FICO Score
TheĀ FICO Score is a numberĀ calculated by the Fair Isaac Corporation (FICO) which shows how likely it is that a borrower will default on a loan. Although Fair Isaac's Web site offers to sell consumers their "FICO score," the company actually uses slightly different scoring methods to rate a consumer's suitability for three different types of credit—mortgages, auto loans, and consumer credit—reflecting the differing risks of these various types of lending. It is not unusual for these scores to differ by 50 points or more for the same borrower. (The number offered to consumers is the consumer credit score.)
FICO Credit Score
Credit Score
Lenders, such as banks and credit card companies, use credit scores to evaluate the potential risk posed by lending money to consumers and to mitigate losses due to bad debt. Lenders use credit scores to determine who qualifies for a loan, at what interest rate, and what credit limits. The use of credit or identity scoring prior to authorizing access or granting credit is an implementation of a trusted system. While the most widely known score in the United States is FICO (which is most widely used in the mortgage industry), there are many others, such as NextGen, VantageScore and the CE Score.
The 3 Major Credit Reporting Agencies
These 3 companies calculate their own credit scores. The credit scores they supply, many with trademarked names, differ by what they are meant to predict, statistical methods used to determine a score, as well as what information is used and how it is weighted.
For example, Beacon, Beacon 5.0, Beacon 96, and Pinnacle scores are available only from Equifax; Empirica, Empirica Auto 95, Precision Score, and Precision 03 at TransUnion; and Fair Isaac Risk Score at Experian.
While these versions are developed for the agencies by Fair Isaac, they differ and are periodically updated to reflect current consumer repayment behavior. The NextGen Score is a scoring model designed for consumers. Other consumer scores are published by MyFICO.com and by Community Empower (the CE Score).
Most scores use a multiple-scorecard design. Each version may use individual scorecards, and an individual is typically compared with other consumers. (For example, a borrower with two 30-day late payments will be scored against a population with some similar delinquencies.) The individual is then graded according to which variables indicate a repayment risk in that group.
Nearly all large banks also build and use their own proprietary statistical models for credit scoring purposes, often in conjunction with outside scoring formulas.
The statistical models that generate credit scores are subject to federal regulations. The Federal Reserve Board's Regulation B, which implements the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, expressly prohibits a credit scoring model from considering any "prohibited basis" such as race, color, religion, national origin, sex, or marital status. It also stipulates that credit scoring models must be empirically derived and statistically sound. Furthermore, if an adverse action is taken as a result of the credit score (e.g., an individual's application for credit is denied) then specific reasons for the denial must be provided to the individual. A statement that the individual "failed to score high enough" is insufficient; the reasons must be specific ("too many delinquencies 60 days or greater").
For ease of use, most scores are mathematically scaled so that they fall in the same general range as prominent scoring model competitors. Since Fair Isaac provides the dominant scoring methodology, non-Fair Isaac scores are often designed to mimic FICO scores and are sometimes derisively referred to as "FAKO" scores.[1] Although not as widely used, these scores (for example, TransUnion's "TransRisk" score or Experian's "ScoreX" and "PLUS" scores) are less expensive than the FICO score. The cost savings of a non-FICO score are tempting to some banks and credit card companies, who need an accurate risk assessment on millions of accounts every year.
Fair Isaac offers scoring models for the U.S., Canada, and South Africa, and the firm also offers a "Global FICO" for many other countries.
How FICO Credit Score Is Determined
* 35% - punctuality of payment in the past (only includes payments later than 30 days past due)
* 30% - the amount of debt, expressed as the ratio of current revolving debt (credit card balances, etc.) to total available revolving credit (credit limits)
* 15% - length of credit history
* 10% - types of credit used (installment, revolving, consumer finance)
* 10% - recent search for credit and/or amount of credit obtained recently
The percentages shown above provide very limited guidance in understanding a credit score. For example, the 10% of the score allocated to "types of credit used" is undefined, leaving consumers unaware what type of credit mix to pursue. "Length of credit history" is also a murky concept; it consists of multiple factors - two being the oldest account open and the average length of time an account has been open. Although only 35% is attributed to punctuality, if a consumer is substantially late on numerous accounts, his score will fall far more than 35%. Bankruptcies, foreclosures, and judgments affect scores substantially, but are not included in the somewhat simplistic pie chart provided by Fair Isaac.
Current income and employment history do not influence the FICO score, but they are weighed when applying for credit. For instance, an unemployed individual with no other sources of income will not usually be approved for a home mortgage, regardless of his or her FICO score.
There are other special factors which can weigh on the FICO score.
* Any money owed because of a court judgment, tax lien, or similar carry an additional negative penalty, especially when recent.
* Having more than a certain number of consumer finance credit accounts also carries a negative weight (critics say that this causes a vicious cycle, locking people into continuing to use consumer finance companies).
* The number of recent credit checks also can weigh down the score, although credit agencies usually claim to allow for credit checks made within a certain window of time to not aggregate, so as to allow the consumer to shop around for rates.
Range of Scores for Various Credit Reporting Agencies
Each individual actually has three credit scores for any given scoring model because the three credit agencies have their own, independent databases. As these databases are independent of each other, they may contain entirely different data. Many lenders will check an applicant's score from each bureau and use the median score to determine the applicant's credit worthiness.
VantageScore ranges from 501 to 990 and offers letter grades as well: A (901-990), B (801-900), C (701-800), D (601-700), and F (501-600).
Free Annual Credit Reports
Equifax and Fair Isaac teamed up to provide consumers with their FICO credit scores. The other two credit bureaus, TransUnion and Experian, also sell their scores to consumers. Experian calls its credit score product PLUS Score. The PLUS Score ranges from 330 to 900.
Additional Resources
http://www.AnnualCreditReport.com
Annual Credit Report Request Form
Online Credit Reports Articles and Resources
http://www.CreditReportsOnline.org
Some of the information appearing on this page is from Wikipedia.org



