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Was I re-bucketed or something?

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SouthJamaica
Mega Contributor

Re: Was I re-bucketed or something?


@wasCB14 wrote:

My TU according to both Discover and Barclaycard-provided scores (both less than a week old) fell from about 780 to 733 in the last month. Puzzled, I got the full report from annualcreditreport.com.

 

Nothing amiss in the report. It's just a sea of green "OK"s.

 

No new accounts in the last 6 months. One TU inquiry 18 months old. No baddies. 2% utilization overall, with balances on 7 of 13 open cards (which is normal for me, and no single-card utilization was high). No installment history, just 13 open cards (and one closed). AAoA just under 2 years. Everything has "Current" status.

 

Is it likely I was re-bucketed? 47 points is a big drop.

 

The only other explanations I can think of would involve TU thinking a card was inactive. One card hasn't had a balance report for 8 months. Another hasn't had a balance report for 6 months. A third had a balance report for the first time in the last 14 months. I was using them during that time, but not much, and generally paying before the statements cut.

 

No apps planned for a few months, I'm mostly just curious what might explain this.


I think it's just a glitch. TU does that some times. There's absolutely nothing in your profile that should have caused a 47 point drop.

 

I'm betting it pops right back.

 

The problem is that when it does pop back, you won't know for awhile, because you're getting your score the super-slow way, from the credit card site.

 

 

 

 


Total revolving limits 569520 (505320 reporting) FICO 8: EQ 689 TU 691 EX 682




Message 11 of 34
wasCB14
Super Contributor

Re: Was I re-bucketed or something?


@newhis wrote:

+1

 

Going over the 3 year mark on oldest card and 6 months newest card, doesn't make sense. Unless there is a higher risk someone having oldest card over 3 years (than 2), with AAoA of less than 1 year, I mean, crossing the 3 year mark on oldest account.

 

My DW is close to 3 year mark on oldest card. Her AAoA just crossed the 2 year mark. I don't expect a score drop.

 

OP, if you can, pay the 3 cards you mention and report $0 again.

Any of your cards is above 30%? or higher and was not that high last month?


I'm paying off the one that had the first balance report for 14 months. The other two have no current balance.

 

My highest single-card utilization is around 8%. That's very low compared to my normal spending and payment habits. My charge card balance is presently under $100.

 

Also, if it is a bucket thing, 6 full months is the longest I've been in the garden. So that could be two of the three factors changing: Length of history, and time since last account.

 

I also had an inquiry fall off in the last month, going from 2 to 1.

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Message 12 of 34
Anonymous
Not applicable

Re: Was I re-bucketed or something?

Hi BBS.  The way that (for me) the football analogy works is this.

 

In the footbal example, Johnny was a big fish in a small pond.  It was natural for him to shine on the Junior High team, because all the other kids on his team were small, weaker, and had played football for less time than he had.

 

Then he moves to the high school and the guys on his team are all bigger than he is!  Bigger, stronger, faster, and know more about football.  He was the star player six months ago -- but now in football practice every afternoon he's being run over by the guys on his team.  He's no longer the star player.  He's the weakest player!  He may be on the bench a lot.  And so on. (But as I also said, over time that will change.  If he stays at it, eats his Wheaties, reads his playbook, he will eventually be one of the big stars on the high school team.  If he then goes on to play college ball, he'll have another rude awakening his freshman year there -- he was rebucketed again, darn it!)

 

FICO scorecards are like that.  FICO groups people it regards as being "similar" into 12 groups.  (I think that's the number of scorecards in FICO 8.)  The exact details behind how a person gets classified is a trade secret, but some things are known.  For example, there are score cards for dirty profiles and those that are clean.  (A person can have a couple 30-day lates and be clean in this sense.)  Clean profiles are then placed into 8 scorecards, depending on the three factors I gave earlier.  (That the method involves these and only these three factors is also known.)

 

A person is then scored by FICO against the people in his group (scorecard).  Another high school analogy is that it is like being graded on a curve for an exam.  Your exam score is based on well you do relative to the other people in that class -- in that "scorecard."  The same exam might be given to two different classes with person X in one class and person Y in the other -- with X and Y getting exactly the same questions right.  Nonetheless, if the students in X's class knew the material better than the students in Y's, then X will get a worse grade.

 

Hope this makes a bit more sense. 

 

What you may be wondering is why FICO does scorecards at all.  Why not just let everyone be on the same team and rank everyone against each other?  Why split everyone into 12 subteams and rank them against the people only on their team?

 

I am not a statistician but the answer must be that FICO has to determined that this in general creates a more reliable score for lenders.  And it's not just FICO that does this.  Every major scoring model does this.  E.g. Vantage 3 does scorecards too.

Message 13 of 34
Anonymous
Not applicable

Re: Was I re-bucketed or something?


@wasCB14 wrote:

@newhis wrote:

+1

 

Going over the 3 year mark on oldest card and 6 months newest card, doesn't make sense. Unless there is a higher risk someone having oldest card over 3 years (than 2), with AAoA of less than 1 year, I mean, crossing the 3 year mark on oldest account.

 

My DW is close to 3 year mark on oldest card. Her AAoA just crossed the 2 year mark. I don't expect a score drop.

 

OP, if you can, pay the 3 cards you mention and report $0 again.

Any of your cards is above 30%? or higher and was not that high last month?


I'm paying off the one that had the first balance report for 14 months. The other two have no current balance.

 

My highest single-card utilization is around 8%. That's very low compared to my normal spending and payment habits. My charge card balance is presently under $100.

 

Also, if it is a bucket thing, 6 full months is the longest I've been in the garden. So that could be two of the three factors changing: Length of history, and time since last account.

 

I also had an inquiry fall off in the last month, going from 2 to 1.


I am pretty sure that scorecard assignment works on integer year values.  But nobody knows for sure so it is certainly conceivable that a "youngest account" breakpoint is set by FICO 8 for exactly six months.  More likely in my opinion is that it is at one year (or possibly even two years).

 

Because of all that, if you have been rebucketed (that's an IF), then I'd guess it was age of oldest turning 3.

Message 14 of 34
Thomas_Thumb
Senior Contributor

Re: Was I re-bucketed or something?


@wasCB14 wrote:

My TU according to both Discover and Barclaycard-provided scores (both less than a week old) fell from about 780 to 733 in the last month. Puzzled, I got the full report from annualcreditreport.com.

 

Nothing amiss in the report. It's just a sea of green "OK"s.

 

No new accounts in the last 6 months. One TU inquiry 18 months old. No baddies. 2% utilization overall, with balances on 7 of 13 open cards (which is normal for me, and no single-card utilization was high). No installment history, just 13 open cards (and one closed). AAoA just under 2 years. Everything has "Current" status.

 

Is it likely I was re-bucketed? 47 points is a big drop.

 

The only other explanations I can think of would involve TU thinking a card was inactive. One card hasn't had a balance report for 8 months. Another hasn't had a balance report for 6 months. A third had a balance report for the first time in the last 14 months. I was using them during that time, but not much, and generally paying before the statements cut.

 

No apps planned for a few months, I'm mostly just curious what might explain this.


I think you answered your own question - cause of score drop due to cards that have been inactive 6 or more months reporting activity.

 

Others have reported score drops due to this situation. My understanding is scores should rebound the next reporting cycle. Your score drop is a bit severe but, you have re-activated 3 cards and one has been inactive over 12 months.

 

There could be something else going on but, the inactive cards reporting activity is my bet.

Fico 9: .......EQ 850 TU 850 EX 850
Fico 8: .......EQ 850 TU 850 EX 850
Fico 4 .....:. EQ 809 TU 823 EX 830 EX Fico 98: 842
Fico 8 BC:. EQ 892 TU 900 EX 900
Fico 8 AU:. EQ 887 TU 897 EX 899
Fico 4 BC:. EQ 826 TU 858, EX Fico 98 BC: 870
Fico 4 AU:. EQ 831 TU 872, EX Fico 98 AU: 861
VS 3.0:...... EQ 835 TU 835 EX 835
CBIS: ........EQ LN Auto 940 EQ LN Home 870 TU Auto 902 TU Home 950
Message 15 of 34
Anonymous
Not applicable

Re: Was I re-bucketed or something?

I wish that there was a definite way to figure out WHY you experienced the score drop.  Either way (re-bucketing or card inactivity) it would tell us something really interesting.

 

With re-bucketing it would give us some evidence that a scorecard breakpoint may be at 3 years (age of oldest).  That's REALLY cool to know if true.

 

With card inactivity, it would mean that using the card while it continues to report $0 each month is not sufficent to make FICO think the card is actually active.  Some people think using the card and then paying to zero (PTZ) is enough to prevent FICO from categorizing it as inactive after a while.  But your case would show that allowing cards to report a balance and then PIF is better at avoiding the inactivity issue.

 

But I agree with SouthJ that we may never know what caused it.

 

If you think that inacativity might be the culprit (even a chance) you could consider switching to PIF rather than PTZ (your current strategy for some of your cards).  Allowing balances to report and then using autopay may be easier too.  There's been some recent threads that are increasingly bringing to everyone's attention that FICO 8 may not care with you have a lot of $0 balances or not.  That used to be the received wisdom (and it is certainly true about earlier FICO models) but there may be little advantage in PTZ even in the month right before a big credit pull (unless it is a mortgage).  FICO 8 may simply not care whether 5 of your 6 cards are at $0 or whether only 1 card is at $0.

Message 16 of 34
SouthJamaica
Mega Contributor

Re: Was I re-bucketed or something?


@Anonymous wrote:

I wish that there was a definite way to figure out WHY you experienced the score drop.  Either way (re-bucketing or card inactivity) it would tell us something really interesting.

 

With re-bucketing it would give us some evidence that a scorecard breakpoint may be at 3 years (age of oldest).  That's REALLY cool to know if true.

 

With card inactivity, it would mean that using the card while it continues to report $0 each month is not sufficent to make FICO think the card is actually active.  Some people think using the card and then paying to zero (PTZ) is enough to prevent FICO from categorizing it as inactive after a while.  But your case would show that allowing cards to report a balance and then PIF is better at avoiding the inactivity issue.

 

But I agree with SouthJ that we may never know what caused it.

 

If you think that inacativity might be the culprit (even a chance) you could consider switching to PIF rather than PTZ (your current strategy for some of your cards).  Allowing balances to report and then using autopay may be easier too.  There's been some recent threads that are increasingly bringing to everyone's attention that FICO 8 may not care with you have a lot of $0 balances or not.  That used to be the received wisdom (and it is certainly true about earlier FICO models) but there may be little advantage in PTZ even in the month right before a big credit pull (unless it is a mortgage).  FICO 8 may simply not care whether 5 of your 6 cards are at $0 or whether only 1 card is at $0.


Although I use each of my cards every month, the vast majority have no reported balance, and it's possible that many of them have never reported a balance, because I'm the type of person who likes to pay them off even before the statement cuts. I don't think the bureaus, or the FICO algorithms, think the accounts are inactive.


Total revolving limits 569520 (505320 reporting) FICO 8: EQ 689 TU 691 EX 682




Message 17 of 34
Thomas_Thumb
Senior Contributor

Re: Was I re-bucketed or something?

SJ -

 

Accounts that show payments - which your's do if they were used and paid off show activity. Thus, they would not be tagged as inactive.

Fico 9: .......EQ 850 TU 850 EX 850
Fico 8: .......EQ 850 TU 850 EX 850
Fico 4 .....:. EQ 809 TU 823 EX 830 EX Fico 98: 842
Fico 8 BC:. EQ 892 TU 900 EX 900
Fico 8 AU:. EQ 887 TU 897 EX 899
Fico 4 BC:. EQ 826 TU 858, EX Fico 98 BC: 870
Fico 4 AU:. EQ 831 TU 872, EX Fico 98 AU: 861
VS 3.0:...... EQ 835 TU 835 EX 835
CBIS: ........EQ LN Auto 940 EQ LN Home 870 TU Auto 902 TU Home 950
Message 18 of 34
SouthJamaica
Mega Contributor

Re: Was I re-bucketed or something?


@Thomas_Thumb wrote:

SJ -

 

Accounts that show payments - which your's do if they were used and paid off show activity. Thus, they would not be tagged as inactive.


Thanks.

 

OP had stated that he was using the cards and making payments:   " I was using them during that time, but not much, and generally paying before the statements cut."


Total revolving limits 569520 (505320 reporting) FICO 8: EQ 689 TU 691 EX 682




Message 19 of 34
Anonymous
Not applicable

Re: Was I re-bucketed or something?

Thanks SJ!

 

Thanks for drawing TT's attention to the fact that our OP has been using the cards and paying to zero most or every month

 

This is an area that Thom Thumb knows much more about than myself, but I would love to see some clear answers on it.  I think it would have practical implications for a lot of us with cards we shoebox or PTZ.  I would love to see some concerted attempts by several people to answer the following questions:

 

Do these "inactivity" scoring penalties exist for certain?  On what grounds do we know this?

 

If yes.....

 

Is it in both the mortgage models and FICO 8?

Does using a card but paying to zero prevent FICO from considering it inactive?

 

Does the scoring penalty kick in only after the "inactive" card is used again? 

      Does "used" mean a transaction or allowed to report a positive balance to the CRA?

 

There should be easy ways to test all of these claims empirically and by a variety of people and profiles.

Message 20 of 34
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