Your
Credit And FICO

Back in the 1960’s, a company
called Fair Isaac devised a unique system to determine the
credit worthiness of people who apply for loans. Through
a complicated mathematical computation (too complicated for
this author!), they were able to study a person’s credit
history and assign them a number that would represent how
likely it was that they would be able to repay a loan they were
applying for.
Fair Isaac
sparked a revolution by pioneering credit risk scoring for the
financial services industry. This new approach to lending
enabled financial institutions to improve their business
performance and expand consumers’ access to credit. Today Fair
Isaac’s FICO score is widely recognized as the industry
standard for lenders.
The
condenses a borrower’s credit history
into a single number based on past credit history. Fair, Isaac
& Co. and the credit bureaus do not reveal how these scores
are computed. The Federal Trade Commission has ruled this to be
acceptable. The real truth is that even if we did know,
we probably couldn’t calculate it ourselves anyway.
Unless, of course, you happen to be a mathematical
genius!
Credit scores are
calculated by using scoring models and mathematical tables that
assign points for different pieces of information which best
predict future credit performance. Developing these models
involves studying how thousands, even millions, of people have
used credit.
Score-model
developers find predictive factors in the data that have proven
to indicate future credit performance. Models can be developed
from different sources of data. Credit-bureau models are
developed from information in consumer credit-bureau
reports.
Credit scores
analyze a borrower's credit history considering numerous
factors such as:
-
Late
payments
-
The
amount of time credit has been
established
-
The
amount of credit used versus the amount of credit
available
-
Length
of time at present residence
-
Negative
credit information such as bankruptcies,
charge-offs, collections, etc.
There are really
three FICO scores computed by data provided by each of the
three bureaus––Experian, Trans Union and Equifax. Some lenders
use one of these three scores, while other lenders may just use
the middle score.
Fair Isaac has
become so important in the financial industry that their word
on your credit has become basically the final word. Why
would banks and creditors place so much credibility into one
company? The answer is simply because of their proven
track record.
The FICO score
has proven to be not only an accurate and amazingly consistent
way of showing a person’s credit reliability, but it has also
saved companies millions of dollars in credit write-offs due to
bad lending decisions. A study of loans that were granted
and/or denied simply due to the FICO scores shows that Fair
Isaac has been right over 80 percent of the
time.
Of course, that
required some chance taking on the part of many creditors, but
they were willing to take the risk. After all, this was a
ground-breaking thing determining credit worthiness through a
simple three-digit number. Many companies jumped “on the
bandwagon” just to show that Fair Isaac had the right
idea.
Fast forward to
the twenty-first century and you will find that FICO has become
the definitive when it comes to financial and credit
matters. They have proven their reliability and their
worthiness just through trial and error.
Unfortunately,
the problem is that finding your FICO score isn’t as easy as
you think. The truth is that it’s not even shown on your
credit report like you would think. In fact, for years
and years, your credit score was a securely kept secret number
that was elusive to the average person.
Click the following link to get
your
|