No credit card required
Browse credit cards from a variety of issuers to see if there's a better card for you.
@Anonymous wrote:
Here's my problem with all this, Midnight.
It's like with car insurance. Yes, having a certain car can cause you to have higher rates. Having previous accidents can set your rates. That's fine, too.
However, telling you which roads to take, when you drive, is how FICO does. They tell you which roads you should drive, how many passenger's you should have in the car, what type of music you should have on the radio.
In essence, they are controlling your behavior to play a game. None of us want to play the game. We just want a system that tells lenders whether we pay or bills or not.
A previous collection of accidents isn't risk analysis? Of course it is, and a very good one. This isn't the stock market. Here is what I think.......it's not that they don't have a right to do whatever analysis they want, because they do, but do they, or should they have the power to keep you out of the premium range because you don't choose to do exactly what they say you should do? My brother has a clean credit history. He has a long credit history. He doesn't have any revolving credit. He has a mortgage and a car loan that he has maintained for years. However, he doesn't fit the model that FICO deems is appropriate for the most premium scores, and that's where I have a problem. Do all the risk analysis you want, but don't penalize people because they didn't play the game that FICO says you need to play. It's crazy to me that they can't put you into a premium range, just becuase they don't like the types of credit you have. And I won't even open up the can of worms of how askew their system is if you have a negative on your report. About your point here: "FICO has observed through research and statistical analysis that if you drive road X, and carry Y or more number of passengers, and listen to FM station Z, you are more likely to have accidents. And since the job of risk analysis is to predict the likelihood of unpleasant outcomes, FICO will assign you a risk score that reflects this." It should matter what you've DONE......whether you have had the accidents. Whether you killed someone or had a hit and run. Do all the risk analysis you want, but the bottom line is what you do or have done. And if anyone thinks that having ONE organization to go to that lenders use to assign scores is capitalism, then think again. I believe it's called a monopoly.
@haulingthescoreup wrote:I don't think that's an exact parallel. It's more this way: FICO has observed through research and statistical analysis that if you drive road X, and carry Y or more number of passengers, and listen to FM station Z, you are more likely to have accidents. And since the job of risk analysis is to predict the likelihood of unpleasant outcomes, FICO will assign you a risk score that reflects this. You are completely free to drive these roads, cram your car full of passengers, and crank up the radio to the point where cows in the fields lose their milk. On the other hand, if you want a different score, you can choose to act differently. The system that you're talking about, "a system that tells lenders whether we pay our bills or not," isn't risk analysis. It's just a collection of accident reports. FICO is in the business of risk analysis, not updating your credit history. That's the job of your creditors and the credit bureaus, and I might add, they don't do it very well.
wordslayer wrote: Here's my problem with all this, Midnight. It's like with car insurance. Yes, having a certain car can cause you to have higher rates. Having previous accidents can set your rates. That's fine, too. However, telling you which roads to take, when you drive, is how FICO does. They tell you which roads you should drive, how many passenger's you should have in the car, what type of music you should have on the radio. In essence, they are controlling your behavior to play a game. None of us want to play the game. We just want a system that tells lenders whether we pay or bills or not.
@MidnightVoice wrote:
Not really - be fiscally responsible for an extended period of time and you will get scores that allow the best rates for most loans and credit cards.
@Anonymous wrote:
A previous collection of accidents isn't risk analysis? Of course it is, and a very good one. This isn't the stock market.
Here is what I think.......it's not that they don't have a right to do whatever analysis they want, because they do, but do they, or should they have the power to keep you out of the premium range because you don't choose to do exactly what they say you should do?
My brother has a clean credit history. He has a long credit history. He doesn't have any revolving credit. He has a mortgage and a car loan that he has maintained for years. However, he doesn't fit the model that FICO deems is appropriate for the most premium scores, and that's where I have a problem.
Do all the risk analysis you want, but don't penalize people because they didn't play the game that FICO says you need to play....
@Anonymous wrote:
Not a bad analogy, Hauling.....
However, people who are healthy shouldn't be outliers.
This is a flawed system that gives too much emphasis to people who have charge cards, and not enough weight to people who refuse to play a lot in the credit card game.
Personally, I think everyone should have manual review, because we aren't all applying for credit as a group, so why should we be scored that way?
Maybe the problem I have is that lenders give way too much weight to a fico score.