Your Credit Score: 6 Actions You Can Take To Improve Your Contract Terms - Part 2
Your Credit Score: 6 Actions You Can Take To Improve Your Contract Terms - Part 2
Copyright © 2007 Ed Bagley
If any of these three agencies (Equifax, Experian and
TransUnion) could "legally" lie, cheat and steal they would
do it every day of the week and twice on Sunday.
All three agencies were forced to give out a free credit
report to consumers annually; they did not do it willingly
and never would have done it without being mandated to do
so by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
Another example is that the top three credit reporting
bureaus agreed to $2.5 million in payments (penalties) as
part of settlements negotiated by the Federal Trade
Commission to resolve charges that they (each and every
one) violated provisions of the Fair Credit Reporting Act
(FCRA) by failing to maintain a toll-free telephone number
at which personnel are accessible to consumers during
normal business hours.
In other words, the three top credit reporting agencies
mentioned were too cheap to offer the toll-free line and
better service on their own, and would not even continue to
maintain the toll-free line system they were ordered to
implement unless faced with prosecution by the Federal
Trade Commission.
Pigs in the barnyard are more ethical, trustworthy and
honest than the top three credit reporting bureaus. If it
looks like a pig, walks like a pig, acts like a pig and
smells like a pig, it is a swine.
These are businesses that either through their sloppy,
inattentive reporting or accurate, quality reporting help
determine your credit score which determines how much you
will pay or not pay to fulfill your monthly mortgage
contract.
Be advised that your credit score from each agency will
likely vary because, whether recorded correctly or not,
some lenders do not report information about borrowers to
all three credit bureaus.
Here are 6 things you can do to stay abreast with your
credit reports and credit scores:
1) Secure copies of your credit reports and credit scores
annually, even if you have to pay to get credit scores from
two of the agencies too cheap to give them to you.
2) Dispute errors that you find in the reports. The credit
reporting agencies would not care if an error caused you
great harm, and they would not (singly or collectively)
notify you if they found an error that they knew would hurt
your score.
They get paid by businesses for your report. You are
nothing to them other than the fact that there would be no
credit reporting business without you.
3) Pay off credit card balances as it is one of the factors
used to determine your FICO score, which is your total debt
relative to your available credit line, called "credit
utilization".
4) Do not close unused accounts as closing these accounts
reduces the amount of credit you have available. Cut up the
card and do not use it but keep the account open as it can
help your credit score.
5) Do not open new accounts as it could hurt rather than
help your credit score even though by doing so you will
increase your credit utilization.
6) Pay your bills on time because 35% of your credit score
is determined by your credit payment history.
(Note: This is Part 2 of a 3-Part Series.)
About the Author:
Ed Bagley is the Author of Ed Bagley's Blog which he
Publishes with Original Articles on Current and Past Events
with Analysis and Commentary on Movies, Sports, Lessons in
Life, Jobs and Careers, News and Comment, and Internet
Marketing that are intended to Delight, Inform, Educate and
Motivate Readers. Visit Ed at . . .
www.edbagleyblog.com
www.edbagleyblog.com/MovieReviewArticles.html
|