MyCRA Specialist Credit Repair Lawyers

Tag: credit score

  • Australians on ‘credit-collision course’ without better education.

    Media Release

    credit collision courseAustralians on ‘credit-collision course’ without better education.

    15 October 2013

    A consumer advocate for accurate credit reporting hopes the introduction of a public scoring system from Veda Advantage will be the catalyst to boost dangerously low credit awareness and reduce the likelihood of credit disasters following the implementation of new Privacy Laws next year.

    Graham Doessel, CEO of credit repair company MyCRA says the Veda credit score is calculated from interpreted data at Australia’s biggest credit reporting agency, Veda Advantage – and has up till now been used by many lenders to assess credit worthiness.

    “This information is now available to consumers, and this is a positive step in terms of transparency,” Mr Doessel says.

    “But what I am most hoping will happen, is that more Australians will find this new number an easy and attractive starting point to finding out more about managing their own credit-worthiness.”

    He warns if we don’t facilitate credit-savviness now, possibly millions of Australians could be severely disadvantaged come March 2014 when new data sets are available on Australian credit reports.

    “The need for knowledge is going to be greater next year, as more people are going to get caught out with a bad credit score, and be scratching their heads to understand why,” he warns.

    Recently Veda Advantage released results of its analysis of 300,000 VedaScores with consumer research of 1,000 Australians, and found that an astounding 80% of people had never accessed their credit report.

    “…despite 15% of Australians being at risk of a credit default being recorded on their credit report in the next 12 months, considerable lack of awareness exists about what a credit history is, or how a poor credit report can impact chances of getting credit from lenders,” Belinda Diprose, Veda Marketing Manager says.

    Mr Doessel says it demonstrates an alarming rate of ignorance in the community.

    “It’s not really the fault of consumers. In my opinion there has not nearly been enough emphasis on public credit education right across the board up until quite recently,” he says.

    Mr Doessel says there are some important basics about their credit rating that Australians should know.

    5 Things You Need To Know To Manage Your Credit Worthiness.

    1.  You don’t have to pay to see your credit file, just your credit score.

    In most cases you can access your credit file for free annually from all of Australia’s credit reporting agencies, and this will remain at a standard 10-day issue from receipt of application. It is important to apply for your credit file with each credit reporting agency – as you may have defaults with only one company. They are: Veda Advantage, Dun & Bradstreet, Tasmanian Collection Services, and Experian.

    2. Your credit score rates you based on other credit-active Australians.

    Your credit score based on Veda data will be available to you when you pay to see your VedaScore with your credit report, via this particular credit reporting agency. Veda Advantage holds roughly 16.5 million Australian credit files – so the data should be quite predictive of your overall credit worthiness in comparison to other credit-active Australians. If you are applying for credit in the near future, this credit score could be important to know.

    3. There are several factors that make up your credit-worthiness.

    Items such as negative credit listings (defaults, Court Writs, Judgments and Bankruptcies); number of credit enquiries and the type and size of credit requested in your past application can all impact your credit worthiness.

    But there are other pieces of information about you which also have a bearing on your credit score – including your address; your age; how long you’ve lived at your current address; any business directorship or partnership you have, and the address of the business and length of time there.

    Information on the VedaScore calculation can be found on Veda’s website.(1)

    4. There will be more factors affecting your credit-worthiness next year.

    As of March 2014, there will be 5 new data sets available on Australian credit reports, and this data will be used in any credit score calculation.

    They are: repayment history information; the date on which a credit account was opened; the date on which a credit account was closed; the type of credit account opened; and the current limit of each open credit account.

    5. Late payments will impact your credit file.

    You will still be defaulted if you are more than 60 days late in making repayments to any Credit Provider, but in addition if you are more than 5 days late paying a licenced Credit Provider, you will be issued a late payment notation and this will show on your credit file from March 2014.

    Repayment history information applies to credit such as loans and credit cards and is being collected NOW. Too many late payments will more than likely reduce your credit score significantly.

    Mr Doessel says better credit education should eventually lead to fewer inconsistencies in credit reporting.

    “Credit rating errors are quite common, and the onus of ensuring the credit file is accurate rests with the consumer – so better education across the board could result in more errors being ironed out in the credit reporting systems,” he says.

    /ENDS.

    For interviews please contact:
    Graham Doessel – CEO Ph 3124 7133

    For media enquiries please contact:
    Lisa Brewster – Media Relations media@mycra.com.au

    Ph 07 3124 7133 www.mycra.com.au  www.mycra.com.au/blog

    MyCRA Credit Repair 246 Stafford Rd, STAFFORD Qld

    MyCRA is Australia’s number one in credit rating repairs. We permanently remove defaults from credit files. CEO of MyCRA Graham Doessel is a frequent consumer spokesperson for credit reporting issues and is a founding member of the Credit Repair Industry Association of Australasia.

    (1) http://www.veda.com.au/yourcreditandidentity/check/vedascore/how-my-vedascore-calculated

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    Image: nuttakit/ www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net

  • How will open credit scores impact Australians?

    access credit scoreCredit reporting agency Veda Advantage has just announced it will allow consumers to receive a copy of their credit score with their credit report. We look at how that will occur, and what possible impact that will have on consumers and also brokers and whether consumers will be better able to manage their credit worthiness using this ‘score’.

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

    It was announced on Monday by Banking Day that Veda has ‘lifted the veil’ on credit scores and will allow consumers to be able to apply to see their credit score. Available to consumers for the first time, the VedaScore is a number between 0 and 1,200 that summarises information on your Veda credit file at a specific point in time. The higher the ‘VedaScore’ the better an individual is considered credit worthy.

    For a fee consumers will be able to access their credit score along with their credit file.

    This is over and above the standard credit report, which is still free from all of Australia’s credit reporting agencies once every year and is sent after 10 working days of application.

    Despite being the credit reporting agency holding the credit files of the largest number of credit active Australians, Veda has in the past remained tight lipped about default numbers and credit statistics in Australia.

    But this week they have offered some insight into credit activity, whilst releasing their ‘VedaScore’ product, by offering up a ‘Veda ScoreCard’ – which reportedly combines consumer research of 1,000 Australians about their finances with analysis of 300,000 VedaScores.

    One of the biggest findings was that more than 2.3 million Australians are at risk of financial strife in the next year, with 27% (628,000) at high risk of credit default from something as simple as an unpaid bill, credit card or loan.

    Veda’s survey also found some interesting facts about credit active Australians. Here are three we found most troubling about the credit active Australians surveyed:

    93% know they have a credit record, but don’t know you can access it

    81% are not concerned about their credit history

    80% have never checked their credit history

    Veda says the national average credit score is 749. But whilst Veda Marketing Manager Belinda Diprose, says in a statement to the media that making the VedaScore available to consumers for the first time “makes it easier for Australians to understand and manage their credit profile” – I am unsure how this will occur – as it hasn’t been announced that there will be a breakdown of that score and how it is calculated. There may be no way for consumers to understand what they can do to prevent their credit score from being reduced.

    Yesterday Business Insider Australia featured an American report on How To Improve Your Credit Score. Whilst the U.S. system has a vastly different credit reporting system – what’s interesting is, the report gives us insight into how the U.S. ‘Fico’ Score is broken down:

    FICO score breakdown

     

     

    Chart from Business Insider Australia’s report.

    A similar breakdown could be useful to consumers looking to improve their credit worthiness or prevent decision making which reduces their credit score.

    How will the VedaScore impact brokers?

    Today we were quoted in The Adviser in a story about the Veda Credit Score.

     Graham Doessel, chief executive officer of MyCRA Credit Rating Repair, said brokers should use the score to select the appropriate loan and lender for their clients, cutting back on rejected loan applications.

    “Being able to see the credit score would be invaluable to brokers,” he told The Adviser. “It will make their job much easier, because they can have an idea very quickly how the client is going to fare with particular lenders.”

    Alex Shumsky from Loan Market Oakleigh also made an important point about credit scoring information in the same story:

    [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][Credit scoring] can be valuable provided the credit scoring is in line with that of the banks.

    “You can submit one loan to one bank and fail on credit scoring then submit it to another bank and it gets approved, same deal, same info but they’ll score it differently,” he said.

    It will still be up to brokers to match the right product to the right client – so whilst the VedaScore will be valuable in many cases, different banks will have different priorities and different scoring systems.

    We also see it could bring new clients to brokers – those who have obtained their credit score but don’t know how to interpret it, or what the relevance of that score will be with each lender.

    Brokers will still be quite necessary in terms of helping borrowers ‘test’ how their score rates against a range of available credit. What we don’t want to see in the future, are a great volume of borrowers ‘going it alone’ using their credit score, and then falling into the trap of worsening their credit score by generating excess credit enquiries.

    So whilst revealing the score is great, we hope consumer education goes hand in hand with this product release.

    For more information on your credit file, visit our main website www.mycra.com.au. 

    Image: phanlop88/ www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net

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  • Veda credit scores: mystery still surrounds calculation

    Press Release

    credit scoreVeda credit scores: mystery still surrounds calculation.

    2 October 2013

    The decision by Veda Advantage to offer credit scores to Australian consumers previously reserved for lenders has been welcomed by a consumer advocate for accurate credit reporting – as long as Veda  clearly outlines how the score is calculated.

    CEO of MyCRA Credit Rating Repair, Graham Doessel says in general consumers have been kept in the dark about how to best actively manage their credit worthiness.

    “I believe every credit active individual has the right to know what their credit score is, but with that, they also need to know how that score is arrived at to positively manage their own credit decisions,” Mr Doessel says.

    He says people believe if they pay all of their bills on time, their credit score will be high, but this is not always the case.

    “There are a range of factors that go into the score calculation – and it has all been a bit of a mystery to consumers really which is not ideal,” he says.

    Mr Doessel says largely consumers don’t even know they have a credit score.

    “Most times it’s only when their credit score is lower than it should be to obtain finance with a lender that consumers even know they have been rated with a number attached to their approvability,” he says.

    Veda Advantage’s Marketing Manager Belinda Diprose told Banking Day yesterday there was a low level of consumer awareness about credit reporting, with as much as eighty per cent of people having never checked their credit report.[fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][i]

    Mr Doessel says currently the big issue with allocating a credit score under the current credit reporting system, is that the number is only calculated on negative data.

    “It’s not balanced. An individual can have a few too many credit enquiries in a certain period, and perhaps apply for the ‘wrong’ type of credit, which will reduce their rating, and there is no consideration for paying bills on time to offset that information,” he says.

    New Privacy laws to take effect March 2014 will provide extra information for lenders and Mr Doessel says this will deliver a bigger picture of credit suitability and more information from which credit reporting agencies can draw on to calculate a fairer credit score.

    “Until then, any number of things could be shaving points off your score – consumers don’t really know for sure the full gamut of what may reduce it, and this needs to be made public knowledge now that the score is available and moving forward towards comprehensive credit reporting in March.”

    Go to http://bit.ly/My-Free-Credit-File for more information on obtaining your credit score.

    /ENDS.

    Please contact:

    Graham Doessel – CEO Ph 3124 7133

    Lisa Brewster – Media Relations media@mycra.com.au

    Ph 07 3124 7133 www.mycra.com.au www.mycra.com.au/blog

    MyCRA Credit Repair 246 Stafford Rd, STAFFORD Qld

    MyCRA is Australia’s number one in credit rating repairs. We permanently remove defaults from credit files. CEO of MyCRA Graham Doessel is a frequent consumer spokesperson for credit reporting issues and is a founding member of the Credit Repair Industry Association of Australasia.

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  • Experian plans to enter Australian credit reporting – good news or bad?

    A newly formed credit reporting agency is set to change the nature of credit reporting in Australia.
    UK credit reporting giant Experian plans to enter the Aussie market. The company proposes to form a joint venture “Experian Australia Credit Services” with leading financial institutions ANZ, Citibank, Commonwealth Bank, GE Capital, NAB and Westpac. Experian will own 76% of the company, with the financial institutions owning the remaining 24%.
    Reporter for The Australian, Teresa Ooi ran the story on Friday, titled Experian Plans Credit Bureau in Australia. Experian’s newly appointed managing director, Kim Jenkins says the venture will increase bureau competition, drive innovation and deliver better services for clients and consumers.
    The aim of the new bureau will be to improve credit reporting efficiency, particularly in light of forthcoming plans to permit positive credit reporting, which is currently under consideration by the Government.
    “The prospect of an inclusive bureau in Australia, accessible to all industry sectors, will strengthen standards in credit reporting, data quality and governance — which is particularly important in a changing regulatory environment,” Ms Jenkins said.
    I believe the introduction of Experian into the Australian credit reporting system will increase competition, and can only improve efficiency and transparency. The changes which will occur when or if we switch to a positive credit reporting system will be well serviced by a company who has had years of experience with the system in the U.K.

    What does concern me, however is the joint venture with leading Australian financial institutions. Does a credit reporting agency remain neutral when its owners are effectively creditors? Since creditors are responsible for listings on a credit file in the first place, does that create a conflict of interest for Experian in providing objective credit reporting?
    The other question is, how much say will these financial institutions actually have? Currently Australian law gives a bigger voice to smaller shareholders in a company. With these institutions all having a common interest as ‘creditors’ and all having a smaller share in the company – where will the interests of the company as a credit reporting agency actually lie – with consumers or creditors?
    Perhaps our current credit reporting laws will be tough enough to ensure that all credit reporting remains neutral, regardless of the ownership of the company.
    It will be very interesting to see what develops from this issue.