Tuesday, July 28th, 2009 at
6:00 am
Starting September 2007, the newest version of the FICO scoring module will ignore all authorized user information when computing scores. The company that created FICO, Fair Isaac Corporation, changed the formula after learning that some credit repair companies were “buying” authorized user slots on the credit cards of people with good scores and “renting” those slots to strangers with bad credit to quickly boost their scores. This made it look like the bad credit person had a long history of build good credit and credit card balance with a high credit limit and very low balance, thus effectively lowering their debt to credit ratio and increasing their history. Credit scores would increase dramatically for them. Not a bad idea and since it still works for the older scoring modules of which most creditors still use, I would suggest not “buying” a slot but borrowing a family members slot on a good card to do the same thing. We call it “piggybacking”.
Wednesday, July 8th, 2009 at
10:00 am
New loans always cost you points because they start with an inquiry, don’t have credit history repair services and are usually 100% debt to credit ratio. Be cautious in getting a new loan as it does hit your credit score in 7 different ways as we mentioned in previous secrets. Know what you need the credit for and don’t just get any credit you can as it will hurt your credit scores. It’s a puzzle that needs a plan and requires careful consideration before plunging ahead. What will it be used for, when will you get it paid off, what will it cost you to get, what is the interest rate and will it help to improve your lifestyle or will it put you deeper in debt?
I have noticed that people are not patient anymore and it costs them in money, in time, in heartache, and in stress and strain on relationships. Plan ahead, be patient, save, invest, gain knowledge from those who are successful and then be patient again. My father always taught me, “When in doubt, don’t.” In other words, wait and see so you aren’t jumping on board a boat that has already left the dock. You get wet and it upsets the fish.
A rule of thumb to getting new credit is this… get a National Bank Credit Card, get a high credit limit, and keep it for the rest of your life, with a low balance, paid on time, every month… this will create an excellent credit score for years and years to come.
Now go be curageous…
Tuesday, May 26th, 2009 at
6:00 am
Credit limits are an important factor in your credit score because of the debt to credit limit ratio. The lower the ratio the higher your credit scores because the credit bureaus want to see that you can control your spending. If you have a high credit limit and have the option of using up the entire credit limit, but don’t, then you become a low risk user and deserve to have a higher credit score interpretation.
The solution then is to increase your credit limits and keep your balances low. The higher the credit limit with a low balance, the lower the debt to credit limit ratio the higher your credit scores.