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@Eric958 wrote:
Eq 640 EX 646 tU 639 2 Paid co will drop 12/08 2 paid judge from 03 and 05 =$300 2 unpaid co from 03 = $185 Auto 12/05= $17000/$29000 Aspen cc 12/06= $1/$350 AF$89 Orchard 5/07= $79/$300 AF$49 CU loan 06/07= $1500/$1500 H Depot 06/07= $500/$1000 Carecredit5/07= $1000/$1000 Inquiries past 6 mths EQ 10 EX 3 TU 1 Can't seem to qualify for any cc with limits over $500, do I need to age the 2 cc I have first or is my credit just down right nasty? Do you have to own a home to qualify for the higher limits? Any suggestions? I think I have to many Inquiries to try for cc's. As you can see I only have 2 accts more then 6 mths old. E!
Eric958 wrote:
Why do you say lucky you?
Thanks for this info!
fused111 wrote:For the last several weeks it has been rumored consumers with subprime CCs reporting on their CRs will see their FICO scores plummet once FICO'S new and improved scoring model debuts this September. JUST IN, THIS IS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN! So what will the new FICO scoring model do? Simply put, a better job of predicting subprime and prime risk than earlier versions of FICO scoring models. That's it!
@fused111 wrote:For the last several weeks it has been rumored consumers with subprime CCs reporting on their CRs will see their FICO scores plummet once FICO'S new and improved scoring model debuts this September. JUST IN, THIS IS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN! So what will the new FICO scoring model do? Simply put, a better job of predicting subprime and prime risk than earlier versions of FICO scoring models. That's it!
The Big Kahuna, Barry!
@Anonymous wrote:
@fused111 wrote:For the last several weeks it has been rumored consumers with subprime CCs reporting on their CRs will see their FICO scores plummet once FICO'S new and improved scoring model debuts this September. JUST IN, THIS IS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN! So what will the new FICO scoring model do? Simply put, a better job of predicting subprime and prime risk than earlier versions of FICO scoring models. That's it!
Cool. Like some others I had doubts that FICO could accomplish a logical separation of prime and subprime, given the sheer number of cards and endless combinations of APR, CL, and fees.
I know the information about FICO penalizing subprime CCs came from a video mentioned in another thread. Where did the update come from that said this is not going to happen?