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Home buyers and refinancers who've paid all their credit
card, mortgage and revolving debts on time could be in for an unexpected
bonus: A big jump in their credit scores, opening up the possibility of
lower interest rates and fees on future loans.
On the other hand, under important credit-scoring
changes now being introduced to major lenders nationwide, some
late-paying borrowers can expect painful retribution: significant drops
on their scores below where they are today, potentially costing them
more money the next time they apply for a mortgage.
These little-publicized credit score changes are part of
a new, alternative approach being rolled out by the developer of "FICO"
scores, the dominant credit-risk ratings used by mortgage lenders,
credit card issuers, auto finance firms, insurance companies, employers
and landlords across the country. "FICO" is short for Fair, Isaac & Co.,
Inc., of San Rafael, California. The company calls the new alternative
its "Next Generation" scores, as distinct from the "Classic" FICO scores
virtually all lenders currently use to rate loan applicants' risk of
future defaults.
The new scores became available from all three national credit
repositories -- Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion -- last month, and are
expected to be rapidly adopted by banks and mortgage lenders during the
coming year. The significance of the move to "Next Generation" scores
was explained last week to local credit bureaus at the annual convention
of the National Credit Reporting Association in Tucson, Arizona.
The key to the "Next Generation" score is that it uses
complex statistical models to "see through" credit file data to better
identify loan applicants who represent the highest risks of delinquency
or foreclosure. Based on new analyses of tens of millions of consumer
credit files, the Next Generation scores "reward" some people -- moving
them into the heretofore rarefied "800" and higher score category. But
it also pushes other people below the "600" level that often triggers
higher interest rates and fees.
Under the FICO score system, consumer credit files are
risk-rated on a numerical scale from 300 to about 900. The higher you
score, the better credit risk you represent. Late payments, high credit
balances against credit limits, too few or too new credit lines, and
other factors lower scores. On-time payments, moderate to low credit
balances against limits, and active but prudent use of credit over
extended periods all tend to increase FICO scores.
Under the "Classic" FICO system now in use nationwide,
only 11 percent of borrowers get scores of 800 or higher. Fully 40
percent of the credit-using population have scores of 699 or below. With
the introduction of Next Generation scores, however, 22 percent of all
borrowers will discover their scores have risen into the select 800-plus
category -- double the current proportion. On average, in fact,
consumers with relatively clean credit histories are likely to score 15
points higher on the new system than under the current, "Classic" FICO.
These are people who manage their credit well, and have no delinquencies
or "derogatory" entries on their repository files.
On the other hand, certain borrowers will end up with
lower scores: |