By: Tara Siegel Bernard
Anyone who has recently applied for a mortgage
knows that lenders are already looking much more closely at your
financial affairs. But soon, they’ll be able to easily delve into the
deepest recesses of your financial life, accessing information that
never before appeared on your credit report.
This week, a company called CoreLogic introduced a new type of credit
file, which is based on the giant repository of consumer data it
maintains on just about everything that most of the traditional credit
bureaus do not: missed rental payments that have gone into collection,
any evictions or child support judgments, as well as any applications
for payday loans, along with your repayment history.
The new report also includes any property tax liens and whether you’ve
fallen behind on your homeowner’s association dues. It may reflect that
you now owe more than your house is worth or if you own any other real
estate properties outright. It also is supposed to catch mortgages made
by smaller lenders that the big credit bureaus may have missed.
The idea, CoreLogic says, is to provide lenders with more details about
prospective borrowers, supplementing what they already know through the
more traditional credit reports furnished by the big three credit bureaus, Equifax,
Experian and TransUnion. Moreover, CoreLogic has formed a partnership
with FICO — the provider of one of the most popular credit scores used
by lenders — which will formulate a new consumer score based on the new
data.
Perhaps it’s not surprising that a company decided to pull together this
information, since much of it is already publicly available. But
because it comes on top of all the other information that’s being
collected about you — your exact location at every minute, where you’ve
been on the Web — you can’t help but feel that some of these companies
know more about your activities than your spouse.
While the CoreScore credit report became available to all types of
lenders on Wednesday, the actual score, which will be ready in March, is
being created specifically for mortgage and home equity lenders, though
it could eventually be developed for other types of credit.
For many consumers, the files are likely to reveal black marks that
previously went undetected, which may damage an otherwise clean record.
But the companies contend that it works both ways: The added information
could help consumers with thin credit files by illustrating positive
behaviors elsewhere, say making timely rent payments.
So why now? Clearly, the two companies saw a business opportunity.
Lenders, who just a few years back looked the other way, remain
particularly skittish about mortgage lending and are looking for more information about prospective borrowers’ ability to pay their debts.
“Lending is very constrained and origination volumes need to grow to
make for a profitable mortgage business,” said Joanne Gaskin, director
of product management global scoring at FICO. “So lenders are looking
for ways to expand, but to expand safely.”
An estimated 100 million American consumers will have a CoreScore credit
report, while more than 200 million people have traditional reports
from the big three bureaus. Though the new information can influence a
lender’s decision, the new score isn’t replacing the classic scores used
in the automated mortgage underwriting systems kept by Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac or the Federal Housing Administration, which buy or back the
vast majority of mortgages (though CoreLogic said it has let the
agencies know what it is doing). But the added information may sway a
lender to charge you more (or less) in interest on a mortgage. Lenders
of all stripes, including auto lenders, have access to the reports, and
they will be marketed to employers and insurers, too.
Ms. Gaskin said that FICO was still tweaking the credit score’s formula.
But the next step is to build something that will try to get even
deeper inside your financial mind: The company plans to create a more
sophisticated tool that will predict how you might behave under
different loan terms.
Read the rest of the article HERE
Six Ways To Beat Late Fees - That EVERYBODY Needs To Know
VISIT THE CREDIT RESTORATION ASSOCIATES WEBSITE:
Back to the CRA blog homepage:
Credit Repair Va:
CRA Resources:
Credit Repair:
About CRA:
No comments:
Post a Comment