Some Questions About Credit Scores
“Can I get a mortgage with a credit score of 450?”
If you get
one, it won’t be a mortgage you want.
Credit scores
are calculated using a variety of models that have small
differences between them and generate similar but not
identical scores. The range of scores in most models is 300
to 850, with a score below 620 considered sub-prime, and a
score of 450 marking the subject as a deadbeat who no honest
lender will touch. If
you have equity in your home, however, there are some
predators who will lend to you in the expectation that when
you default, they will find ways to shift the equity to
themselves. Don‘t bother asking me who they are.
“What should my target credit score be if I want the lowest
possible interest rate on a mortgage?”
It depends on
where you start, and on how much time you have to raise your
score.
If you begin
with a 620 and have 18 months, shoot for a 660 which will
drop the rate by about .375% (say 4.625% to 4.25%). If you
begin with 680 and have 18 months, shoot for 720 which will
drop the rate by about .125%. Some lenders will drop the
rate by another .125% at 780, but you can’t get there from
680 in 18 months.
Note that
credit scores are calculated from mathematical models, of
which there are many designed for different types of users.
Mortgage lenders won’t ordinarily use the same model as auto
loan lenders, and some mortgage lenders use different models
than others. Different models will generate different
scores, and while the differences are small, your target
score should include a margin of error of at least 5 points.
This would make the targets discussed above 665 and 725.
How does one manage credit cards so as to generate the
highest possible credit score?
Avoid
delinquent payments and maintain low utilization ratios.
Delinquent
payments reduce your score. Eliminating the delinquency does
not restore your score to where it was, it merely prevents a
further decline. Delinquencies stay on your record for 7
years, although their force will gradually weaken as on-time
payments come in.
Shoot for low
utilization ratios, below 33% on all your cards. The
utilization ratio is the outstanding debt relative to the
maximum amount of debt that the credit grantor has set on
that card. For example, if the balance on a card is $2,500
and the maximum balance is $5,000, the utilization rate is
50%.
A card holder
can reduce his utilization ratio by reducing his balance,
and also by increasing the maximum balance. If a borrower
has had a good payment record, the maximum can often be
increased simply by asking.
If your card
issuer does not report a maximum, your score will be
calculated on the assumption that the highest balance ever
reached in that account is the maximum, when in fact it
could be well below the maximum. This raises your
utilization rate (and lowers your credit score) for no good
reason.
If a card has
no reported limit, you can either request that the limit be
reported, or terminate the relationship. Alternatively, you
can shift all your balances into this account temporarily so
that the highest balance comes closer to the unreported
maximum.
In addition,
don’t have too many cards or too few, about 4 or 5 old cards
that you actively use is about right. New cards can reduce
your score. Avoid department store cards, which will reduce
your score.
‘Will inquiries about my credit made by the lenders I am shopping reduce my credit score?”
“Should I pay off an old collection account before applying
for a mortgage?”
Lenders may or
may not accept an unpaid collection account, depending on
the circumstances, so the safest procedure is to pay it off,
and the sooner the better. The payoff will temporarily
reduce your credit score, and the sooner that happens, the
better.
Paying off a
collection account, like bringing a delinquent payment
current, does not remove it from your credit record. As time
passes, the impact on your credit score of an adverse item
in the report gradually declines, because older information
is less predictive of how good a credit risk you are than
more recent information. But the adverse item does not
disappear.
When a borrower pays an old collection item, the payment
converts it from an old item with diminished weight into a
current item with greater weight. As a result, paying an old
item reduces the credit score. You want this to happen as
early as possible so that the passage of time will diminish
its negative weight in your credit score.
If the amount
required to pay off the collection item is so large that
paying it will mean that you can’t meet the down payment
requirement, you will have to make the collection item the
first order of business with any loan provider you contact.
On August 7,
2014 the Fair Isaac company which develops the models used
to calculate credit scores, announced that its newest model
would ignore collection items that had been paid, and that
medical collection items would carry a substantially lower
weight. The new model will become available before the end
of the year, but mortgage lenders won’t adopt it until it is
blessed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and nobody knows when
that will be. For now, the best rule remains “Pay off
collection accounts ASAP.”
