Do?

Avoid maxing out your credit cards. Maxing out the card will have you swimming in debt and interest. Instead, try to keep the utilization rate between 1%-30% of the high credit limit on the card. If you pay on time and keep a balance in this zone, your credit scores will likely improve. This shows that you know how to correctly use a credit card and will reflect on your score. Always keep this in mind so you can avoid those impulse buys and save money. You can also pay more than once a month to show that you are determined to drop that balance. After you’ve had the account for some time (and with positive history), request a credit increase. This will make it easier for you to stay within that 1%-30% margin, and keep you away from that high credit limit.

5. Making Minimum Payments

Plain and simple, making minimum payments will show the credit bureaus you take too long to pay off debt. You’ll also be paying a mountain of interest. So although the payments are smaller, you’ll actually be spending more.

What Can You Do?

Simple, pay off more than minimum payments. Set monthly payments to double the minimum if you can afford it. When you find yourself with extra cash, throw it towards your payments. The sooner you pay the account off, the sooner you can cross off this expense and put more money into your wallet.

6. Charging Major Expenses on Cards for “Rewards”

We’ve all seen it. Almost every major credit card has “rewards”. Charge x amount to the card and get a bunch of airline miles or points towards redeeming a certain “prize.” It’s so easy to take their bait when they’re waving a “free” vacation in front of your face. The truth is, whatever “benefit” you get from these cards will be offset by the amount of interest you will be paying.

What Can You Do?

Don’t take the bait unless you already have the money to pay it off immediately. You’re better off saving up and paying for a vacation, and it’ll probably cost less in the process.

7. Not Monitoring Credit

The last and one of the most important factors. 1 in 4 consumers have errors on their credit reports!  With identity theft being the number one crime in America, it is insane to not sign up for a credit monitoring service. (if you haven’t read last weeks blog on data breaches, you can do so here)

What Can You Do?

Perform routine checkups on your credit. Get free credit reports online to make sure there is no fraudulent activity occurring on your account. www.AnnualCreditReport.com supplies you with one free FICO credit report per year. Check your credit from consumer sites like www.CreditKarma.com and www.CreditSesame.com.

cutting Card
Be sure to take the next step and enroll in a credit monitoring program. Fill out the form below and have Better Qualified go over a credit report with you. We’ll enroll you into our own credit monitoring program with BQ911.com. Plans start as low as $9 a month. Get protected and take control of your credit before it’s too late!

Fill Out The Form for a Free Credit Consultation



 

Data Breaches: Why You Should Worry

It’s your day off, and you’re out picking up some groceries at WalMart. After the cashier is finished ringing you up,  you pull out your AMEX and swipe to pay without thinking twice.

 On the way home you stop by Target to pick up that rug that you’ve been eyeing up for the past few months. (You’ve been told it would really tie the room together.) This time you swipe your VISA bank card to pay.

 What you’re not thinking about is how WalMart and Target have your personal information tucked away in their databases, potentially putting your personal information at risk in the event of a data breach.

Internet Heists Are Real

 You’ve seen the movies where a group of gangsters team up to knock off a jewelry store, only to escape in their getaway car just seconds before police can apprehend them. Data breaches are not much different. The gangsters are hackers, the diamonds are your personal information, and the getaway car is the internet. In a technology driven world, it is becoming easier every day for hackers and Identity thieves to get their hands on your personal information.

Last December we received a rude awakening when it was made public that Target had a massive data breach, potentially compromising more than 40 million customer’s credit and debit accounts. Since then, there have been major data breaches almost every month. Those data breaches include: Michaels Stores, The Home Depot, Sally Beauty Supply, eBay, AOL, P.F. Chang’s, and most recently JP Morgan Chase. In 2013 alone,  there were more than 600 data breaches, costing the USA over $100 billion dollars.

Protect Yourself Against Data Breaches

By now you’re probably thinking “This seems hopeless, What can I do to protect myself?”. Nearly one fifth of Americans suffer from data breach attacks. All is not lost, there ARE ways to protect yourself!

  1. Check Your Accounts Often: The sooner you realize there’s a problem, the better. It is ideal to check all your credit and bank accounts daily. Make sure everything is in order and there’s no suspicious activity.
  2. Change pins/passwords: By constantly changing your pins and passwords, you are staying one step ahead of hackers. If a data breach occurs and they have your outdated password or pin, they will not be able to access your accounts.
  3. Use Gift Cards/Prepaid Cards: Another great way to stay ahead of the game is to use gift cards or prepaid credit cards. This way you can swipe away without having to worry about any personal information being compromised.
  4. Use Cash: Cash is king! We lost that long ago. Cash is untraceable and accepted almost everywhere.
  5. Call Better Qualified: We can help protect you against Identity Theft. Go to www.BQ911.com and sign up for our credit monitoring service, or call us at (888) 533-8138. We’ll go over your credit report with you and make sure you don’t have any fraudulent activity on it.

For more information on data breaches, watch me on CBS here:

Student Loans and your Credit Score

With the exit of Labor Day, summer has officially come to a close. For hordes of young Americans, this means one thing: back to school. Back to late night cramming, ramen dinners, and hopelessly worrying about how student loan debt will annihilate your credit score come post-graduation. But before you start to panic, let’s take a look at some of the facts about student loans and your credit score.

Credit History 101

First, lets take a look at how FICO actually works. What exactly is your credit score? Where does it come from? Back in the 1950s Fair Issac and Company (FICO) introduced an algorithm to decide how risky it is to lend money to an individual. They based the algorithm on five categories: Payment History (35%), Amounts Owed (35%), Length of Credit History (15%), Types of Credit in Use (10%), and New Credit (10%).

The three major reporting credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion), use FICO developed software along with you personal information to generate a credit score for you. The scores can range between 300 to 850, and are always changing based upon your credit history.

Student Loans DON’T Automatically Drop your Credit Score

A common misconception about student loans is that they will automatically destroy your credit score. This is not true. In fact, approximately 7% of consumers with at least $50,000 of student loan debt have FICO scores in the 800s. That’s correct, the 800s! Remember, 35% of your FICO score is based off of payment history accounts (See above). As long as you are making on time payments, student loans can actually help generate a good (if not great) credit score.

Managing Your Student Loans

For most people, it’s just a matter of “how to manage student loans correctly”. One would think paying them off ASAP would be best for your score (it’s not). Paying off student loans too quickly can actually have negative impact on your credit score. On the flip side, you don’t want to pay the minimum every month either, doing so will imply that you are taking too much time to pay off the debt. You want to find the sweet spot in between to make sure your debt will not hurt your credit.

It’s always good to minimize your student loans the best you can. You can do this by taking AP courses in high school to knock out the basic classes. Applying for scholarships, attending community college, and putting money away into a savings account can all help minimize your student loans before you apply.

Avoid Missing Payments

ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS pay on time! Just a single late payment can linger on your credit report and haunt you for YEARS. In the cell phone age we live in today, it is ideal to set reminders on your phone’s calendar or email. Make sure you don’t default on your loans. Defaulting can lead to garnishments, which will obliterate your credit report. Times can be tough and if your payments are taking too big of a toll on you, try reaching out to the lender to negotiate.

Know What’s on Your Report

Finally, it’s always good to know what’s on your credit report before you apply for the loan and after you graduate. The bureaus make mistakes too and you need to make sure everything is reporting correctly. You can always obtain a free credit report online and ask the experts at Better Qualified to help give an overview of your credit report.

Student Loans

 

Target Breach: How to Lose Friends and Alienate Customers

Target’s response to its recent breach is a good lesson in what not to do after a company experiences a security incident. Other corporations facing the growing risk of data breaches can learn from the many missteps, if not foolish errors, taken by one of the nation’s largest retailers.

The company’s first mistake was bad timing. Hackers stole confidential data of up to 110 million Target customers who shopped at stores from Nov. 27 to Dec. 15. But instead of proactively announcing the breach, Target got scooped by respected security blogger Brian Krebs.
Krebs broke the story on Dec. 18. On the same day, Target CEO Gregg Steinhafel issued the statement that “we are pleased with Target’s holiday performance.” The company confirmed the breach only after the U.S. Secret Service and American Express released their own investigations.

From there, Target made two more egregious errors that sent the wrong message to customers and may jeopardize its financial security.

The first was an email that notified customers of the breach and offered them one year of free credit monitoring through Experian. Here are the problems with that approach:

• The email included a suspicious sender with the address: TargetNews@target.bfi0.com instead of @target.com. Plus, it directed users to click on a link for additional details on the monitoring. The bizarre “bfi0” in the subdomain suggested nothing official to differentiate it from phishing and malware-laden emails sent by scammers following such corporate data breaches; scammers often make subtle tweaks.

• Target should have known that customers are conditioned to not click on links in email messages, especially after a headline-grabbing security breach and with a questionable sender address.

• Many people who received that email—myself included—didn’t actually shop at Target during the compromised dates, which made the email appear even more like a scam.

• Because the notice was delivered via email and probably due to the fact that it originated from a suspicious email address the original message ended up in junk mail boxes. I only looked at the Target email because I was looking for a good example of a phishing email following a data breach.

But the gravest error by Target was to offer free credit monitoring. It may seem counterintuitive, but it has become a routine mistake companies make in the aftermath of a security breach that involves payment cards rather than Social Security numbers (SSNs). Though offering credit monitoring is usually an attempt to reassure consumers, this may instead give them a false sense of security and lead to more consumer blowback. Here’s why:

• Credit monitoring won’t help people impacted by a payment card breach. Credit monitoring is a service that is limited to looking at changes to your credit file. It looks for new creditors, credit accounts and key account changes, such as an address change, that have been reported to Experian, Equifax, or TransUnion. What credit monitoring does not do is monitor your existing credit accounts. So, if a Target customer enrolls in the credit monitoring solution provided by Target, that customer would not be alerted if an existing account—in this case credit cards and payment cards—was used fraudulently. The only way for Target customers to find out if an existing credit or payment card is misused is by monitoring their payment card accounts for suspicous activity. All suspicious activity should immediately be reported to their payment card issuer. While banks and card companies are aware of this incident, some customers of smaller financial institutions may think they are safe when they enroll in the credit monitoring only to find that their card has been maxed out at the end of the month.

• Were SSNs stolen? By most accounts, including Target’s, no SSN’s were exposed in this breach. Based on the nature of the breach and the very limited cicumstances that Target would have needed to collect SSNs, it is unlikley that the exposure of SSNs was part of the fact pattern here. This is important because without the exposure of a SSN, the creation of new credit lines and accounts, which creditors report to the credit bureaus and which then show up on an individual’s credit file(s), is incredible unlikely. So again, it begs the question: Why was a tool that doesn’t monitor the actual risk here offered when no SSNs were exposed and it simply won’t help? (See point 1)

• Even if credit monitoring were effective or called for here, one year of free credit monitoring often isn’t long enough. Even if SSNs were exposed in this breach, which they weren’t, organized thefts of information by criminal rings, as is likely the case here, create exposures that surpass one year. Organized rings often will know that a breach of information was disclosed. They are aware that people may place 90-day fraud alerts or be enrolled in a year of monitoring as a result. So what do they do? Well, they simply hold on to the information for a year. Since there is no expiration date on an SSN (until you expire, that is) customers may initially breathe a bit easier with a year of credit monitoring. But they shouldn’t assume that stolen information can’t be abused afterward. Identity thieves can simply sit on collected data until 2015 or later.

• The sign-up process for the monitoring offered is not consumer friendly by nature. Some providers of credit monitoring have a one-step process: You simply enroll and once you have been authenticated and signed up, your monitoring is active and no further steps are required. But the Target/Experian process involves a two-step enrollment process. So once you have been authenticated and signed up, you are then sent a verification email to enroll. Enrollment is only completed and active when you click on a link in the verification email, which often either a) winds up in a Spam folder and/or b) is forgotten by the consumer. The e-mail is then never clicked for activation and the consumer is left thinking they are enrolled in monitoring when, in fact, they are not. Regulators do not like this two-step sign-on proces for the very reason that so many consumers do not, by no fault of their own, end up getting enrolled. In fact even the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau director Richard Cordray mentioned this in a recent appearance on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. While he was referencing monitoring and other services paid for by the consumer, he said, “What they don’t tell you is maybe there’s an extra step or two to actually get the product. Months later when you go to seek the protection, they say, ‘Oh you didn’t have it.’ That’s wrong. That’s totally unfair.” And when it comes to consumer protection by the Federal Trade Commission, CFPB, or even state offices of the Attorney General, the last thing you want to hear is the word “unfair” in relation to treatment of a consumer.

The bottom line: Credit monitoring can be useful when it’s an ongoing service and not presented as an easy fix to a problem it will not solve, which is the case with the Target breach. It shouldn’t be used as a replacement for careful consumer vigilance. This means regularly looking over your existing accounts and cards for suspicious activity and charges in addition to monitoring your actual credit files.

While Target management was likely following the advice of its counsel, business units, compliance folks and potentially even regulators, this breach is a good opportunity for companies large and small to rethink their ‘boilerplate’ approach to breach remediation in exchange for solutions and advice to consumers that fit the actual risks. It is also a good lesson in how communicate with the public and impacted consumers, or in the least, a lesson in how not to communicate and respond to a breach.

Eduard Goodman is chief privacy officer at IDentity Theft 911.
– See more at: http://www.idt911blog.com/2014/02/target-breach-how-to-lose-friends-and-alienate-customers/#sthash.kWn4cMFp.dpuf