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haulingthescoreup wrote:I'll bet that the decision to use statement balance came from back when people just didn't use credit very much at all, so any evidence of high credit use, as reflected by a high balance on the statement, made that person a higher risk. Now that so many of us use plastic in order to get rewards, or minimize carrying cash, or out of distrust of debit cards, it's probably an invalid indicator.
haulingthescoreup wrote:
I realize that this is the data field in the credit reports. But I'll betcha that if research showed balance after due date was a better predictor, the lenders would start reporting that instead.
I mean, even now HSBC does its own thing for reporting, so it's not like using the statement balance was given to Moses on Mount Sinai or something.
@Junejer wrote:
FICO is not a monopoly as you suggest Wordslayer. There is competition. Banks are free to use Vantage Scores, Plus scores or any of the other miriad of credit scoring algorithms that are available. However, they feel most comfortable with the FICO model.
So, we are to penalize FICO for being the industry leader and gaining the trust of their subscribers. I suspect that the same arguement would be alive if Plus or any other credit score were mostly widely used.
Again, I achieved 768 on EQ FICO with only a small maxxed out installment loan was open. I expect that by adding the credit mix, my score will actually surpass that. There is nothing wrong with rewarding me for using the most risky type of credit responsibly and vice versa.