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Anya Kamenetz Generation Debt

Anya Kamenetz, Generation Debt

What You Need to Know About Credit Scores

by Anya Kamenetz

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Posted on Wednesday, August 27, 2008, 12:00AM
You've probably realized by now that your principal in high school was full of it when he or she warned you about your "permanent record." There is no such thing.

But there is, in a way. It has nothing to do with cutting class or smoking out by the football field. It's called your credit report, and it shows your current credit accounts, outstanding debts, and payment history going back for several years. Credit cards, student loans, auto loans: They're all there, and if you have a problem paying any other kind of bill or have an overdraft on your checking account, it will show up, too.

High Score

So why is this important? Well, credit reports yield credit scores, a powerful little three-digit number ranging from 300 to 850. A bad credit score -- less than 620 is considered subprime -- will have you paying 10.99 percent interest on a car loan when your friend with squeaky-clean credit is paying 6 percent, or 29 percent on a credit card when your friend's card charges 12 percent.

Credit scores can also affect your rates for mortgages and home, auto, and life insurance.

And increasingly, bosses are conducting credit checks when they make hiring decisions.

Credit scores are a great scam for the credit card industry. Without fail, when I give a talk on college campuses about the dangers of credit cards, someone in the audience asks, "But don't we need a credit card to build a good credit score?" And I have to say, well, yes. You need those credit cards to get a mortgage or an auto loan down the road. But you don't have to run up any balances! The most cautious thing to do is to use your credit cards to make a regular payment, like a cell phone bill, and then set up automatic bill paying online each month.

There are lots of businesses, some fraudulent, offering to "repair" your credit.
But as the Federal Trade Commission wants you to know, self-help is the best approach. Here's what you can do:

The Score Decoded

Requesting your credit reports and scores is a good way to start taking control of your money. There is one most common credit score used by banks to make decisions: the FICO score, developed originally by Fair Isaac Corporation.

FICO scores, once again, range from 300 to 850. Three different credit bureaus combine information from credit card companies and banks to make credit reports: TransUnion, Experian, and Equifax. Each of these bureaus may have slightly different information on you in their reports, which yields a different score. The Equifax score is seen by some as being most similar to what banks actually see when they pull your credit report.

By federal law, you are entitled to one free copy of your credit report each year from each of the credit bureaus. Go to annualcreditreport.com to request them. You will have to pay about $7.95 a pop to see the scores as well.

To write this column, I pulled my free credit report from TransUnion. It's pretty easy to read, showing my name, Social Security number, and current address, as well as two previous addresses and the payment history for my credit cards: a Capital One Visa, a Chase/Bank One Visa, and a Washington Mutual card that I've since canceled. I don't have any balances on the cards right now, and I have made nearly all on-time payments. But my credit score is only 705, shy of the "excellent" cutoff of 720.

This is primarily because last year I traveled out of the country, moved apartments, and forgot to pay a $40 charge on my Capital One Visa. The payment went overdue for 90 days, until Capital One finally reached me on the phone. So now I am patiently repaying my cards on time each month, via automatic direct debit, and waiting for my score to improve. On the advice of TransUnion, I'm also going to open another credit card to increase my available credit, which could help improve my score.

The Breakdown

Your credit score is based on several factors, many of which will hit Generation Debt harder than older folks.

1. Payment history -- the biggie, about 35 percent of a FICO score. Also the no-brainer: Any late payments or overdrafts, like mine, will ding your credit score for several years.

2. Amount owed -- about 30 percent

This figure compares the amount you owe to your available credit. So someone who has a $2,000 balance and a $2,000 credit limit -- they're maxed out -- will look worse than someone who owes $3,000 but has cards with $30,000 worth of limits. This may hurt folks with large student loan balances. It's also the reason that you don't necessarily want to close accounts after you pay them off -- it's better to leave them dormant to raise your available credit.

3. Length of history -- about 15 percent

The longer your perfect record of on-time payments, the better your score -- so if you've only been out of school for a couple of years, your credit score won't be as high as it can be down the road if you keep it clean.

4. New credit -- about 10 percent

Repeatedly shopping for credit -- either credit cards or bank loans -- can hurt your score because it makes you look desperate. I learned this the hard way when I got out of college. I had smugly avoided signing up for a student credit card. Well, suddenly I was a freelance writer's assistant, with no regular income. I applied for and was rejected from so many cards in the first few months out of school that I was told I couldn't file any more applications for six months. I finally got a Capital One Visa with a $300 limit. All of this probably hurt my credit.

Message: Confine your credit card shopping to 30 days, and, yes, get a student card if you're in school.

5. Miscellaneous-- about 10 percent

This includes stuff like having a nice "mix" of credit cards, auto loans, and other types of credit.

Mr. Fix-It

First, make sure your report has no mistakes. The Public Interest Research Group found in 2004 that 79 percent of credit reports had some kind of mistake. One out of four had a serious error that could lead to denial of credit.

If you're young and have never requested it before, your credit report may contain information from someone else with the same name. Or there may be duplicate information.

Evan Hendricks, an expert who wrote the book "Credit Scores and Credit Reports", told Bankrate.com that student loan borrowers especially have to watch out:
"Student loan information will sometimes multiply like rabbits on the credit report because student loans are sold from one company to another, and the old company continues reporting and then the new company continues reporting it, and it might make it look like you have more loans than you actually do. Then if they're showing any late payments, you can get hit with double whammies on late payments as well."

If you have a mistake, you need to send a dispute letter to the credit bureau and ask them to "reinvestigate" it. Include copies of any supporting evidence like your drivers license. Keep records of everything in writing. You can also request that the bureaus include a note in your file to help explain any delinquencies -- e.g., you were taking care of a sick parent or were unemployed. "Credit Scores and Credit Reports"  has all the info on how to do this for free, yourself.

If your credit report is accurate, do what I'm doing now. Set up automatic direct debit to pay all your bills on time, on the day they're due. Start paying down your credit card balances, starting with the highest-interest cards, paying at least $10-$15 over the minimum each month. But don't close any accounts -- remember, you need a high ratio of available credit to used credit.

Take courage. It doesn't happen overnight, but after seven years, most blemishes on your credit report -- even bankruptcies -- are erased by your most recent payment history. Take comfort in the fact that there isn't really a permanent record after all.

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136 Comments

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  • Zenas B - Friday, October 23, 2009, 8:03PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Way too much stock is being place on these scores and the creditors know this. Its becomming the new discrimination tool. Don't borrow a dime ever and you have a bad score. Miss a 40 dollar payment for 90 days and your score suffers for 90 months making your car insurance more expensive? Wheres the logic in that? No... the 'deep pockets' want to lend money... they NEED to lend money. They have more money than their kids, or their kids kids could ever use. They can't eat it... they can't wear it but they can make you their bi*@#. The best way to win is not to play.

  • Doug - Saturday, June 27, 2009, 6:01PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Hi Anya. Thanks for a great article, which explains the basic implications of the credit report and score, and how we cause it to change for better or worse. Since it was designed to reflect a person's credit history, it should, and used to, reflect their actions. Recently, there seems to be a new and disturbing twist in which this is no longer the case. After the bailouts began, the banks and credit card companies began treating their customers as if they were the ones who caused these problems, when in reality it was the banks' own careless lending practices that were to blame. It reminds of the way the airlines began treating their customers (and still do) after 9-11. Instead of receiving respect and appreciation, we are now treated with scorn and contempt. Even the very concept of what the credit report is supposed to show has been undermined by these institutions. Several examples come to mind. Even those customers like myself who have never been late on a payment (knock on wood) or missed a payment, are suddenly seeing their credit card limits lowered for no apparent reason except bank paranoia and the need to blame others for the problems that they themselves caused. Here is a specific example that just blows me away, so to speak. One of my credit cards had a low balance on it, and during the 30-day period in which no interest (APR) accumulates, and just before it was to be paid off, I received a letter from the bank that my credit limit had been lowered. Annoying? Yes. What's the big deal, you ask? Well, please read on. The new credit limit amount was BELOW the current balance that wasn't even due to be paid off yet for that month. In other words, through no fault of my own, I was suddenly converted into someone who "charges over their credit card limit". I'm not sure that I can accurately describe how I felt at that moment, except to say that I froze in place, and my eyes started turning green like Bill Bixby preparing to change into "The Hulk". I immediately headed to that particular financial institution. Talking to the bank manager only made matters worse. "It is not our responsibility to make your credit report look good”, she said. At this point, my shirt and pants and shoes were really starting to seem too small for me. Do you "feel me" yet folks? I thought to myself, “I know, I’ll try to reason with this person”. I had asked her if the fact that her institution had lowered my limit to below the current balance might cause my credit score to go down, and she replied, “Probably”, and followed-up with the aforementioned comment. Although I explained to her my concern that this situation was not reflective of any actions that I had or had not taken, but rather an action that was taken by her institution, and therefore not an indicator of my credit worthiness, she did not seem to grasp either this concept or my concern. I decided to settle out of court when she assured me that if I paid the balance due, which I had planned to do anyway, this would not show up on my credit report, since bank reports are submitted to the credit reporting agencies at the end of the month, and this situation had occurred in the middle of the month. “This was not about you”, she said, “we did this to all of our customers!” Sadly, however, she told me that those customers who did not notice this change, and continued to make their monthly payments on time like the good credit-worthy customers that they were, would see a substantial drop in their credit scores the following month (which many would probably not even notice, until they tried to apply for credit sometime in the future), and would (you guessed it), be subject to “over-the-limit” fees every month, which would add up to a huge amount over time. Now, what can be done about this? Can harmful bank actions that are not the consumer's fault, as well as the numerical impact on the score itself be indicated on the credit report? Thanks for your time.

  • niknar2003 - Saturday, June 27, 2009, 5:04PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Funny stuff, credit scores. My parents, in their 90's were found to have stock certs in a safe deposit box. To save grief in iinheritance we went to UBS to open a brokerage account and have the shares registered and reseached. For instance 15 shares of ATT bought in 1945 !! They - UBS - claimed my parents profiled as terrorists. No mortgage, no car loan, no credit card, Only a SS# and $ 20,000 in a checking account.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Sunday, February 22, 2009, 7:41PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    bend over sweety,i have something for you and your great advice : )

  • sevenedge - Sunday, December 14, 2008, 11:36AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    You have to be kidding me. Your "permanent record" only applies to school career. And it IS real. This girl is an idiot. yahoo finance's team of "experts" is a joke.

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More from Anya Kamenetz

Read the Generation Debt Book

According to economics professor Laurence J. Kotlikoff, Generation Debt offers "a truly gripping account of how young Americans are being ground down by low wages, high taxes, huge student loans, sky-high housing prices, not to mention the impending retirement of their baby boomer parents." Generation Debt will inspire you to take charge of your financial future.

Read more from Anya Kamenetz here and here.

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