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| | | What Information is in the Report? |
Your credit can determine what you can
buy, what type of car you drive, and even where you
can live. It is important to maintain the best credit report
possible. Each person should check his or her credit report
and make sure it is correct. Always get your credit in order
when shopping for a loan.
To understand the credit process
you first need to understand what information is contained
in a credit report. Although the style, format and coding
may be different depending on which credit reporting bureau
is used, the typical person's credit report includes four
of the following types of information:
- Identifying
information: your name, nicknames, current and
previous addresses, Social Security number, date of
birth, and current and previous employers. This information
comes from any credit application you have completed,
and its accuracy depends on your filling out forms clearly,
completely and consistently each time you apply for
credit.
- Credit information:
specific information about each account including the
date opened, credit limit or loan amount, balance, monthly
payment and payment pattern during the past several
years. The report also states whether anyone else besides
you (i. e., a spouse or cosigner) is responsible for
paying the account. This information comes from companies
that do business with you.
- Public record
information: federal district bankruptcy records;
state and county court records, tax liens and monetary
judgments; and, in some states, overdue child support
payments. This information comes from public records.
- Inquiries:
includes the names of those who have obtained a copy
of your credit report for any reason. This information
comes from the credit reporting agency, and it remains
available for as long as two years, according to federal
law.
How is this information used?
A credit bureau score is one type of credit score. It is calculated from the information on your credit
bureau file at the time
that the information was requested. Consequently, a credit
score is like a snapshot: It sums up, at one given point
in time, what your past and current credit usage say about
your future credit performance.
Credit
scoring helps lenders apply one set of rules to everybody.
The sophistication of today's models allow for certain behavior
patterns. As a result, a 20-year-old's credit history would
not be compared to a 45-year-old's credit history. One reason
these scoring models are so widely used is because they
can differentiate between the credit patterns of individuals.
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