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Your FICO Score and You
Credit Scoring in the Mortgage Industry

Three years ago, credit scoring had little to do with mortgage lending
. When reviewing the credit worthiness of a borrower, an underwriter would
make a subjective decision based on past payment history.
Then things changed.
Lenders studied the relationship between credit scores and mortgage
delinquencies. There was a definite relationship. Almost half of those
borrowers with FICO scores below 550 became ninety days delinquent at
least once during their mortgage. On the other hand, only two out of every
10,000 borrowers with FICO scores above eight hundred became delinquent.
So lenders began to take a closer look at FICO scores and this is what
they found out. The chart below shows the likelihood of a ninety
day delinquency for specific FICO scores.
|
FICO Score |
|
odds of a delinquent account
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
595 |
|
2.25 |
to |
1 |
|
600 |
|
4.5 |
to |
1 |
|
615 |
|
9 |
to |
1 |
|
630 |
|
18 |
to |
1 |
|
645 |
|
36 |
to |
1 |
|
660 |
|
72 |
to |
1 |
|
680 |
|
144 |
to |
1 |
|
700 |
|
288 |
to |
1 |
|
780 |
|
576 |
to |
1 |
If you were lending a couple hundred thousand dollars, who would you want
to lend it to?
Imagine a busy lending office and a loan officer has just ordered a
credit report. He hears the whir of the laser printer and he knows the
pages of the credit report are going to start spitting out in just a
second. There is a moment of tension in the air. He watches the pages
stack up in the collection tray, but he waits to pick them up until all of
the pages are finished printing. He waits because FICO scores are located
at the end of the report. Previously, he would have probably picked them
up as they came off. A FICO above 700 will evoke a smile, then a grin,
perhaps a shout and a "victory" style arm pump in the air. A
score below 600 will definitely result in a frown, a furrowed brow, and
concern.
What is FICO?
FICO stands for Fair Isaac & Company, and credit scores are
reported by each of the three major credit bureaus: TRW (Experian),
Equifax, and Trans-Union. The score does not come up exactly the same on
each bureau because each bureau places a slightly different emphasis on
different items. Scores range from 365 to 840.
Some of the things that affect your FICO scores:
- Delinquencies
- Too many accounts opened within the last twelve months
- Short credit history
- Balances on revolving credit are near the maximum limits
- Public records, such as tax liens, judgments, or bankruptcies
- No recent credit card balances
- Too many recent credit inquiries
- Too few revolving accounts
- Too many revolving accounts
Sounds confusing, doesn't it?
The credit score is actually calculated using a "scorecard"
where you receive points for certain things. Creditors and lenders who
view your credit report do not get to see the scorecard, so they do not
know exactly how your score was calculated. They just see the final
scores.
Basic guidelines on how to view the FICO scores vary a little from
lender to lender. Usually, a score above 680 will require a very basic
review of the entire loan package. Scores between 640 and 680 require more
thorough underwriting. Once a score gets below 640, an underwriter will
look at a loan application with a more cautious approach. Many lenders
will not even consider a loan with a FICO score below 600, some as high as
620.
How your score affects you
Credit scores can affect more than whether your loan gets approved or
not. They can also affect how much you pay for your loan, too. Some
lenders establish a "base price" and will reduce the points on a
loan if the credit score is above a certain level. For example, one major
national lender reduces the cost of a loan by a quarter point if the FICO
score is greater than 725. If it is between 700 and 724, they will reduce
the cost by one-eighth of a point. A point is equal to one percent of the
loan amount.
There are other lenders who do it in reverse. They establish their base
price, but instead of reducing the cost for good FICO scores, they
"add on" costs for lower FICO scores. The results from either
method would work out to be approximately the same interest rate. It is
just that the second way "looks" better when you are quoting
interest rates on a rate sheet or in an advertisement.
FICO scores are only "guidelines" and factors other than FICO
scores affect underwriting decisions. Some examples of compensating
factors that will make an underwriter more lenient toward lower FICO
scores can be a larger down payment, low debt-to-income ratios, an
excellent history of saving money, and others. There also may be a
reasonable explanation for items on the credit history which negatively
impact your credit score.
Even so, sometimes credit scores do not seem to make any sense at all.
One borrower with a completely flawless credit history had a FICO score
below 600. One borrower with a foreclosure on her credit report had a FICO
above 780.
How to protect your score
Finally, there are a few "portfolio" lenders who do not even
look at credit scoring, at least on their portfolio loans. A portfolio
lender is usually a savings & loan institution who originates some
adjustable rate mortgages that they intend to keep in their own portfolio
instead of selling them in the secondary mortgage market. They may look at
home loans differently. Some concentrate on the value of the home. Some
may concentrate more on the savings history of the borrower. There are
also "sub-prime" lenders, or "B & C paper"
lenders, who will provide a home loan, but at a higher interest rate and
cost.
One thing to remember when you are shopping for a home loan is that you
should not let numerous mortgage lenders run credit reports on you. Wait
until you have a reasonable expectation that they are the lender you are
going to use to obtain your home loan. Not only will you have to explain
any credit inquiries in the last ninety days, but numerous inquiries will
lower your FICO score by a small amount. This may not matter if your FICO
is 780, but it would matter to you if it is 642.
In conclusion, a word of advice not directly related to FICO scores.
When people begin to think about the possibility of buying a home, they
often think about buying other big ticket items, such as cars. Quite often
when someone asks a lender to prequalify them for a home loan there is a
brand new car payment on the credit report. Often, they would have
qualified in their anticipated price range except that the new car payment
has raised their debt-to-income ratio, lowering their maximum purchase
price. Sometimes they have bought the car so recently that the new loan
doesn't even show up on the credit report yet, but with six to eight
credit inquiries from car dealers and automobile finance companies it is
kind of obvious. Almost every time you sit down in a car dealership, it
generates two inquiries into your credit.
Nowadays, credit scores are important if you want to get the best
interest rate available. Protect your FICO score. Do not open new
revolving accounts needlessly. Do not fill out credit applications
needlessly. Do not keep your credit cards nearly maxed out. Make sure you
do use your credit occasionally. Always make sure every creditor has
their payment in their office no later than 29 days past due. And never
ever be thirty days late on your mortgage. Ever.
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