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@Anonymous wrote:Hi I came across this in my researchAccording to the Fair Isaac Scorecard(slide 8 0f 49), it goes as follows>50% = -18 ;
41 - 50 % = -10;
31 - 40% = -3;
16 - 30%= 5;
and 0 - 15% = 15one ? is this considering only the collective total? meaning that you lose only 18 pts if your total util is over 50%or you losing any points individually as well? like a double wammy...one card is 51% minus 18and one is 52% minus 18So, would you be losing 18 points times 3?Also, has anyone seen data to support what type of points you are losing based on 61% usage and 71% etc? I am worried as I have one card that is at 71% that I really can't comfortably pay down at this point.I was told that you could lose b/w 70-100 points being maxed out.
Message Edited by takemehigher_1 on 11-12-2007 05:12 PM
RobertEG wrote:FICO score calcuation is a pure mathematical algorithm once data is entered, so a clear mathematical view of this calculation is required. And yes, the slide referred to is a very old slide, and does not discuss what baseline a "gain" or "loss" is calculated from. It thus has no disclosed baseline for the "loss" or "gain" approximations given, and accordingly has no clear mathematical basis for its intepretation, which is probably why FairIsaac no longer uses this in its discussions. It makes mathematical sense (and FICO is a mathematical algorithm) only when compared to some defined baseline from which any increase or decrease is compared. In reality, total FICO %util points are 30% of 850, or 255 points max. So the real baseline is 255 points, which is a max, and thus points are never gained for %util if total points are the baseline, which they are....., they are only lost from the 255 max. For absolute scoring changes, it is the amount of loss from max that is the true mathematical issue, not any gain from some other baseline. While the exact algorithm used by FICO is a trade secret, if one assumes a simple linear scale, then points at each level would be:10% util 255-25 = 230 positive, and of course, about a 10% loss from max of 25520% util 255 - 50 = 205 positive, or about 10% lower score than 10% util of 23030% util 255 - 76 = 179 positive, or about 12.1% lower score than 20% util score of 205and so on...If the scale is not linear, then the differences will also be non-linear. The point is, you only "gain" over a prior baseline, and not in the absolute sense. Also, there seems to be some feeling on here that FICO deducts more points if you are at 0% than if in the 0-9% range, and thus showing some utilization. Who knows? Only Fair Isaac! And also, 255 is for all util, which incudes both installment and revolving. Your guess is as good as mine as to how much is weighted for revolving, and how much for installment. Clearly, revolving is weigthed much higher, but the weighting is a FICO secret.
Message Edited by RobertEG on 11-13-2007 03:44 PM
Message Edited by RobertEG on 11-13-2007 03:50 PM
@Anonymous wrote:Now is this point boost on a monthly basis...something tells me that would be too aggressive to the whole scoring system.how often would the points fluctuate?30, 60, 90, 120, 150? every 365???
@haulingthescoreup wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:
Now is this point boost on a monthly basis...something tells me that would be too aggressive to the whole scoring system.how often would the points fluctuate?30, 60, 90, 120, 150? every 365???
Scores don't exist until they are pulled. They are just potential. Whatever shows on your CRA's at that moment determines your score (as crunched by the mystery FICO formula.)
If you win the lottery and pull all three every day, they won't change much, because your reports don't change much. If you pull once a year, there's no telling what they might have been on the other 364 days. It just is what it is, when you take a look.