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Home » Categories » » The New Vantage Credit Score. Their "Ad"Vantage or Ours? » Printer Friendly

Robert Tenorio

The New Vantage Credit Score. Their "Ad"Vantage or Ours?

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Submitted Sunday, March 19, 2006
Robert Tenorio (399)
Robert Tenorio

Creditegghead.com
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The New "Vantage" Score. (Their "Ad"Vantage or ours?)



It’s no secret that your credit score affects every aspect if your financial life. Your three digit credit score impacts your mortgage interest rate, your ability to secure low interest credit cards, and possibly even your ability to land that great new job you’ve been eyeing. Your credit score is like your financial DNA that identifies you as a person who is a high credit risk or not.

One of the more popular companies that calculate your credit score is the Fair Isaacs Corporation. The number or credit score they calculate is known as your FICO credit score, based on a mathematical formula they have developed. The average consumer credit score is 677. Only about 11% of the surveyed population ranks above 800 29% ranks between 750 and 799. There are more than 30 million people in the United States with credit problems severe enough to score under 620, making obtaining loans and credit cards at reasonable interest rates difficult (subprime).

The Fair Isaac Corporation is different from the three major credit bureau’s, Experian, Transunion and Equifax, in that, Fair Isaac’s only business is to calculate’s credit scores and sell them to consumers and lenders. They have seemed to push themselves to the top of this industry and have high name brand recognition in the profitable business of selling credit scores to lenders who want to lend us money. At the same time, the big three credit bureau’s compile and sell credit reports but also calculate and sell their own version of our credit scores. Each bureau has developed their own name for their credit score as well. At Equifax, your credit score is known as the Beacon credit score. At Transunion, it’s call Empirica. At Experian, it goes by the name of "Experian/Fair Isaac Risk model". Confused yet? In addition, these credit scores are likely to all be different numbers with each company if you were to check your score with each.



The "Vantage" Score

So, do we really need another three digit number that describes a consumers credit risk to lenders? Apparently Experian, Transunion and Equifax thinks so. They have announced this week that they are producing a more consumer friendly credit score designed to be more understandable to the industry. But is it really and who really benefits from this change?

Here are some facts to consider. Apparently Experian, Transunion and Equifax are all going to drop their individual former names for the credit scores and now all are going to be known as a Vantage credit score. At first I thought, what a great idea, know consumers will have one Vantage score that represents the credit score from Experian, Transunion and Equifax. Consistency across the board at last! Wrong. That’s not the case at all. Each major credit bureau will still individually calculate a consumer’s credit score and sell it to the financial world. These credit scores are still likely to be different numbers with each company if you were to check your score with each. The only thing they have changed is that the three bureau’s have agreed to call their credit score numbers the new Vantage score number.

So basically what we have here is name change and a repackaging of an old product. Sound’s like a huge buzz generated to give new focus on an old product that has a shiny "bell and whistle" attached. Now to make it even more confusing, Experian, Transunion and Equifax have decided to interpret their credit scores by using a scale they have created which is different than the industry norm. Prior to this week, a consumers credit score was interpreted as shown below to the left. Compare this with the way the Vantage score will be interpreted on the right.

FICO CREDIT SCORE

(Range is from 300-850)

720 + --- Excellent

680-719 Good

640-679 Fair

599-639 Poor

VANTAGE CREDIT SCORE

(RANGE IS 501-990)

901-990 = A

801-900 = B

701-800 = C

601-700 = D

501-600 = F

As you can see, person’s having a perfect FICO credit score, say 850, would only be considered to have B credit under the Vantage scoring system. Obviously, the adjustment has to be accounted for but why do we need to create more confusion with such a highly important number for consumers. So who really benefits here?

So there you have it. You are know up to speed. It is expected to be about six months to a year to see whether or not this new change will take off and how it will impact the industry. For now, just remember the importance of your credit score no matter which scale is used to interpret it.

By: Robert Tenorio, Attorney at Law and owner of http://www.creditegghead.com, a consumer reference website for improving your financial health.






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Comments on this article:


» left by Bradley Jones from Las Vegas, Nevada (3 years 197 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
Great article! As a Compliance Officer for a national Credit Reporting Agency that provides credit reports to the automotive and mortgage banking industries, thank you for providing the most up-to-date info to consumers on what is going on!
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» left by Marlon Howard from South Korea (3 years 191 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
this was just the information that I was searching for about Vantage Credit Score
Respond to this comment

» left by logan (3 years 102 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 2 out of 5
"As you can see, person’s having a perfect FICO credit score, say 850, would only be considered to have B credit under the Vantage scoring system." WRONG! An 850 FICO would be equivalent to a 990 Vantage ("A" credit).
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» left by Misty from Indianapolis (3 years 94 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
Great article, but I don't think the new Vantage scoring system is fair (or accurate). My FICO score is 697 which puts me as "GOOD", but my Vantage score is 701 (only 4 points difference) and puts me on the edge of "C" & "D". Numbers in general are looked at differently than letters. A "C" or "D" in general doesn't look very good.
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» left by Andrea from United States (3 years 70 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 3 out of 5
Interesting article! but I Don't think Vantage scoring is going to help people trying to bill up there credit.
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» left by Tatiana from Indiana (2 years 355 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
VantageScore creators should be sued for the violation of Fair Credit Act. My VantageScore is 659 (a mid-D) while my FICO score on the same day was 719, which is good. Number one reason for the low score was "low amount of open real estate accounts", meaning my affordable mortgage in a midwestern town. Including the size of your mortgage in their formula is the same as using income, which is illegal. Income should factor in how much a person can borrow, not how much interest they should pay.
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» left by Toni Jones (2 years 180 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 2.5 out of 5
Your article doesn't present the entire truth, and THAT should be illegal. The Vantage score takes many more factors into consideration, thus, it actually gives consumers a broader range in terms of allowing them to have a better rating. Also, as each of the bureaus contain different information in their credit files, the consumer could apply Vantage score to each file from each bureau and still get a different number.
Not to mention the fact that if a lender isn't using all the criteria available to calculate a person's credit, they are not going to get the same score anyway. Most lenders pick and choose which criteria they feel is important and each item you lose will have an affect on the overall score that you receive. To compare Vantage and FICO is like comparing apples and oranges. To illustrate:

With VantageScore, the factors contributing to the score include:
• 32% payment history
• 23% utilization of available credit
• 15% credit balances
• 13% length and depth of credit history
• 10% recently opened credit accounts
• 7% available credit

and compare that to FICO:

For FICO, factors contributing to the score are:
• 35% payment history
• 30% amount owed
• 10% types of credit in use
• 15% length of credit history
• 10% new credit

As you can see, they are completely different animals.
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» left by Toni Jones (2 years 180 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 2.5 out of 5
I forgot to add, the bureaus are NOT calling their score the Vantage and selling a different score. Each bureau's website clearly states which score you are getting. Also, the use of a universal scoring system depends on lenders. The Big Three can work all day and night to agree on a scoring system, but it doesn't mean a thing if lenders refuse to use that system.
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» left by Anonymous (1 year 351 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 3 out of 5
The question seems to be this: Is the Vantage scoring model used by any Bank, Mortgage Company, etc? Or is it simply another ruse used by the Credit Bureaus to sell to consumers? Such as the TransUnion Personal Credit Score? Yep, it's a personal score all right. Because no lender would ever consider it, it's just for you, and no one else. Now that's not what I call serving the Public Interest at all...
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» left by Anonymous (252 days 3 hours ago.)
left by FATZUKI < The entire credit industry is a racket, three different sites, info, and scores, a no win for the consumer

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» left by Anony the mouse from US VA (211 days 4 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 4 out of 5
The low Down:
 
Before:
the 3 pays FICO for his scoring
 
now:
The 3 dont want to pay FICO any more and developed their own scoring called Vantage.

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» left by Anonymous (91 days 11 hours ago.)
This new scoring system makes it harder for people to obtain credit and get good interest rates. Its not fair I use to have good credit but under vantage im now a D, thats near failure, the new score is not fair and it only helps the credit bureau's by saving them money so they wont have to pay for FICO.

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» left by bihl from USA (73 days 10 hours ago.)
so how do you translate your vantagescore to a fico score?
 
my vantagescore is 948, but I don't want to pay to see my FICO.
 
any ideas/comments?

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Article added to SearchWarp.com on 3/19/2006 5:30:39 PM.
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