MyCRA Specialist Credit Repair Lawyers

Tag: clean credit history

  • Children targeted for clean credit history

    children credit historyAn interesting story just out of the United States on ID theft attempts on the credit files of children. Whilst Australia has vastly different laws when it comes to children and credit history, we want to share this story with you, to show that children are targets for fraudsters – and to explain what the dangers may be for our Australian children when it comes to fraudsters and their credit file.

    By Graham Doessel, Founder and CEO of MyCRA Credit Rating Repair and www.fixmybadcredit.com.au.

    An alarming report by ABC 2 WBay last week ‘ID Thieves Targeting Children’s Clean Credit History’, revealed that children and adolescents have become the fastest growing sector of identity theft victims in the United States. In the U.S., children are allocated a Social Security number from birth, and it is this number that fraudsters are using to steal the identities of their young victims, and take credit out in their name. Here is an excerpt from that story:

    Experts warn from the time your child gets a Social Security number, their personal information needs to be protected.

    “Be aware of how your children’s personal information is used just like your own information–Social Security number, and date of birth–be aware of how it is being used,” says Jim Walsh, U.S. Postal Inspector.

    In a recent case, more than 500 elementary school kids in Los Angeles had their information compromised.  A suspect with access to school files sold the kids’ personal information to another suspect.

    “There were hundreds of accounts opened and most of the accounts were used to get money,” said Walsh.

    The suspects withdrew cash advances, or they would sell the names to make fake IDs.

    Postal inspectors say children have clean credit histories, which makes them appealing to criminals.

    “If they apply for a loan or try to get credit, they could find out their credit is basically ruined and wouldn’t know it the whole time they are growing up,” said Walsh.

    That’s why it’s important to periodically check your child’s credit.

    Unlike the U.S. system, Australian children don’t have a social security number, so they are protected from any immediate identity theft. But what Australian Police have been concerned about in the past is that children are still targets for fraudsters due to their clean credit history, but instead of using personal information straight away as in cases in the U.S. it may be being stored or ‘warehoused’ until the child turns 18.

    The main area Police have been concerned about is Facebook – which remains incredibly popular with children, and gives them the option to openly share their personal information on the internet.

    The Australian Federal Police’s national co-ordinator of identity security strike team, Ben McQuillan spoke about the dangers of identity crime as far back as 2011 at a forum in Sydney on money laundering and terrorism.

    He warned listeners about what was then a new trend of ‘warehousing’ which involves storing data for a time, making it harder for a victim or bank to trace where and when the data was stolen.

    ”If people know your full name, your date of birth, where you went to school and other lifestyle issues, and they were to warehouse that data, there is a prospect that could then be used to take out loans or credit cards or to create a bank account that could then be used to launder money,” Mr McQuillan told the Sydney Morning Herald.

    This warning was echoed by Queensland Fraud Squad’s Superintendant Brian Hay, who warned that criminals were targeting the personal information of our young Facebook users.

    Supt Hay said criminals had been known to be storing the personal information of children around the world in databases to be used when they turn 18 and are able to take out credit.

    “We know that the crooks have been data warehousing identity information, we know that they’ve been building search engines to profile and build identities,” he told Channel 7’s Sunrise program in October 2011.

    “We need to tell our children if you surrender your soul, if you surrender your identity to the internet it could come back to bite you in a very savage way years down the track,” he said.

    This data warehousing could leave the newly credit active young person blacklisted from credit well into their 20’s. For 5 years they are locked out of credit, refused cards, loans, even mobile phones. It need not be major fraud to be a massive blow to the identity theft victim. Unpaid accounts for as little as $100 can have the same negative impact on someone’s ability to obtain credit as a missed mortgage payment. So any misuse of someone’s credit file can be extremely significant.

    Proving the case of identity theft when attempting to recover a clear credit rating is already difficult for the individual to undertake, as the onus is on the victim to prove to creditors they didn’t initiate the credit. Adding to that the fact that the perpetrator would be long gone with the actual act of identity theft happening years earlier – and those young people will have a very difficult task of recovery indeed.

    So how can we protect our children? In the same way we may protect our own identity and credit file.

    It begins with taking an active role in children’s computer use, and realising that their personal information is just as coveted as our own. Perhaps even more so – as the likelihood the child will have a clean credit history to begin with is even higher.

    Image: imagerymajestic/ www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net children credit history

  • Interest rates cut to record lows at 2.5%

    interest rate cutsThe Reserve Bank of Australia has cut its cash rate to a low 2.5% – lower than during the GFC. The Sydney Morning Herald says several banks wasted no time in passing on the rates cut to their home loan customers. National Australia Bank and Bank of Queensland said they would both pass on today’s 0.25 percentage point cut in interest rates to the home loan customers in full. This is good news for home buyers with a good deposit and a good clean credit file – but maybe not such great news in the long term for the Australian economy.

    By Graham Doessel, Founder and CEO of MyCRA Credit Rating Repair and www.fixmybadcredit.com.au.

    As Australian Broker reported today, the speech made late last week by RBA governor, Glenn Stevens, also indicated another rate reduction was on the cards, with Stevens admitting the RBA was becoming increasingly concerned about major areas of the Australian economy, particularly the passing of  mining and credit growth ‘booms’.

    Many brokers will be taking this information straight to clients, as 1st Street Home Loans founding director, Jeremy Fisher, outlined in an interview with Australian Broker earlier today.

    “First and foremost, we’ll get in touch with any clients that are due to settle and looking at making any necessary changes to their loans. And then we’ll go back and review any clients that are, I guess, a ‘watchlist’. So it’s pretty much just keeping our clients informed of the change.”

    Fisher said 1st Street sends out a bulletin to all their clients immediately following RBA cash rate announcements in order to keep them updated.

    “Then we just go back to our watchlist and touch base with everyone that’s kind of doing things as we speak – because that may or may not influence what they’re doing.”

    Mr Stevens told the Sydney Morning Herald he expected the Australian economy to continue to grow below trend in the near term as mining investment falls, and for inflation to remain consistent with the medium-term target as labour costs moderated.

    He added that the Australian dollar remained “at a high level” despite losing about 15 per cent of its value since early April, and welcomed a further depreciation of the exchange rate to help foster a rebalancing of growth in the economy.

    Several analysts said the RBA could ease rates again later this year as the country continues to grapple with a slowing economy amid an uneven transition away from mining-led growth.

    Taking advantage of interest rate cuts.

    With this interest rate cut, we feel it is worthwhile to ramp up our education efforts around credit history. Many people do not know what a credit file is – many more don’t know the process for being listed with bad credit, and more again assume that if there was something amiss with their credit file, that they would somehow be informed. They don’t realise that the onus is on them to check their credit history on a regular basis (at least once per year) just to make sure that errors have not been made on the credit file. Errors can happen to anyone – from all walks of life.

    People may believe their credit history is clean, but creditors can and do make mistakes with credit reports, and often it is not until people apply for finance that they have any idea they have bad credit. At this time the process of investigation and complaint can be stressful and can sometimes mean the prospective borrower misses out on the home loan while the discrepancy is addressed.

    The process of clearing an unfair credit listing can sometimes be very time consuming – especially if the creditor has not cooperated with requests to supply documentation in a timely fashion, or the matter has to be referred to a third party for investigation.

    So the message is, if people are thinking about buying a home in the near future – they should check their credit report first, and make sure it has the “all clear” before they apply for finance, and before they get their hearts set on any particular home. This is free for all credit active Australians once every year and we encourage any home buyer to request a copy of their credit report. It takes 10 working days or for a fee to the credit reporting agency, it can be sent urgently. But what it does is give peace of mind – not only to the Purchaser, but to the Broker or Bank Manager, and in some cases a clear credit file can help get the deal over the line with the Agent and Seller.

    If there are any inconsistencies or out and out errors on the credit file, the advantage to getting those removed is generally thousands and thousands of dollars in interest saved by being able to take advantage of those interest rate cuts with the mainstream lender of the buyer’s choice.

    To find out more about the benefits of using a credit rating repairer to dispute credit listings, contact a Credit Repair Advisor at MyCRA Credit Rating Repairs on 1300 667 218 or visit the main site for more information www.mycra.com.au.

    Image: renjith krishnan/ www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net

  • More positivity for housing: ABS Housing Finance figures continue to climb for September

    Good news again for the property market, with data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics recording another increase in Housing Finance figures. Some economists say Australians are starting to make the most of interest rate cuts. We look at the ABS Statistics, and look at the importance of credit file education to a possible new buyer’s market.

    By Graham Doessel, Founder and CEO of MyCRA Credit Rating Repairs and www.fixmybadcredit.com.au.

    Figures released today by the Australian Bureau of Statistics on September 2012 Housing Finance figures show owner occupied housing commitments rose 0.9% from August to 46,395, up from an upwardly revised 45,983 in August.

    An increase of 1.0% was predicted by economists.

    CommSec chief economist Craig James (featured in The Australian today) says the ABS data suggests home loan value could be on the rise.

    “The data shows that loan value is rising at a faster rate than the actual number of loans,” he said.

    “That suggests that there’s increased confidence by borrowers, or that home prices are edging a little higher.”

    Here is an excerpt from the ABS release:

    SEPTEMBER KEY POINTS

    VALUE OF DWELLING COMMITMENTS

    September 2012 compared with August 2012:

     The trend estimate for the total value of dwelling finance commitments excluding alterations and additions rose 0.7%. Investment housing commitments rose 1.1% and owner occupied housing commitments rose 0.5%.
     In seasonally adjusted terms, the total value of dwelling finance commitments excluding alterations and additions rose 3.8%, with investment housing commitments rising 8.6%.

    NUMBER OF DWELLING COMMITMENTS

    September 2012 compared with August 2012:

     In trend terms, the number of commitments for owner occupied housing finance rose 0.5%.
     In trend terms, the number of commitments for the purchase of new dwellings rose 3.0%, the number of commitments for the purchase of established dwellings rose 0.5%, while the number of commitments for the construction of dwellings fell 0.3%.
     In original terms, the number of first home buyer commitments as a percentage of total owner occupied housing finance commitments rose to 19.3% in September 2012 from 18.6% in August 2012.

    Over the past six months, the Reserve Bank of Australia has shaved a full percentage point from the key interest rate. As a result, standard variable mortgage rates have on average come down by 55 basis points to 6.85 per cent.

    This seems to finally be making an impact on Housing Finance, with both August and September data showing a recorded increase in commitment numbers.

    The ABS reports that in original terms, the number of first home buyer commitments as a percentage of total owner occupied housing finance commitments rose to 19.3% in September 2012 from 18.6% in August 2012. Between September 2012 and August 2012, the average loan size for first home buyers rose $400 to $289,300.

    As more buyers enter the market, we feel it is worthwhile to ramp up our education efforts around credit history. Many people do not know what a credit file is – many more don’t know the process for being listed with bad credit, and more again assume that if there was something amiss with their credit file, that they would somehow be informed. They don’t realise that the onus is on them to check their credit history on a regular basis (at least once per year) just to make sure that errors have not been made on the credit file. Errors can happen to anyone – from all walks of life.

    People may believe their credit history is clean, but creditors can and do make mistakes with credit reports, and often it is not until people apply for finance that they have any idea they have bad credit. At this time the process of investigation and complaint can be stressful and can sometimes mean the prospective borrower misses out on the home loan while the discrepancy is addressed.

    The process of clearing an unfair credit listing can sometimes be very time consuming – especially if the creditor has not cooperated with requests to supply documentation in a timely fashion, or the matter has to be referred to a third party for investigation.

    So the message is, if people are thinking about buying a home in the near future – they should grab a copy of their credit file, and make sure it has the “all clear” before they apply for finance, and before they get their hearts set on any particular home. This is free for all credit active Australians once every year and we encourage any home buyer to request a copy of their credit report. It takes 10 working days or for a fee to the credit reporting agency, it can be sent urgently. But what it does is give peace of mind – not only to the Purchaser, but to the Broker or Bank Manager, and in some cases a clear credit file can help get the deal over the line with the Agent and Seller.

    If there are any inconsistencies or out and out errors on the credit file, the advantage to getting those removed is generally thousands and thousands of dollars in interest saved. A clear credit file allows purchasers to capitalise on those interest rate cuts with the mainstream lender of their choice rather than being forced into the non-conforming sector at much higher interest rates.

    To find out more about the benefits of using a credit rating repairer to dispute credit listings, see our recent post How Do I Fix My Bad Credit? Or contact a Credit Repair Advisor at MyCRA Credit Rating Repairs on 1300 667 218 or visit the main site for more information www.mycra.com.au.

    Image: Idea go/ www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net

  • What Does Your Credit File Say About You?

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    Our credit file is like a mirror on our finances. How healthy are you looking? Here’s a back to basics look at the ins and outs of taking on credit in Australia, and why it’s important to look your best when applying for credit by having a clean credit history.

    By Graham Doessel, Founder and CEO of MyCRA Lawyers and www.fixmybadcredit.com.au.

    When you apply for credit, the lender will, after assessing your savings history, your income and your debts – order a credit check on you. This involves contacting one or more of Australia’s credit reporting agencies, to order a credit report from your credit file.

    What the lender sees on your credit file can reflect your assets, your good history, but it can also reveal your financial shortcomings. It can be a reflection of your inability to stick with something, your disregard for repayments, or the financial potholes that are sometimes impossible to climb out of. Let’s look at what a lender might see about you on your credit file, and how you can make sure it looks squeaky clean.

    Your Credit File

    Is a collation of your credit history. As soon as you become credit active, you have a file opened in your name. This file is then attached to you as long as you apply, use and unfortunately abuse credit – it will follow you everywhere in Australia.

    If you have applied to borrow money, or have established an account for services you are considered credit active.

    Every creditor inputs information about you to one or more of the credit reporting agencies in Australasia. Australia’s CRA’S include: Equifax (Formerly Veda Advantage), Dun & Bradstreet, Experian & Tasmanian Collection Services (TASCOL) if in Tasmania.

    What a credit file contains

    – Your credit file includes identity information – such as your full name, date of birth, gender, driver’s licence details, addresses and employer information.

    It also includes other information about your credit and repayment of credit history:

    -Any current active credit and details of current credit providers, for instance mortgages, personal loans and credit cards.
    – Any overdue credit accounts – these may be reported as either a ‘payment default’ or a ‘clearout’.

    How long will I have bad credit?

    Credit Reporting Body Equifax reports these time periods for holding information on your credit file:

    How long is the information held on my credit file?
    • Credit applications and enquiries and overdue accounts are held on your file for five years
    • Overdue accounts listed as a payment default are held for five years
    • Overdue accounts listed as a Clearout are held for seven years
    • Bankruptcy Act Information is held on your file for seven years (prior to January 1998, Bankruptcy Act Information was held for five years)
    • Court Judgments are held for five years
    • Writs & Summons are held for four years
    • Identity information, which includes name, date of birth, sex, drivers license, address history, and linked names (if any) are held for the life of the credit file. This information is used to distinguish the credit file from others held in the database
    • Purge dates are calculated on the date the information was added to the file, and are based on the time limits provided in the Privacy Act 1988
    • Files are scanned each month and out of date information is automatically purged to ensure the files are accurate.

    NB: Even when an overdue account or clearout has been brought up to date or paid in full, it will not be removed from your file.

    All payment default listings remain on file for five years from the date of listing. All clearout listings remain on file for seven years. The fact that an account has become overdue, and then been paid becomes part of your credit history.

    Your credit report

    As the credit file holder, you are legally able to obtain a copy of your credit report for free from all of the credit reporting agencies in Australia every 12 months – and a written copy of your credit file will be provided within 10 days from your written request.

    Every credit active person should obtain a copy of their credit report annually  – regardless of whether or not they think they have a bad credit rating. It is important that when checking your credit file, you obtain reports from all possible credit reporting agencies.

    Definition of a ‘bad’ credit rating

    If you don’t already know you have bad credit, you would be notified at the time of credit application, when the credit provider obtains a copy of your credit file.

    In broad terms, any credit defaults, court actions or writs, external administrations and bankruptcy are all recorded on your credit file and would be considered ‘bad’ credit history by most credit providers.

    In this current economic climate even too many credit applications are often considered to be ‘black marks’ on your credit file.

    Impact of a bad credit rating

    If you discover you have a negative listing on your credit file, you will find it very difficult to obtain mainstream credit in the future, generally for the term of the listing (5 -7 years).

    You will likely be refused a home loan with most lenders and possibly be refused credit of many kinds from credit cards to phone plans right through the term of the listing.

    Too many credit enquiries on your credit file may also stop you from getting major credit with most lenders.

    Most times the loan options available to bad credit clients are at significantly higher interest rates in order to cover the risks associated with taking on someone with bad credit.

    Can you change what is said about you on your credit report?

    It depends if the information on your credit report is accurate or not. If your address or other personal details are inaccurate, you may want to contact the credit reporting agencies to have this rectified. But you should also consider why. Do you think it’s possible that there are inconsistencies on your report? If you also have defaults or other credit listings which you feel shouldn’t be there, you should pursue the matter through making a claim with the Creditor to dispute and remove any listings which should not be there.

    Any credit listings which you feel are unfair, incorrect or just shouldn’t be there should be addressed well before you need to apply for credit. The impact of bad credit is pretty severe – and can haunt you for a long time. Spend the time to make sure everything is correct on your credit report.

    You may only get one chance at clearing your credit file – so it’s important to give yourself the best chance of having any inconsistencies removed from your report by using a professional credit repairer.

    Sometimes individuals can attempt to deal with creditors to remove the credit rating default themselves and can do more harm than good by not understanding the legislation.

    Credit repair is a lengthy process, involving the review of all documentation from an individual – including the credit file and all the circumstances surrounding the default, writ or Judgment.

    Then the credit repairer negotiates with the creditor who initiated the listing on your behalf to remove the default.
    This can also often involve lengthy requests and submissions of documentation until an agreement is reached by the creditor and the repairer to remove the offending black mark.

    Not every credit file is suitable for credit repair. The credit repair company can review your situation and determine whether your case is worthy of pursuing.

    For advice about whether your adverse listing may be suitable for credit repair, contact a Credit Repair Advisor on 1300 667 218 or visit our website for more information www.mycralawyers.com.au.

    Once your credit file is restored and your bad credit is removed, you will be looking great to the lender, and ultimately feeling great when you have access to the best credit you can, at the best rates.

    Image: Stuart Miles/ www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net

    Image 2: imagerymajestic/ www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net

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