FICO Score vs VANTAGE Score

There is some confusion going on lately about the credit score range and about the credit scoring in general. We believe this is caused by the recent introduction of the VantageScore in addition to the FICO score that we are all used to as a ‘classic’ or common credit score. Let us outline the main differences between the two to clear up this confusion.

VantageScore range vs. FICO – score range

VantageScore range: 501-990
FICO range: 300-850

As you can see the two scores overlap but the range is quite different. This is where, we believe, the rumors about the existence of FICO scores over 900 are coming from. When presented with their credit scores by the lender, most people don’t pay attention on which brand that score is as most are not even aware that there is more than one.

VantageScore vs. FICO – letter grading

VantageScore: A to F
FICO: none

VantageScore number is associated with a letter grade. FICO doesn’t use letter grading.

VantageScore vs. FICO – score usage

Based on what we’re seeing when working with major lenders, only FICO score is used when obtaining Mortgage Loans. On some occasions, we’ve seen VantageScore being used to qualify consumers for Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) and Car Loans. So as of now, in order to get better interest rate when getting a new mortgage, concentrate on repairing your FICO score only.

VantageScore vs. FICO – consumer advantages

From what we understand by studying the White Papers, the VantageScore is more ‘relaxed’ than FICO in general. In our opinion, it is designed to better accommodate certain groups of consumers that FICO algorithm most likely will score very low. Indeed, the VantageScore should provide higher credit ratings to these consumers with thin credit history file:

– young adults just starting their careers
– recently divorced or widowed individuals with little or no credit in their own name
– newly arrived immigrants
– previous bankrupts
– people who shun the traditional banking system by choice

Using FICO, these would have made to be sub-prime mortgage candidates! In any case, simply based on the range comparison, your VantageScore will always be higher than your FICO score.

VantageScore vs. FICO – credit scoring model

With FICO, the three credit bureaus, Equifax, Experian and TransUnion, each uses its own Scoring Model when calculating the score, and applies it to its own data.
With VantageScore, the three credit bureaus use a collectively developed Scoring Model … but still apply it to each own data. “While there will still be some score variation with VantageScore due to differences in the data provided to the individual CRCs (credit reporting companies) for each consumer file, the gaps among the results generated via VantageScore are diminished because the credit scoring model itself and the underlying credit characteristics in the algorithm are the same at all three CRCs.”, as company explains.

VantageScore Score Consistency

Will there now be just one consistent score per consumer across the three Credit Agencies?
“No. While the three credit agencies, Equifax, Experian and TransUnion, can now generate scores using the same underlying credit scoring model, differences in the actual scores are to be expected because each agency maintains its own consumer credit files, which may vary. Consumers’ files at each credit agency can vary because credit grantors can choose which agency they provide consumer payment data.”, as according to company.

How Credit Is Calculated

· 35% Payment history
· 35% Amounts owed
· 15% Length of credit history
· 10% New credit
· 10% Type of credit

– Stay away from small department store cards; they have a low limit and tend to bring down your overall score.
– You must use credit in order for it to report to the bureaus.
– If you do not use a card it may be cancelled by the bank – this WILL hurt your score.
– Never use more than ½ of your available credit line.
– Ask for line increases.

How Do They Calculate a Credit Score?
Different credit bureaus calculate your Fico or Beacon Score slightly different. Each credit bureau makes the score their own and gives it a different name. Equifax calls the score a Beacon Score, Experian calls it a Fair Isaac Score and Transunion calls it an Empirica Score. Every time something changes on your bureau, your score will change. A lot of information is used to calculate your score; however, there is no formula that has ever been given to the public. Lenders will look at your score along with your income and the kind of loan you are applying for to determine interest rates.

Improving Your Credit Score
Here are some suggestions on how you can begin making some changes.
· Pay your bills on time. This sounds simple, but this is the biggest thing you can do to keep your score high. Delinquent payments and collections have a major negative impact on your score.
· Keep your balances low on unsecured revolving debt like credit cards. High balances still owed can affect a score.
· The amount of unused credit is an important factor in calculating your score. You should only apply for credit you need.
· Make sure the information on your credit report is correct. If it is not, dispute it with the Bureau Company or lender directly.
· Removing negative accounts on your credit report has the biggest impact on your score.

Credit Repair – Some Common Questions And A Few Myths

How long does information remain on my report?
Generally negative things can stay on your credit for 7 to 10 years. But you can hire a professional credit repair service to do it for you.

Credit bureaus report credit information for a period of seven (7) years. Some states have special provisions for collections and paid liens. Chapter 7, Chapter 11 and Chapter 13 Bankruptcies are each reported for 10 years and the date is measured from the date of the filing.

Does paying off my bills repair my credit?
The credit reporting system doesn’t work that way. When you pay an old debt, the negative credit listing doesn’t disappear. In fact, it re-ages and the seven year clock begins again with that negative listing. The most ironic thing is that a paid, current negative listing is not any better than an unpaid negative listing.

How does a Credit Bureau make money?
A credit bureau is a commercial business. It makes money by selling your credit report to others. A person with bad credit means more business for them as such a person applies for credit about ten (10) times more than a person with good credit.

Why do Credit Bureaus not want me to use a Credit Repair Company?
The credit bureaus will tell you that it is easier and less expensive to do it yourself. While it may be true that you have the right to repair your credit yourself, many individuals do not have the time, experience and organizational savvy necessary to deal with bureaucracies. You must also spend hours of study to gain a working knowledge of the consumer laws available to you. Many who start repairing their credit turn to a credit repair company after months of work.

What can you take off of my credit bureau report? Aren’t these items impossible to remove?
We can take off unpaid collections, charge-offs, repossessions, bankruptcies, medical bills, foreclosures, tax liens, civil liens, judgments, student loans, credit card debt, inquiries, slow pays, old addresses and all incorrect names.

How does TRW Credit Group do this legally?
Disputing your credit report is your right. Credit restoration is as legal as pleading “not guilty” in a court of law. The Federal Trade Commission and The Consumer Credit Protection Act have enacted 100’s of regulations that the reporting and collection agencies have to adhere to in order for an item to remain on credit reports. The Fair Credit Reporting Act gives you the legal right to dispute items on your credit reports that may be inaccurate, out of date, incomplete or unverifiable.

We challenge the credit agencies how they posted the information. Are they in compliance with all of these laws? And more often than not, they are not in compliance and we have them remove the negative information.

How much does a low score cost you?
Having a low score can cost you thousands of dollars. The higher score you have, the lower interest rate you will have. The lower interest rate that you have… the less money you will pay!
$100,000 mortgage over 30 years

Home Loans
••       Category                       Interest Rate       Payment      Total Cost After 30 Yrs
••       Prime                               6.50%               $632            $228,625
••       Alternative A                    7.50%               $699            $251,715
••       Subprime                         10%                  $877            $315,925

Ten Facts About the History of FICO

A three digit number that tells the story of your past and holds the potential of your future? Nope, it’s not your weight or your cholesterol. And hopefully it’s not the score of your latest golf round, yikes! Of course, it’s a credit score—one of the very first things you want to know about a potential borrower. So you always know your customers’ credit scores, but do you know anything about where they came from?

 

While the exact method behind calculating these revealing little numbers remains a mystery, here are a few fun facts you may not have known about the history of one of the most powerful numbers in our lives.

Ten Facts You Didn’t Know About FICO:

1. FICO actually stands for the Fair Isaac Corporation, a company started in 1956 by an engineer and a mathematician.
2. It wasn’t until 1958 that FICO created its first credit scoring system for American Investments.
3. Later that year, FICO sent out 50 letters to America’s biggest lenders asking to explain their credit scoring system. They got one response.
4. One of the best investments founders Bill Fair and Earl Isaac ever made? The $400 each of them contributed to start the Fair Isaac Corporation.
5. Remember Montgomery Wards? In the early 1960’s FICO built their first credit scoring system.
6. In 1995, nearly 40 years after FICO began; Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac recommended the use of FICO scores to evaluate mortgage loans.
7. In 2010 FICO introduced their national FICO certification for mortgage lenders with AllRegs.
8. FICO also boasts that it has more than half of the world’s top 100 banks as their clients.
9. Even more impressive, nine of the top ten Fortune 500 companies are FICO clients.

And finally…

10. Just how prevalent are FICO scores in the mortgage industry? Today, FICO scores are used in 3 out of 4 US mortgage originations.

Missed Mortgage Payments Hurt Credit Scores

Missed mortgage payments, short sales, and foreclosures can all drastically bring down a credit score.

Lenders use credit scores to measure how well a person handles debt. Credit scores range from 300 to 850, with 650 and below considered poor credit. A mortgage makes up a big part of a person’s credit score and often is the most important part of a person’s credit profile.

And just missing a single mortgage payment by 30 days can ruin a credit score, say FICO and VantageScore, which have studied the impact mortgages can have on credit scores. For borrowers, that can be nearly as destructive as a foreclosure to a credit score, according to the companies.

On the other hand, loan modifications, which is when lenders approve new loan terms, have a “very, very minimal” impact to credit scores, possibly dropping the borrower’s score by 10 or 15 points, Sarah Davies, the senior vice president for analytics at VantageScore, told The New York Times.

A good credit score is important not just for financing home purchases, but employers increasingly check credit as well as landlords when seeking rentals. Also, poor credit scores can also mean higher costs on car loans and credit cards. Check out this site for the ways of putting aside some money for a long-term goal.

How a Credit Score Is Affected

FICO evaluated three various scenarios of mortgage holders — a borrower with a great credit score (780), a borrower with good credit (720), and a poor credit borrower (680) — in a study it conducted last month. Here’s the impact FICO found:

▪ 30 days late on a mortgage payment: The 780 credit score borrower has her credit score fall to 670-690. The 720 credit score borrower has his fall to 630-650. The 680 credit score borrower falls to 600-620.
▪ Short sale, deed in lieu of foreclosure, or settlement, assuming the balance has been wiped out: The 780 credit score borrower falls to 655-675; the 720 credit score falls to 605-625; and the 680 credit score drops to 610-630.
▪ Foreclosure, or short sale with a deficiency balance owed: The 780 credit score drops to 620-640; the 720 credit score falls to 570-590; and the 680 credit score decreases to 575-595.

Source: “Fallout From a Poor Credit Score,” The New York Times (April 24, 2011)

Credit Cards To Rebuild A Low Credit Score

How Secured Cards Can Help The Financial Lives Of Consumers In The Future

Credit cards that are available and can be used to help consumers rebuild their low credit score come in either unsecured or secured lines of credit, but for consumers who are having trouble in their financial life and, as a result, may be in a bad position, secured credit cards are an option that these individuals turn to for the help they need to repair any damage that may have been done due to either poor financial practices or unavoidable financial distress.

However, there are still some consumers who are unsure of how they can use a secured credit card to help their financial life and gain benefits from doing so in the future. Obviously, bad credit repair is a process that consumers must take seriously, devote a great deal of time to and, for those who have most benefited from secured credit card use, gaining smart financial practices that can be used throughout a consumer’s lifetime will, again, pay dividends in the future.

Secured credit cards can be helpful in the life of a consumer down the road as future financial needs and aspects of a consumer’s personal financial life, like the availability of alternative forms of credit or interest rates will all depend on their credit score. Typically, consumers that have been successful at using secured credit cards have researched these options from reputable financial institutions, offered collateral through the form of a deposit in a savings account, and use this credit card to make affordable purchases each month and promptly repay them, which is only one piece of the bad credit repair puzzle but can be greatly helpful in setting consumers on the right path to a better credit score.

According to MyFICO.com, It’s important to note that repairing bad credit is a bit like losing weight: It takes time and there is no quick way to fix a credit score. In fact, out of all of the ways to improve a credit score, quick-fix efforts are the most likely to backfire.” Also, consumers are prompted to check their credit report, make sure they pay their bills on time, which includes debts outside of their secured credit card purchases as well, and simply work to erase any debts that may be owed, as a consumer cannot truly and efficiently begin the bad credit repair process while they owe to various creditors.

Yet, one reason that consumers are prompted to use secured credit cards and other bad credit repair methods is because it can be beneficial later in life when a consumer attempts to either purchase a home, get a car loan, or when other areas of a individual’s financial life require a credit check, a better score will obviously lead to lower interest rates in many cases and, as a result, more affordable costs. While, again, secured credit cards are beneficial as they can be a line of credit accessible to consumers with a bad credit score, they are only one aspect of the bad credit repair process and, even these types of credit which, when a reputable financial institution is the lender report to the big credit bureaus, can cause damage if not properly used.

However, consumers attempting to begin the bad credit repair process and who may be in need of a line of credit to do so can benefit from proper secured credit card use and, as a result, can set themselves on a more prosperous financial path that will lead to benefits seen in other areas of the consumer’s personal finances, if proper habits are developed during the repair process.

Building Business Credit

Bad credit can keep you from buying a home, financing your education, and even from getting a job. This is why it’s so important to build a good credit history. So if you’d like help obtaining finance to make the most of temporary full expensing for your business, get in touch with Network Finance today and learn about it.

Starting with your first credit card, everything you do that involves credit becomes part of your credit history. To have a good credit history, you have to use credit responsibly. But what counts as using credit responsibly?

1. Charge only what you can afford to pay

When you get into the habit of charging only what you can afford, it lets future lenders and creditors know that you are a responsible borrower. You’ll find it easier to borrow money and get new credit when you show that you know how to only borrow what you can pay back. Not only that, only charging what you can afford helps you avoid excessive debt.

2. Use only a small amount of the credit you have

Maxing out your credit cards – or even coming close – is one of the most irresponsible ways of using credit. Chances are that you can’t afford to pay off a maxed out credit card balance. Lenders know that borrowers who max out their cards often have difficulty repaying what they’ve borrowed. Staying below 50% of your credit limit is wise, below 30% is best.

3. Start with only one credit card

Many first-time credit card users accumulate a collection of credit cards within their first few years of using credit. Don’t do this. The more credit you have, the more you’ll end up using. Learn how to be responsible with credit before you apply for additional credit cards.

4. Pay your balance in full and on time

If you’re only charging what you can afford to pay, this won’t be a problem. Paying off your balance each month shows that you’re capable of paying bills, something creditors and lenders want to see. Since a large part of your credit score includes timeliness of your payments, paying your balances on time improves your credit.

5. Carry a balance the right way

Having a credit card balance isn’t bad as long as you do it the right way. Make more than the minimum payment each month to pay off your balance as quickly as possible. Avoid making late credit card payments and continue to keep your balance at a reasonable level. If you follow these principles, carrying a balance won’t hurt your credit.