FICO Scores
FICO® scores were developed by Fair Isaac &
Company, Inc. for each of the credit repositories. The scores are: (Equifax)
Beacon®, (Experian formerly TRW) Experian/FICO and (TransUnion) Empirica®.
They are simply repository scores meaning they only consider the information
contained in a person's credit file; they do not consider a persons income,
savings or amount of a down payment for a mortgage.
The scores were designed to assess risk. They are useful in directing
applications to specific loan programs and to set levels of underwriting,
i.e. streamline, traditional or second review. The scores are objective,
consistent, accurate and fast.
Many people in the mortgage business are skeptical about the accuracy
of FICO scores. Scoring has only been an integral part of the mortgage
process in the past few years; however, the scores have been in use since
the 1950's by retail merchants, credit card companies, insurance companies
and banks for consumer lending. The data from large scoring projects emphasizes
the accuracy, the predictive quality of the scores. Large portfolios have
been scored for mortgage servicing and investment groups, and again, they
demonstrate that FICO scores work.
The scores were developed from each repository's database using actual
loan performance. A sample of over 750,000 consumers per repository was
used. The repositories have each made great strides to increase the accuracy
of their respective database through computer technology and internal
monitoring. There is a new standard reporting format for credit grantors
to use when sending electronic information to the repositories; this is
the critical first step to providing accurate data.
The scores use a multiple scorecard design. Each repository uses 10 individual
scorecards, and the models at each repository are the same. This increases
accuracy and optimizes the predictive variables for each subpopulation.
(For example, a borrower with two 30-day late payments will be scored
against a population with some minor delinquencies.) This feature may
cause a borrower with delinquencies to score in the same range as a borrower
without delinquencies. Scorecards are reviewed and updated every twenty-four
months.
The actual scoring process is proprietary, and the algorithms are copyrighted.
We can share the predictive variables, the portion of the credit file
considered and the weight as provided by Fair Isaac. They are:
Previous credit performance (35%)
Trade line information specific to payment history
Current level of indebtedness (30%)
Current balance compared to the high credit
Time credit has been in use (15%)
Opening date
Types of credit available (15%)
Installment loans, revolving accounts, debit accounts
Pursuit of new credit (less than 5%)
Inquiries
FICO has changed the way it factors credit checks, inquiries. These changes
should minimize the "negative" effects that aggressive rate
shopping or the normal mortgage process can have on a mortgage applicant.
In the new Beacon version, the deduping process has been expanded beyond
seven days. One variable counts the number of days within 365 days of
scoring. If there has not been an inquiry, the deduping mechanism is not
activated. If there is a consumer originated inquiry within the past 365
days from mortgage or auto related industries, these inquiries are ignored
for the first 30 calendar days from scoring; then, multiple inquiries
within the next 14 days are counted as one. Each inquiry will still appear
on the credit report.
Scores should not change significantly because the variable in the model
using inquiries contributes less than 5% of the predictive power of the
model. According to Equifax statisticians, an average of 5% of the credit
reports in the Equifax consumer credit reporting database (over 200 million
consumer files) will see a change in score due to this. Fewer than 5%
of those will see a change significant enough to effect a loan decision.
In order to get a score a borrower must have the following conditions
in his/her file:
No "Deceased" indicator on the credit file
At least one undisputed trade line that has been updated in the last six
months
One trade line open at least six months
Scores range from 350 (high risk) to 950 (low risk). A scorecard of 660
will be 660 on Beacon 96, Empirica and Experian/FICO if the data on each
file is the same. However, each repository is likely to contain different
data.
Every score is accompanied by a maximum of four reason codes. Reason
codes identify the most significant reason that a consumer did not score
higher. They are not red flags. Consumers with scores in the 800 range
get reason codes just as consumers with scores in the 500 range. The reason
codes may be used in describing to the consumer the reason for adverse
action. Scores are not part of the credit file and are not covered by
the Fair Credit Reporting Act. Scores, if disclosed to the consumer, must
be related to the credit file - using the reason codes - since the score
has no meaning in itself; the meaning or risk level is assigned by the
lender and the investor.
When applicants have erroneous information reported, document the inaccuracies.
The easiest way to do that is to have your credit-reporting agency upgrade
the merged in-file to an edited mid-range report or to a Residential Mortgage
Credit Report. With the upgraded report, you can ignore the score! The
file will have to be handled in a traditional manner for underwriting
and investment purposes. The developed report will provide the paper trail
that investors want.
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