April 20, 2024

Bucks Blog: Nuances of Credit Scoring Still Elude Consumers

Consumers still have many misunderstandings about the details of credit scoring, like the impact of having several inquiries on their report around the same time, according to the Consumer Federation of America.

The federation and VantageScore Solutions, creator of a score that competes with the heavily used FICO score, commissioned a survey to gauge the public’s understanding of credit scoring and the factors that affect a credit report.

A credit score is a three-digit number, based on information in your credit report, that lenders use to help gauge the risk of lending you money. Both FICO, the most widely used scoring model, as well as the newest version of the competing Vantage score, use a range from 300 to 850 — the higher the score, the lower the risk. (Earlier versions of the Vantage score use a range of 501 to 990.)

Just 7 percent of those surveyed knew that making several inquiries about a consumer loan, like a car loan or mortgage, in a short period of time won’t lower a borrower’s credit score. In fact, consumers should check multiple lenders to be sure they are getting the best rate, Stephen Brobeck, the federation’s executive director, said in a telephone briefing about the findings. This misunderstanding may hamper comparison shopping for interest rates, and end up costing consumers extra on their loans, he said.

Generally, multiple similar inquiries within a one- to two-week period are recognized as comparison shopping, so they count as one inquiry and don’t greatly affect your score, he said. Even if the inquiries span more than two weeks, it’s generally worth the effort because the potential savings outweigh a minor impact on your score, he said. “Consumers should not worry that comparison shopping for a loan in a week or two will lower their scores,” he said.

It’s a different situation, however, if you apply for multiple store credit cards in a short period of time. Such inquiries are clearly separate applications for credit, and may be detrimental to your score, said Barrett Burns, president and chief executive of VantageScore Solutions.

Consumers were also uninformed about the impact of co-signing for a student loan for a child.  About a third didn’t know that even one late payment could harm the credit score of the loan’s co-signer.

Consumers were also not aware of the relative cost of having a low credit score. About 80 percent underestimated, for example, the increase in interest costs due to a low credit score when taking out a $20,000, 60-month auto loan. (The correct answer, according to a quiz offered by the federation, is that a person with a low score will pay around $5,000 more than a person with a high score.)

To see how much you know about credit scores, and how to improve them, answer the questions at creditscorequiz.org. The updated quiz covers many of the questions asked in the survey.

The telephone survey of 1,022 adults, including both land lines and cellphones, was conducted by ORC International on April 25 through 28. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3 percentage points. (The survey results can’t be compared with prior years’ surveys because of a change in methodology, including the addition of cellphones to the survey sample.)

The federation offers these tips for maintaining a healthy credit score: pay your bills on time each month; don’t put the maximum amount on your credit cards; pay down debt, rather than just moving it around to new cards; check your credit reports for potential errors. You can check them free at annualcreditreport.com.

Were you aware that comparison shopping for rates won’t harm your credit score?

Article source: http://bucks.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/05/14/nuances-of-credit-scoring-still-elude-consumers/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Your Money: VantageScore Ignores Paid Collections in Setting a Credit Score

But the old bill, which she ultimately paid, had gone to collections and showed up as black mark on her otherwise clean credit report. Ms. Barringer said she found out about it only when she applied for a mortgage last month and got an interest rate that was half a percentage point more than it would otherwise have been. As a result, she is paying an extra $94 a month on the $298,000 loan she took out on a three-bedroom ranch in Dallas, adding up to tens of thousands of dollars over the life of her 30-year fixed-rate mortgage.

And it was all because the doctor didn’t contact Ms. Barringer, an elementary school assistant principal, in a timely manner to let her know that she had mistakenly handed over her dental insurance card.

“I have always paid my bills on time and I put myself through school and have not had any kind of credit issues,” said Ms. Barringer, a single mother of twin 8-year-old boys. “If they want to punish somebody, does it really need to be on your report for seven years if you have not had credit problems and you pay it off? It just seems a little much.”

Credit scores try to capture your financial behavior and distill that identity into one all-powerful number. But that figure doesn’t differentiate between people like Ms. Barringer, whose credit suffered for an innocuous reason, and consumers who can’t keep up with their credit card payments after a wild shopping spree at Best Buy.

But now, at least one major credit score generator, VantageScore Solutions, has decided to ignore collection actions on credit reports — more than half of which are typically tied to medical debts — as long as the collections are paid. The change is not being made out of sympathy for people like Ms. Barringer. Instead, the company found that paid collections are less accurate at predicting future defaults than looking at unpaid collections in combination with a variety of other factors, like the age of consumers’ accounts and the size of their loans.

“There was no intentional decision to exclude a piece of behavior,” said Sarah Davies, senior vice president of analytics, research and product management at VantageScore Solutions, a joint venture of the three major credit reporting companies. “It was just about what was most predictive.”

VantageScore’s findings would also seem to lend support, at least indirectly, to proposed legislation that was reintroduced in Congress this year to require consumer reporting agencies to remove fully paid or settled medical debt information from consumers’ credit reports within 45 days of the debt’s resolution.

That sort of fix would could potentially help some of the estimated seven million people who reported that a billing error prompted a collection agency to contact them in 2012, according to an April study by the Commonwealth Fund, a private foundation that researches health policy issues.

“While it doesn’t seem like an isolated collection account should have a significant impact on your scores, it can,” said Gerri Detweiler, a credit expert with Credit.com who supports the legislation. “We’ve heard from so many people over the years who thought that paying a collection account would help their credit scores. They were shocked to learn it didn’t. It feels terribly unfair to consumers not to feel like they are getting credit for doing the right thing.”

The VantageScore plays second fiddle to the FICO credit score, which is more widely used by lenders and continues to consider all collections valued at more than $100. So it’s unclear how many consumers the formula change will help. And ignoring paid collections does little for the millions of people who cannot afford to pay their medical debts because they are underinsured, uninsured or simply can’t keep up with the growing amounts their health insurance policies require them to pay. Among people who reported having trouble paying their medical bills, 32 million, or 42 percent, said they received a lower credit rating as a result of unpaid medical bills, Commonwealth found. And an estimated 28 million, or 37 percent, said they used all of their savings because of their bills, whereas 20 million, or 27 percent, took on credit card debt.

Even someone with a spotless credit history can fall into a downward spiral with just one hospital stay. “It is easy to point to someone who has run up their debt when it has to do with consumer spending,” said Mark Rukavina, former executive director of the Access Project and now a principal at Community Health Advisors, a Boston-based firm that consults with nonprofit hospitals. “But it is harder to say that about somebody that is dealing with illness and injury.”

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which oversees both the major credit reporting agencies and debt collectors, has acknowledged that medical debts are a problem. Richard Cordray, the agency’s director, has said that consumers who have medical collections reported on their credit file can face a harder time getting a loan — or even a job, since some employers now look at prospects’ credit reports. And the agency has gone so far as buying its own batch of anonymous credit reports so that it can study how medical debts affect consumers, as well as to better understand the degree to which paid medical collection items predict defaults. But it remains to be seen what sort of action, if any, it will take.

The big question is whether FICO’s scoring strategy will eventually ignore paid collections, too, since that would have a much broader effect. A spokesman said that its scoring technique did not distinguish between paid and unpaid collections, though it began ignoring all collections for amounts under $100 when it introduced the latest iteration of its score in January 2009. All other types of reported collections are considered “as a derogatory because as a category they have proven to be strong indicators of credit risk,” the company said in a statement. “To ignore data that has been proven to be highly predictive of a person’s ability to repay a debt would not be in the best interest of consumers or lenders.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/04/your-money/credit-scores/vantagescore-ignores-paid-collections-in-setting-a-credit-score.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Bucks Blog: The Risks of Transferring a Car Loan to a Credit Card

The credit card site CardHub.com recently reviewed current zero-balance credit card transfer offers and found that many cards let consumers transfer all sorts of debt — not just credit card debt — onto the new cards.

The site’s founder Odysseas Papadimitriou, writing about the findings for The Christian Science Monitor, said several major card issuers let you transfer car loans to their credit cards — in effect, letting you trade secured debt (the car is collateral for the loan) for unsecured debt. Some cards have introductory zero interest rate periods of up to 18 months. If you use such transfers strategically,  he says, you can lower the rate on your car loan, saving as much as $1,000 in interest charges.

If you have just one to two years left on your auto loan, he says, that means the credit card pays off your car loan, getting you the title to the car sooner than expected, and “ensuring that payment difficulties won’t result in your car being repossessed.”

The catch, of course, is that you actually have to pay off the loan before the zero interest period expires. Otherwise, you’ll end up paying double-digit interest on the balance, negating any advantage from transferring the loan.

There are all sorts of potential downsides to such a move, says John Ulzheimer, a credit expert who writes for several financial Web sites. “It’s very dangerous for a variety of reasons,” he said.

First, he said, your credit score may take a hit simply because you’ve applied for new credit. In addition, you’re trading installment debt for revolving debt, which also tends to have a negative impact on your credit score. Installment debt has much less of an effect on your credit score than revolving, or credit card debt, because its typically secured by something and is less risky for the lender. Revolving debt is riskiest for the lender, so it has more impact on your score.

“Unless you’re financially capable of writing a check at the end of one year, you shouldn’t do it,” he said. And if you’re capable of doing that, he said, why not just write a check to pay off the car loan yourself?

Another potential flaw in the plan, he said, is that most zero percent interest offers are made only to people with sterling credit. And if your credit is that strong, you likely aren’t in a bind that would require transferring debt onto another card.

In short, it sounds interesting, “but if you think through the impact, it’s not really a good idea,” he said.

Have you ever transferred a car loan or other type of loan to a credit card? How did it work out for you?

Article source: http://bucks.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/18/the-risks-of-transferring-a-car-loan-to-a-credit-card/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Bucks Blog: Wednesday Reading: Renting Your Own Private Ski Resort

December 26

Wednesday Reading: Renting Your Own Private Ski Resort

Renting your own private ski resort, when your date wants to know your credit score, selling your own iBooks and other consumer-focused news from The New York Times.

Article source: http://bucks.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/26/wednesday-reading-renting-your-own-private-ski-resort/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Mortgages: Mortgages — How to Get a Rock-Bottom Rate

“Rates are very much at the bottom,” Mr. Nothaft said. But, he added, they may start inching up in the second half of the year. “If you’re planning to refinance, do it sooner rather than later.”

In order to cash in fully on some of the lowest interest rates ever recorded, buyers and owners need to start taking steps now, experts say. Rather than look for a house you really want, they suggest first finding out how much money you can afford to borrow, and what you can do in the next three to six months to improve your creditworthiness.

“Sometimes it takes a few extra months to get your ducks in a row,” particularly if there are mistakes or blemishes on your credit report, said Gene Tricozzi, the president of Northern Funding Corporation, a mortgage brokerage in Clifton Park, N.Y. If your score is below 700, your mortgage interest rate could be a quarter to a half percentage point higher than for those with stronger scores, experts say.

Start by ordering copies of your credit reports and reviewing them for inaccuracies or disputes. Tracy Becker, the president of North Shore Advisory Inc., a credit restoration company in Tarrytown, N.Y., suggests doing this a year in advance, if possible, to give yourself ample time to fix any issues, like an inadvertently missed payment or an address error.

Do not close any credit accounts now; doing so can reduce your score by as much as 60 points, she said, adding that banks like to see two to four accounts in the applicant’s name.

Once your credit score is established, identify two or three mortgage bankers or brokers whom you may want to work with. Ask friends, people in your religious or social circles, or your accountant for recommendations. Then do the due diligence on each candidate and meet with them to see who is the best fit.

Determine what your down payment and other out-of-pocket costs will be as you figure out what you can afford to buy. Use a mortgage calculator, or ask the mortgage officers to give you a range that would be comfortable.

Closing costs may be more difficult to estimate because they usually include prepaid real estate taxes and various fees for title insurance, mortgage taxes and more. Total closing costs in 2010 on a $200,000 mortgage were $3,843 in Connecticut and $6,183 in New York state, according to research by Bankrate.com in June.

Those figures exclude association fees, prepaid items and state taxes, which in New York City and a few other places can run 1.9 percent of the loan value for the mortgage recording tax.

It is a good idea to discuss your plan to buy a home with a financial planner or accountant. Your tax adviser may be able to guide you on tax deductions and decisions for your 2011 return. Some mortgages, including those offered by the Federal Housing Administration and those made to self-employed individuals, require two years of tax returns.

In those cases, taxpayers may want to be “a little less aggressive” with deductions so the income figure looks stronger, said Matt Hackett, the underwriting manager of Equity Now, a direct mortgage lender based in New York..

Finally, keep an eye on those interest rates. Mr. Nothaft expects the 30-year fixed mortgage rate to end the year “well below 5 percent” — which could still mean a 0.75-point increase a year from now.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=9361a54e719b6e3d0549a1b989b6e960

Bucks: When It’s O.K. to Skip a Loan Payment

It’s generally a bad idea to skip mortgage and other loan payments. Late payments damage your credit score and add late fees to your monthly total.

But U.S. Bank, based in Minneapolis, is allowing borrowers affected by the Minnesota state government shutdown to skip a payment without any adverse effects like late fees, penalties or effect on their credit ratings. (Keep in mind that interest will still accrue, though.)

On July 1, the state government shut down most functions after the governor, a Democrat, and the Republican-controlled Legislature, failed to agree on a two-year budget. The governor wants to raise taxes; the Legislature disagrees. Roughly 22,000 state workers were laid off, and many businesses are affected, too.

According to the bank, existing customers as of June 30 whose accounts are in good standing can choose what month’s payment they’d like to skip and notify the bank by calling 800-890-2233.

Mortgage loans are eligible, as are installment loans like those for cars and boats, as well as small business and consumer lines of credit.

Borrowers don’t have to be state employees to qualify, said a bank spokesman, Tom Joyce. Small businesses affected by the shutdown can also qualify.

Would you skip a payment if knew it wouldn’t hurt your credit rating?

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=a230d2cb13a507f47848ac364850b12c