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Chapter 17 Credit Records and Law. Section 17.1 Establishing Good Credit. Pay debts according to loan agreement?. credit history – complete record of your borrowing and repayment performance. Pay bills on time?. How large are the payments you owe?. How much do you owe?.
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Chapter 17Credit Records and Law Section 17.1 Establishing Good Credit
Pay debts according to loan agreement? credit history – complete record of your borrowing and repayment performance Pay bills on time? How large are the payments you owe? How much do you owe?
credit bureau – company that gathers, stores, and sells credit information to business subscribers
How Credit Bureau Processes Information
credit report – written statement of a consumer’s credit history issued by a credit bureau to its business subscribers Can be ordered online Can be by writing to a credit bureau annualcreditreport.com **One free credit report per credit bureau per year**
Getting Credit Information • Credit bureaus get info from subscribers • Subscribers pay a monthly fee • Subscribers supply information about customers to the credit bureaus • Credit bureaus get info from: • Newspaper articles • Public records
Who has an Interest in Credit Information? • Retail businesses • Banks • Employers • Landlords • Insurance Companies
Creditworthiness Five Qualifications -5 C’s • Character • Capacity • Capital • Conditions • Collateral
1st Qualification of Credit--Character Will you Repay? • Responsible attitude to go what you say you’ll do • Pay on time • Stability – may be used as a measure • How often have you moved? • More stable you are—better the credit risk
2nd Qualification of Credit--Capacity Can you Repay? • Financial ability with present income • Want to be sure your income is enough to cover the loan amount
3rd Qualification of Credit--Capital Is there protection if you don’t pay? • Do you already owe a lot of debt? • Is what you own greater than what you owe? • Would your assets cover the payment of the debt?
4th Qualification of Credit--Conditions What might impact your ability to repay? • Current economy • How secure is your job? • How’s the company you work for doing? • Is there a demand for people in your field or occupation?
5th Qualification of Credit--Collateral What assets do you have? • Do you have any thing of value? Possessions? • Can possessions be sold easily? Quickly?
Ways to Get Started with Credit • Be sure you have a savings account • Open a checking account when you obtain a job—record transactions/check balances/reconcile • Establish credit by: • Opening store credit account/card—Gap, Macy’s • Obtaining a small loan from a bank or credit union • Obtain one credit card—Visa or MasterCard **Be sure you pay on time and make all payments!!**
credit rating – a measure of creditworthiness based on an analysis of the consumer’s financial history
Credit Rating Systems • Point System • Credit bureau assigns points • Points are based on certain factors • Amount of debt • Number of late payments • Number of accounts • Current employment • Amount of Income • Ratings—Excellent/Good/Fair/Poor • Rates based on how reliably they pay back money borrowed • Subscribers make own rating decisions
FICO Score • FICO stands for Fair Isaac and Company. Their scores are the credit scores most lenders use to determine credit risk. • Each person has three FICO score, one for each of the three credit bureaus. As information changes, so does your score. • FICO scores affect the loan terms, such as interest rate, that you will be offered. • To calculate a FICO score, you must have at least one account open for at least six months. • Your scores may be different at each of the credit bureaus because of varying information collected and slight differences in the way the rating system is applied.
FICO Score Breakdown • Payment History(35%) is rated based on how you pay your debts; the presence of bankruptcy, liens, or collections, and whether accounts are past due or paid as agreed. • Amounts Owed (30%) is rated based on the amounts owed on accounts, amounts on specific types of accounts, lack of balances, and proportion of credit line used. • Length of Credit History(15%) is rated based on the oldest account opened and the average age of all accounts. • New Credit(10%) is rated based on the number of recently opened accounts and the number of recent credit inquiries. • Types of Credit Used(10%) is rated based on the mix of credit accounts, such as credit cards, retail accounts, installment loans, mortgages, etc.
Excellent Credit Rating • 730+ • Also called an A Rating • Customers must pay bills before the due date • Customer is well established • Customer has used credit for many years • Customer has paid off debts/loans early
Good Credit Rating • 670 - 730 • Also called an B Rating • Customers must pay bills on the due date or within the grace period (usually 10 days) • Customer doesn’t miss any payments
Fair Credit Rating • 585 - 670 • Earned by customer who usually pays with grace period • Customer may occasionally take longer to pay • Late charges are sometimes applied • Usually don’t need a reminder • Slow to pay—but pretty dependable
Poor Credit Rating • Below 585 • Usually have payments that aren’t paid on a regular basis • Miss monthly payments • Need reminders about making payments • May have not paid back a debt • May have filed for bankruptcy • May have been denied credit previously
Credit Reports • May be requested for lots of reasons • Investigating credit applications • Employment applications • Insurance matters credit report video
What’s in a Credit Report? • Summary Information • What to look for in report • Outlines +’s and –’s • Shows favorable items • Public Record Information • Lawsuits, legal issues • Marriage, divorce, adoption • Credit Information • List credit accounts • Gives details of the accounts payment status
What’s in a Credit Report? • Account detail • Monthly balances • Lists credit limits • Request for credit history • Lists businesses requests credit information from the file • Examples are employers, creditors, insurance companies • Personal information • Name/previous names • Contact information/birthdate/SS#
Reading a Credit Report Sample Credit Report
Consumer Credit Protection Act • Passed in 1968 • Also called the Truth-in-Lending Law • Requires lenders to fully inform consumers about all costs of a credit purchase • Needs to be disclosed before the agreement is signed • Lenders need to disclose: • Finance charge • APR – consumer can compare costs from other lenders • Allows for a grace period of 3 business days to change your mind about an agreement • Limits consumer’s liability to $50 after a credit card is reported lost or stolen • No liability if card is reported lost or stolen and then someone else uses it
Fair Credit Reporting Act • Passed in 1970 • Consumers have the right to know what’s in their credit file • Consumers have the right to know who has seen their credit file • A listing of requests to see your credit in the last six months or two years – depending on the information must be available for you • Allowed to see your credit file at no charge within 30 days if you are denied credit • A small fee may be charged at other times • Have the right to have inaccurate info investigated, corrected or deleted • You can comment on your credit file—give your side • Your comments about your credit file can be added to your file
Fair Credit Billing Act • Passed in 1975 • Creditors must resolve billing errors within a specified period of time • Creditors need to have policies to correct errors in billing • Consumers need to take responsibility to correct errors on credit card bills • Letter explaining the problem • Letter should include account number and information • Complaints need to be in writing • Complaints should be mailed within 60 days from receiving the statement • Creditor must acknowledge your complaint within 30 days • Creditor must correct or explain why bill is correct within 60 days
Equal Credit Opportunity Act • Passed in 1975 • Designed to prevent discrimination • Can’t be denied credit for the following reasons: • Gender, martial status • Religion, national origin, race, color, age—(minors may be exception) • Receive unemployment, social security or retirement benefits
Equal Credit Opportunity Act • Creditors can’t ask certain questions – plans for having children, etc. • Creditor can’t discourage you from applying for credit • Creditors have to notify you of actions taken on credit application within 30 days of applying • Denial of credit must be in writing • Creditor needs to keep information about the denial • You have the right to appeal a denial • Requires that both husband and wife are responsible for debt
Fair Debt Collection Practices Act • Passed in 1978 • Designed to eliminate abusive collection practices • Regulated techniques used by debt collectors • Debt collectors aren’t allowed to: • Use threats, obscenities, false and misleading statements • Intimidate consumers into paying • Debt collectors can’t call at place of employment or in the middle of the night • Debt collectors have to verify of the bill is accurate • Consumers need to have a chance to clarify or dispute the bill
Credit Cardholder’s Bill of Rights • Passed in 2010 • Protects consumers against unfair lending practices: • Arbitrary rate hikes • Double-cycle billing • Consumers have right to review their rates and have them reduced • Fair allocation of payments • Payments must be made toward higher interest rates first • No fees for paying bill early • Consumers have to have enough time to pay their bill • No tricks/gimmicks dealing with paying the bill by a certain time on a due date • Protection for cardholders under age 21