Credit isn’t only about your score

Your Lifestyle May Hurt Your Credit

 Lenders may be monitoring your bar tab or marriage counseling bill—which could be costly for consumers

Most borrowers know a late payment or high outstanding balance can hurt their credit. But what about frequenting a massage parlor, retreading a tire, or visiting a marriage counselor? Such activities count, too, according to a suit filed by the Federal Trade Commission in federal court in Atlanta on June 10 against card issuer CompuCredit (CCRT).

Lenders, insurers, and other financial firms use credit scoring systems to make a host of decisions about consumers, including the interest rate on their mortgages, the limits on their credit cards, and the monthly premiums for their auto coverage. Some rely heavily on FICO, a three-digit score developed by Minneapolis-based financial firm Fair Isaac, while others use proprietary models developed by statisticians. But companies don’t disclose what’s baked in to their formulas, leaving many borrowers to wonder which factors determine their financial fate. The FTC suit against Atlanta-based CompuCredit for allegedly “deceptive” marketing practices offers a rare look inside the opaque business of credit scoring. It reveals a mechanism that consumer advocates and politicians have long suspected exists—one in which purchasing behavior, not just payment history, matters.

The allegations, in part, focus on CompuCredit’s Aspire Visa, a subprime credit card for risky borrowers. The FTC claims that CompuCredit didn’t properly disclose that it monitored spending and cut credit lines if consumers used their cards at certain places. Among them: tire and retreading shops, massage parlors, bars, billiard halls, and marriage counseling offices. “The company touted that cardholders could use their credit cards anywhere,” says J. Reilly Dolan, assistant director for financial practices at the FTC. “What they didn’t say was that you could be punished for specific kinds of purchases.” The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is also seeking $200 million in penalties from CompuCredit in the matter.

It’s not the first time CompuCredit has come under scrutiny from authorities. In 2006, the credit card issuer and another financial firm agreed to fork over $11million to consumers and reform its marketing and billing procedures as part of a settlement with then-New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, who had launched a probe the year before after receiving various consumer complaints.

CompuCredit maintains that the FTC’s lawsuit is without merit, and defends its practices. “Every time a consumer accesses their credit, a new decision to extend a loan is being made,” says Rohit H. Kirpalani, CompuCredit’s general counsel. “These scoring models are commonplace across the industry.”

GAMING THE SYSTEM

With competition increasing, databases improving, and technology advancing, companies can include more factors than ever in their models. And industry experts say financial firms increasingly are looking at consumer behavior, as CompuCredit did. The worry is that companies may tweak the credit scoring systems in unfair or biased ways, weeding out or limiting borrowers based on race, gender, or sexual orientation. (In the case of CompuCredit, regulators are taking issue with the lack of disclosure, not specifically its use of behavior-based scoring.) “We as consumers should become aware that behavior is used to determine our creditworthiness,” says consumer advocate Karen Gross, president of Southern Vermont College. “What CompuCredit portends is the [use] of information to create a more robust and potentially nefarious credit scoring system.”

Silver-Greenberg is a reporter for BusinessWeek.com

3,176 thoughts on “Credit isn’t only about your score

  1. Pingback: cannabis culture

  2. Pingback: erkek güneş gözlüğü

  3. Pingback: anal penis ring

  4. Pingback: massive dildo

  5. Pingback: adult sex toys

  6. Pingback: CBD oil 500mg

  7. Pingback: click to read

  8. Pingback: CBD soft gels

  9. Pingback: CBD gummies

  10. Pingback: Dispensary Near Me

  11. Pingback: black dildo

  12. Pingback: dildo

  13. Pingback: vtech baby

  14. Pingback: Deep Spin Poster Bonuses

  15. Pingback: blowjob sex toy

  16. Pingback: stroker toy

  17. Pingback: nodejs development company

  18. Pingback: nill

  19. Pingback: react native

  20. Pingback: app free download for windows 8

  21. Pingback: cheap airbnb indianapolis

  22. Pingback: free laptop games download

  23. Pingback: games download for windows

  24. Pingback: games for pc download

  25. Pingback: free games download for pc

  26. Pingback: apps for pc download

  27. Pingback: apps download for pc

  28. Pingback: app for laptop

  29. Pingback: free apps for pc download

  30. Pingback: pc app

  31. Pingback: app free download for windows 7

  32. Pingback: free download for laptop pc

  33. Pingback: free apps for pc download

  34. Pingback: pc app

  35. Pingback: app for pc download

  36. Pingback: apps download for windows 10

  37. Pingback: apps download for windows 10

  38. Pingback: free apps download for windows 10

  39. Pingback: app free download for windows 10

  40. Pingback: app free download for windows 10

  41. Pingback: CBD gummies

  42. Pingback: CBD gummies

  43. Pingback: CBD gummies

  44. Pingback: Exotic carts

  45. Pingback: mango juul pods for sale

  46. Pingback: cbd products

  47. Pingback: royal cbd products

  48. Pingback: cbd products

  49. Pingback: best cbd products

  50. Pingback: best CBD

Leave a Reply