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A few months ago I began to suspect that 40% of accounts with balances is a breakpoint in EX FICO 2.
Today I confirmed it to my satisfaction. A mere $31 balance was added, which took accounts with balances from 12/33 to 13/33. The result ... EX FICO 2 dropped 11 points.
Now to get my utilization down and find out where the next breakpoint is.
But see update post 7/13/19.





























Hi SouthJ! Would you mind testing the difference between exactly one card reporting and 12 cards reporting a balance?
If there is no difference at all for EX FICO 2, it would strongly suggest that the integer number of accounts has no bearing on the factor "number of accounts reporting a balance" (for that model). Instead, all that would matter is the ratio (percentage).
One of the reasons I have assumed that the integer number also matters is that I get the negative reason statement (number of accounts reporting a balance) even when my ratio is extremely low. Last year I had 12 cards and 2 open loans, and I would see that statement even when I had exactly two cards reporting (2/12 ratio for revolving and 4/14 for open accounts).
If you do see a score drop between exactly 1 and 12, it would be interesting to hear where the score drop first appears (and what the negative reason statements say). E.g. testing going from 1 card to 5 cards (say). A score drop there would imply the importance of integer number, since your ratio would be incredibly low regardless.
@Anonymous wrote:Hi SouthJ! Would you mind testing the difference between exactly one card reporting and 12 cards reporting a balance?
If there is no difference at all for EX FICO 2, it would strongly suggest that the integer number of accounts has no bearing on the factor "number of accounts reporting a balance" (for that model). Instead, all that would matter is the ratio (percentage).
One of the reasons I have assumed that the integer number also matters is that I get the negative reason statement (number of accounts reporting a balance) even when my ratio is extremely low. Last year I had 12 cards and 2 open loans, and I would see that statement even when I had exactly two cards reporting (2/12 ratio for revolving and 4/14 for open accounts).
If you do see a score drop between exactly 1 and 12, it would be interesting to hear where the score drop first appears (and what the negative reason statements say). E.g. testing going from 1 card to 5 cards (say). A score drop there would imply the importance of integer number, since your ratio would be incredibly low regardless.
I would love to do that, but unfortunately at the moment I have too much revolving debt to pull that off in the near future.





























That's too bad. You are uniquely poised to answer this, given the huge number of credit cards that you have.
@SouthJamaica wrote:
Today I confirmed it to my satisfaction. A mere $31 balance was added, which took accounts with balances from 12/33 to 13/33. The result ... EX FICO 2 dropped 11 points.
Now to get my utilization down and find out where the next breakpoint is.
What was the dollar balance and aggregate utilization before and after?
I ask that because my EX FICO 2 dropped 6 pts from 727 to 721 when the only data that changed was aging by 1 month, 1% to 7% aggregate utilization change ($40 to $588) , 1 to 2 cards carrying a balance (already a negative at 727).
Negative reason statements were exactly the same on both reports:
@Anonymous wrote:
@SouthJamaica wrote:
Today I confirmed it to my satisfaction. A mere $31 balance was added, which took accounts with balances from 12/33 to 13/33. The result ... EX FICO 2 dropped 11 points.
Now to get my utilization down and find out where the next breakpoint is.
What was the dollar balance and aggregate utilization before and after?
I ask that because my EX FICO 2 dropped 6 pts from 727 to 721 when the only data that changed was aging by 1 month, 1% to 7% aggregate utilization change ($40 to $588) , 1 to 2 cards carrying a balance (already a negative at 727).
Negative reason statements were exactly the same on both reports:
- You have a short credit history
- You have not established a long revolving and/or openended account credit history.
- You have too many credit accounts with balances. (1 of 2 with a balance was already too many with EX FICO 2 at 727 before the drop.)
- You've recently opened too many new credit accounts.
$57,360 10.07%
$57,391 10.07%





























@SouthJamaica wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:
@SouthJamaica wrote:
Today I confirmed it to my satisfaction. A mere $31 balance was added, which took accounts with balances from 12/33 to 13/33. The result ... EX FICO 2 dropped 11 points.
Now to get my utilization down and find out where the next breakpoint is.
What was the dollar balance and aggregate utilization before and after?
$57,360 10.07%
$57,391 10.07%
Wow, that's some pretty good evidence then!
FICO 2 seems really sensitive to some things related to debt. On December 23rd, with my SSL at 8.47%, my FICO 2 was 691.
1 new EX inquiry caused that to drop 16 points to 675 on a report 8 days later (Dec 31).
The next report on January 18th, with my SSL closed and 2 new revolving accounts reporting showed FICO 2 up 52 points to 727! It was the only mortgage score to react so strongly to the loan closing.
@Anonymous wrote:
@SouthJamaica wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:
@SouthJamaica wrote:
Today I confirmed it to my satisfaction. A mere $31 balance was added, which took accounts with balances from 12/33 to 13/33. The result ... EX FICO 2 dropped 11 points.
Now to get my utilization down and find out where the next breakpoint is.
What was the dollar balance and aggregate utilization before and after?
$57,360 10.07%
$57,391 10.07%
Wow, that's some pretty good evidence then!
FICO 2 seems really sensitive to some things related to debt. On December 23rd, with my SSL at 8.47%, my FICO 2 was 691.
1 new EX inquiry caused that to drop 16 points to 675 on a report 8 days later (Dec 31).
The next report on January 18th, with my SSL closed and 2 new revolving accounts reporting showed FICO 2 up 52 points to 727! It was the only mortgage score to react so strongly to the loan closing.
I don't know what you're talking about with respect to a loan closing. Are you saying that you had an SSL at 8.47% and paid it off? If so why on earth did you do that?





























Before and after reason codes please.

@SouthJamaica wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:The next report on January 18th, with my SSL closed and 2 new revolving accounts reporting showed FICO 2 up 52 points to 727! It was the only mortgage score to react so strongly to the loan closing.
I don't know what you're talking about with respect to a loan closing. Are you saying that you had an SSL at 8.47% and paid it off? If so why on earth did you do that?
I started learning about credit from these forums shortly after paying for a myFICO 1B report for TransUnion on December 4th. I had already made 11 monthly payments on a 'credit builder' loan with my credit union before I even knew anything about an SSL.
I didn't even think to ask about keeping it open longer when I was at my credit union applying for my first credit card ever. I just paid it off right before they checked my TU score. I was really surprised how much that score jumped from December 4th. (TU updated to 8.47% util/11 payments sometime after Dec 4 and before Dec 20 when the bank did a HP.)