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Reports & Credit
Scoring
About Credit Scoring
Most
anyone who has obtained a home mortgage in the past 5 years or
so has heard about credit scoring. How many of you have been
told "your scores are great", or "if your score
were 10 points higher, your rate would be better by 1/4 point"?
Probably most of you.
We in
the industry started to become aware of "scoring models",
as they are called, as early as 1994. The use of scoring models
in the mortgage industry came about as the major secondary market
players, known as Fannie Mae and Freebie Mac, started to develop
automated underwriting systems. They had been in use for a long
time for auto lenders and credit card issuers.
The early creators of the automated underwriting systems felt
that, if someone could go to a Mercedes dealership at 10 am and
drive off the showroom floor an hour later with a $100,000 car
(still more expensive than homes are in many parts of the country),
they ought to be able to obtain a home loan the same way. The logic
in this should be obvious... after all, cars are rolling stock,
so they can disappear, they depreciate and usually people don't
live in them. Houses are attached to a foundation, they usually
appreciate and people usually live in them. Using that logic, the
industry should be able to make the home buying process easier
for everyone.
This theory sounds good, but it is only in the last year that
we have seen some relief from the mountains of paper that go into
loan files, and it is because the scoring models have become more
refined. Still, there is progress yet to be made and the industry
is grinding slowly in that direction. Scoring models figure prominently
in the future of how people obtain home mortgages.
Most people know that most creditors use credit report agencies
for obtaining information on a person when they have applied for
any type of financing. However, there are actually two levels of
credit reporting agencies. There are three major repositories of
credit and background information. They are Equifax, Experian and
TransUnion. When someone obtains credit, the creditor reports the
payment history to these repositories. This is usually done monthly
but may be done on an irregular basis. These repositories simply
accept the information as it comes in electronically and they DO
NOT check the accuracy of the information.
The credit repositories and other agencies also maintain other
background information on every person in the country who has a
Social Security number or other identifying information. The other
agencies may include the Department of Motor Vehicles, the Medical
Information Board, the FBI, local law enforcement agencies, the
county recorders for each county (public records repositories),
etc. Even the mortgage industry has a central repository for borrowers
and lenders who may have been involved in fraudulent activities
in the making of mortgage loans. |