Credit domino effect -- one late payment
will cost you across the board By Lucy
Lazarony Bankrate.com Mind
those bills. All of them. A late payment on one account could cost you higher
rates and fees on all your accounts -- from your credit cards to your auto insurance.
More and more companies are peeking at credit reports regularly to justify raising
interest rates or increasing credit limits.
One card to another
Some of the biggest credit card
companies have started aggressively penalizing customers who show signs of trouble
anywhere in their credit reports. If a company likes what it sees in a customer's
credit report, a cardholder might get rewarded with a thicker credit line. But
one black mark from any creditor could trigger a rate hike. So
if you fall behind on your Sears bill, the interest rate on your Citibank credit
card could shoot up. "Why
should that matter?" asks Howard Strong, author of What
Every Credit Card User Needs to Know. "It doesn't harm them in any
way. It's ridiculous. It's just a way to knock up rates." The
lenders say their concerns are justified. "We're
looking at risk factors. If we see someone become delinquent with another creditor,
that may be an indicator that they are about to become delinquent with us,"
says Maria Mendler, a spokeswoman for Citibank. "We may need to adjust our
credit decisions accordingly."
Customers
blindsided Credit counselors say many people feel
blindsided by the credit card companies' rate hikes -- especially if they haven't
been late with any payments. "I'm
hearing about it more and more," says Hal Prather, a branch manager at Consumer
Credit Counseling Service in Norcross, Ga. "It's apparent to me that most
people don't read the inserts (that come with their statements). I think most
people learn about it the hard way." Mike
Kidwell, vice president of the nonprofit debt crisis center Myvesta,
adds, "We get calls and e-mails all the time. 'I've never been late on this
card. Why is my rate going up?' Or 'I had trouble with one account and my rates
went up on another card.' "You've
got to be aware of limits on credit cards. If other creditors are seeing balances
going up and all of a sudden you're late, you're considered a greater risk. Not
just with the one creditor that you paid late but with all your creditors." The
credit/car connection Does having bad credit make you a bad driver? Some auto
insurers think so. That's why they're using credit data to help determine your
insurance rates. Ninety-two of the
100 largest personal auto insurance companies in the country use credit data in
underwriting new business, according to a study by Conning & Co., an insurance
research and asset management firm. It's
not as wacky as it sounds. There does appear to be a connection between your credit
record and the likelihood of you filing an auto insurance claim. Drivers
at the bottom of the credit heap file 40 percent more claims than drivers at the
top of the credit heap, according to a study by the Insurance Information Institute. Consequently,
having black marks on your credit report could really bump up your auto insurance
rates. "A consumer with bad
credit is going to pay 20- to 50-percent more in auto insurance premiums than
a person who has good credit," says Clarence Smith, assistant vice-president
at Conning & Co. Who's watching
Some credit card companies review customers' credit reports
more often than others. "Some
may do it monthly. Some may do it quarterly. Some may do it yearly," says
Martie Edmunds Zakas, corporate vice president of communications for Equifax,
one of the three major credit bureaus. "Some never do it." All
Capital One card customers are subject to periodic credit checks. "Of
course, we may look at rule-breakers more frequently," Diana Don, a spokeswoman
for Capital One. "If people are constantly late or going over the limit,
we don't want to give them that much leverage to overextend themselves." Most
auto insurance companies use credit data when underwriting new customers. Far
fewer, just 14 percent of the nation's largest insurers, use credit data on contract
renewals. And some states don't allow this practice at all. Just
how big an impact your credit record has on your auto insurance bill varies --
based on the state you live in and the insurance company you choose. "Good
credit at one company may not be a good insurance score at another company,"
Smith says. "That's why it's important to shop." A
study by the Casualty Actuarial Society showed that people with prior driving
violations or accidents and good credit had much better loss ratios than people
with clean driving records and a bad credit history. An auto insurer prices policies
based on a customer's potential to file a future claim. Someone with a flawed
driving record and clean credit record could actually end up paying less for auto
insurance than someone with a spotless driving record and a spotty credit record. Insurance
score secrets Your auto insurance company doesn't
actually peek at your credit report. Instead, it receives an insurance score from
a credit bureau based on the information in your credit record. Fair,
Isaac and Co. provides the credit bureaus with the formulas to crunch insurance
scores. Some insurance companies have their own scoring models. Like a credit
score, an insurance score is based on information found in a consumer's credit
file. But the formulas used to arrive at the two types of scores are quite different.
"An insurance score is going
to be less concerned with your propensity to take on new credit and more interested
in how long you've been managing credit," says Craig Watts, a spokesman for
Fair, Isaac and Co. "Insurance scores focus on issues of stability." Curious
about your insurance score? Good luck finding out. Insurance companies aren't
required to tell, and few do. "I
don't know anybody who will show you an insurance score," says Gerri Detweiler,
author of The
Ultimate Credit Handbook. "It's still a bit of a mystery to consumers." Even
if you could find out your insurance score, it might not be all that helpful.
Yes, it could give you a sense of how a single auto insurer rates your credit
record, but that's it. When it comes
to insurance scores, there's no uniform standard. So another insurance company,
using another scoring model, could assign you a different insurance score and
offer you vastly different rates. The
key thing to realize is your credit record does affect the cost of your auto insurance.
If you're having credit problems,
it's best to stick with your current auto insurer until your credit record improves.
If you must shop for a new auto policy, ask the insurer if they use credit data
in their decision-making process. Not all insurance companies do. How
to protect yourself Here's how to manage your accounts
to stave off a rate hike: -
Keep a list of all accounts, due dates, balances and credit limits.
- If
an account's due date falls at a time of the month when cash is tight, call the
issuer and have the due date changed.
- Get
in the habit of paying bills as soon as they arrive.
- Monitor
all accounts carefully.
- Check
your credit report at least once a year and correct
any errors.
Amy
C. Fleitas contributed to this story. --
Posted: Jan. 9, 2003
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