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TransUnion, Experian to give consumers
credit scores, but not the ones lenders use
By Pat
Curry Bankrate.com
Responding
to consumer demands for more access to the information used by lenders
to make credit decisions, two of the nation's three major credit
bureaus have announced that they will begin giving consumers direct
access to credit scores.
But the numbers will not be the industry-standard
scores created by Fair,
Isaac and Co., and insiders and consumer advocates are
divided on the potential value of the service.
Score
one for consumers
On May 15, Trans
Union announced it is developing a credit score that it will
offer to consumers by the end of the year. While different from
the exact score it provides to lenders -- and from the FICO scores
it markets on behalf of Fair, Isaac -- the score will be similar
to the scores used by lenders to determine a customer's likelihood
to repay a loan. The score would come with information on the factors
in the consumer's credit history that influenced the number. The
score would be provided free of charge with the order of a credit
report, which costs $8.
Experian,
another major credit bureau, has plans to provide consumers online
access to credit scores it will create, starting this fall. No pricing
decisions have been made yet.
Using complex statistical models that evaluate
tens of thousands of existing credit users, a credit score is supposed
to distill all the information in your credit report into a single,
three-digit number. It's designed to give lenders a fast, accurate
prediction of the risk involved in giving you credit, such as a
mortgage, credit card, car loan or even an insurance policy.
Fair,
Isaac's score used most
The industry standard -- and the most commonly used measure
-- is Fair, Isaac's FICO score.
"The FICO score is the single best summary score
of one's creditworthiness," said E-Loan
President and COO Joe Kennedy when that site announced earlier this
year that it would begin offering consumers direct access to their
FICO scores. Though extremely popular with consumers -- more than
14,000 individuals checked their scores in about a month -- the
service by E-Loan was pulled in April because Fair, Isaac's contract
with the credit bureaus only allows releasing the scores to consumers
during a credit-making decision.
Since TransUnion will develop its own score
designed for consumers, instead of a score that is used by lenders
for credit-making decisions, it does not run afoul of Fair, Isaac's
contract restrictions. But some industry watchers are dubious that
it will yield anything of value to consumers.
"What use does it have except as a possible
revenue source for TransUnion?" asks Roy Jenkins, senior Internet
consultant with mortgage portal LoanSpeed.com.
"What use is it when the industry standard is the FICO score?"
"It's just an attempt to draw attention away
from the real score," says Greg Fisher, founder of creditscoring.com
and a strident advocate of full disclosure of FICO scores.
TransUnion spokeswoman Colleen Martin responds
that there is no one single score lenders use, and that its score
will give consumers "a very accurate picture of their standing in
credit risk. It's certainly our intention to make it available to
lenders down the road."
Shedding
light on the process
Others in the business -- including industry giant Fair, Isaac
-- say that any service that begins to shed light on a process that
has grown dramatically in the age of instant online credit approval
is a good thing.
"It's probably not the same score, but I have
to imagine the factors are very similar," says Michael Feldman,
cofounder of MortgageIT.com.
"It's not so much the score that's important, it's what causes the
score. It's late payments or extended credit lines or outstanding
judgments. No matter what the scale is, whether it's a credit score
from the different bureaus or a FICO score, it's still basically
the same information ... It's a matter of education. A score
is just an indication of where you fall with other people."
Feldman says offering the score makes "perfect
sense and a step in the right direction to empower the consumer
with information that impacts their loan application. It's going
to help the consumer prepare for a mortgage application. I'm a fan
of consumers coming prepared for the process."
Fair, Isaac spokesman Craig Watts says his company,
which has borne the brunt of consumers' wrath for its stance that
consumers need the assistance of a lending professional to unravel
the mysteries of the number, is happy to see the development.
"We appreciate TransUnion's effort to educate
consumers," Watts says. "That's definitely in the right direction.
Equifax
(another credit reporting bureau) was quick to point out that going
it alone may not be as valuable as a unified effort, and we'd support
movement toward a unified solution, but I'm glad TransUnion is
doing that."
Helping
enlighten confused consumers
Experian says it decided to offer credit scores online because
consumers are "generally confused" about them, and the online environment
is best for explaining what the score actually means and how it's
used when a consumer applies for credit.
"There has been a lack of communication about
risk scores, how they're compiled and how they affect you," says
Experian spokeswoman Anissa Yates. "The status quo has been to
provide just the score with little explanation. Experian is striving
to provide more information."
The major differences between the planned Trans
Union and Experian offerings are that TransUnion will provide the
consumer-oriented score when a consumer orders a copy of his credit
report. Experian is planning to offer the score only on its Web
site, and the number will be the same one it markets to lenders.
Unlike E-Loan's original service, the information wrapped around
the Experian score will include specifics related to the individual's
credit report instead of generic information about how credit scores
work and the factors that influence them.
"The score we're giving is one of the scores
we actually sell to credit grantors," says Joe Greenwald, Experian's
marketing director for Consumer Direct Services. "We'll be changing
some of the score factor codes to make them easier to understand.
"Our feeling is a score won't be that meaningful,
but the information that's around it will be," he says. "There will
be some specific information -- what was in their report that most
influenced the score. We're being real careful about giving advice,
but we want to give them as much education as we can that would
put them in a situation to understand what they need to do."
Consumers
want to know the score
Consumer interest in the information in their credit reports
has changed significantly in the past decade, Greenwald says.
"Ten years ago, people wanted access to the
information on their report, they wanted to be able to validate
the accuracy of it, and it kind of ended there," he says. "Today,
with information being so accessible and consumers more sophisticated,
they also want to know what it means and how do I leverage that
information to put myself in a better situation? We don't want to
just put a score out there for the sake of putting a score out there."
Equifax, the third major credit reporting bureau,
said that while it supports expanded disclosure and consumer education,
a little information can be a dangerous thing.
"The issue involves not only credit reporting
agencies, but credit grantors and credit modeling companies as well,"
says Equifax executive vice president Bill Catucci. "This uncoordinated
action could very well cause harm and confusion to consumers, causing
them to take action to better their score when their actions, without
thorough understanding, could have the opposite effect."
One of the issues Catucci cites is that there
is no single score that's used industry-wide, and when a consumer
sees one score, it may not be the one that's used by the lender
he chooses. Acceptable scores vary from lender to lender, and many
lenders use customized scores.
Different
results from the same information
Fair, Isaac's Watts says that while the base of information
is the same -- a consumer's credit report -- the results can be
different, depending on the weight lenders place on the dozens of
attributes in the scoring model. While a mortgage broker may be
concerned about any kind of a late payment and place heavy weight
on that piece of information, a department store credit card issuer
might be less concerned about a late payment to the phone company
and place more emphasis on retail payment history.
"There are subtle differences," Watts says.
Still, he added, "If you use a generic (score), you wouldn't go
too wrong. If I know my score on one scorecard and understand what
it means, it wouldn't be wildly different on another scorecard."
A final issue that consumers may not even realize
exists in the furor over disclosure is that a credit score is just
one kind of score that's generated every day.
"You're only looking at one quarter to a third
of the pie," Watts says. "There are also scores for making pre-marketing
decisions that predict how likely someone will be to respond to
an offer. Those kinds of models may use credit file information,
plus other sources of information available to individual businesses.
Another piece of the pie is how companies manage existing accounts.
That's become a much hotter topic. Consumers are getting scored
on things all day long."
Pat Curry is a freelance writer
based in Georgia
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