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Credit
Cards and Your Credit History by Amit Laufer Credit Cards are widespread all over the |
They
never took a small loan and paid it promptly on schedule month after month.If you do not have a credit record, you
may have to start small. You may want to start by getting a gasoline card.
Chevron reports payments to the credit bureau monthly, while
most other oil company cards do not.
In addition try getting a few department store cards.
Your best option for establishing a positive credit history may
be a secured Visa or MasterCard. These credit cards are offered
through bankcard issuers who have customers put up several hundred dollars in
collateral in exchange for a card with a small credit limit. As you use
the card, your bill-paying behavior is reported to a credit bureau and
your credit history improves.
Another Important advice is to try as best as you can to Pay your bills on
time.
In addition minimize your payments by choosing credit cards that
have low rates and no fees. Try to limit credit card purchases to
emergency situations only.
(This one is true with your Cell Phones calls as well...).
Take a collateralized loan with a bank or credit union and pay it on
time every month to help establish or reestablish credit.
What Is FICO and how it affects you
FICO is a mathematical model created by the Experian
credit bureau as a tool for lenders to use in evaluating the risk
associated with lending you money. FICO stands for Fair Isaac Company, the
company that created the original scoring model.
FICO scores consider your credit history over several years,
making it difficult to increase your credit score in a short time
frame. Over the long term you can improve your credit-worthiness by:
- Reducing your total indebt ness.
- making your debt payments on time and in full.
- closing unneeded credit accounts.
- avoiding bankruptcy and foreclosures.
How is your Score Calculated?
Your score is calculated by a series of questions based on both your credit
report & debt-to-income ratio. Each answer accumulates a certain number of
points that are then added together for your final score. A typical scoring
considers:
• How long you've lived at your current address
• Your job or profession stability.
• Your financial obligations (debt-to-income ratio)
• Any late payments
• The amount of credit you have outstanding
• The amount of credit you are using
• The amount of time you've had credit established
Most Weighted Factors:
Current balances on accounts, too few bank revolving accounts, too many bank
revolving accounts, number of accounts with balances, number of accounts
opened in the last 12 months, length of time accounts have been established,
amount of past due accounts, number of delinquent accounts, too few accounts
rated "current," recent derogatory public record of collection, past
due balances, number of credit inquiries made.
What is Considered a Good Score?
The magic FICO number is 620. If you score below 620 you are considered to
have a very high default risk giving you the possibility of being declined. If
you score between 620 & 650 you will be put into a
"questionable" category where you will have to provide further
documentation to get approved. A score of 650 or above is considered golden or
"cream of the crop," and most likely you will be eligible for the
best rate on your loan.
About The Author:
Amit Laufer is a Writer
and Internel Marketer. MBA International Trade &
Finance. Bsc. Computer Information System. Owner
Editor of: http://www.creditcard-4-anybody.com/
Copyright Amit Laufer - http://www.creditcard-4-anybody.com/