New credit scores target 'underserved'
consumers
By
Pat Curry Bankrate.com
Consumers who have been turned down for credit
or paid a higher interest rate because a scant credit history
gave them a low credit score have another shot now at more-favorable
terms.
Fair Isaac Corp., creator and owner of the FICO score
that is widely used in the mortgage, auto loan and credit card industry,
has created a new score designed to predict credit risk for individuals
with little or no credit history. The new FICO expansion score draws
on information in an array of small credit reporting agencies outside
the realm of the three major credit bureaus, says Craig Dillon,
vice president of scoring solutions at Fair Isaac. The new score
draws on data from industries such as pay day loan companies, rent-to-own
stores and banking organizations that share information about people
who abuse overdraft protection on checking accounts.
The company's market research, which is confirmed
by others in the credit industry, indicates that while about 160
million consumers have enough information on file to generate a
valid FICO score, as many as another 50 million do not. The consumers
who might get a break with the new score include recent immigrants
to the United States (whose good payment histories from their home
countries don't transfer to the U.S. credit reporting system), college
students, new divorcees and widows, those with low incomes, and
people whose cultures don't trust financial institutions or large
national organizations, Dillon says.
A FICO score is a three-digit number used to predict
how risky it is to extend credit to an individual. A statistical
algorithm that compares a person's credit history to those of millions
of other consumers, it uses a scale from 300 to 850. Most people
will have scores between 600 and 800 -- if there's enough information
in the credit bureau records to generate a score. That information
comes from such places as mortgage companies, credit card issuers
and auto financing companies.
Without sufficient information at a credit bureau
to generate a FICO score, or so little information that it produces
a very low score, many consumers either are turned down for credit
or pay more for it. They might have never paid their rent or their
utilities late, but those companies generally don't report payment
data to the credit bureaus.
Many times, the need to gather a year's worth of rent
receipts or utility payments discourages borrowers from even trying
to get a mortgage, says Randall Johnson, CEO of Florida-based Market
Street Mortgage Corp. "To have (Fair Isaac) convert that information
to a credit score is a real help to the industry. If it operates
the way it should, it should be a real win-win."
The new score won't help individuals who have a low
FICO score because they've messed up their credit by paying their
bills late or walking away from them.
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