|
Real Estate Realities Newsletter
July 2010

7/1-31: National Picnic Month
7/1: Canada Day
7/4: Independence Day
7/5: Independence Day Observed
7/20: Moon Day
7/25: Parents Day
7/26: All or Nothing Day
The Top 10
Credit “Don'ts” During the Loan Process
1. DON’T DO
ANYTHING THAT WILL CAUSE A RED FLAG TO BE RAISED BY THE SCORING
SYSTEM. This would include adding new accounts, co-signing on a
loan, changing your name or address with the bureaus. The less
activity on your reports during the loan process, the better.
2. DON’T APPLY FOR NEW CREDIT OF ANY KIND, including those
“You have been pre-approved” credit card invitations that you
receive in the mail or online. Every time that you have your credit
pulled by a potential creditor or lender, you lose points from your
credit score immediately. Depending on the elements in your current
credit report, you could lose anywhere from one to 20 points for one
hard inquiry.
3. DON’T PAY OFF COLLECTIONS OR CHARGE OFFS during the loan
process. Unless you can negotiate a delete letter, paying
collections will decrease the credit score immediately due to the
date of last activity becoming recent. If you want to pay off old
accounts, do it through escrow – at closing.
4. DON’T MAX OUT OR OVER CHARGE ON YOUR CREDIT CARD ACCOUNTS.
This is the fastest way to bring your scores down 50-100 points
immediately. Try to keep your credit card balances below 30% of
their available limit at ALL times during the loan process. If you
decide to pay down balances, do it across the board. Meaning, pay
balances to bring your balance to limit ratio to the same level on
each card (i.e. all to 30% of the limit, or all to 40% etc.)
5. DON’T CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBT ONTO 1 OR 2 CREDIT CARDS. It
seems like it would be the smart thing to do, however, when you
consolidate all of your debt onto one card, it appears that you are
maxed out on that card, and the system will penalize you as
mentioned above in 4. If you want to save money on credit card
interest rates, wait until after closing.
6. DON’T CLOSE CREDIT CARD ACCOUNTS. If you close a credit
card account, you will lose available credit, and it will appear to
the FICO that your debt ratio has gone up. Also, closing a card will
affect other factors in the score such as length of credit history.
If you HAVE to close a credit card account, do it after closing.
7. DON’T PAY LATE. Stay current on existing accounts. Under
the new FICO scoring model, one 30-day late can cost you anywhere
from 50-100 points, and points lost for late pays take several
months if not years to recover.
8. DON’T ALLOW ANY ACCOUNTS TO RUN PAST DUE --EVEN 1 DAY! Most
cards offer a grace period, however, what they don’t tell you is
that once the due date passes, that account will show a past due
amount on your credit report. Past due balances can also drop scores
by 50+ points.
9. DON’T DISPUTE ANYTHING ON YOUR CREDIT REPORT once the loan
process has started. When you send a letter of dispute to the credit
reporting agencies, a note is put onto your credit report, and when
the underwriter notices items in dispute, in many instances, they
will not process the loan until the note is removed and new credit
scores are pulled. Why? Because in some instances, credit scoring
software will not consider items in dispute in the credit score –
giving false data to the lender.
10. DON’T LOSE CONTACT WITH YOUR MORTGAGE & REAL ESTATE
PROFESSIONALS. If you have a question about whether or not you
should take a specific action that you believe may affect your
credit reports or scores during the loan process, your mortgage or
real estate professional may be able to supply you with the
resources you need to avoid making mistakes that could drop your
credit scores or possibly, cause you to lose the loan.
Courtesy of Linda Ferrari, a leading nationwide expert in the
credit reporting and scoring industry. |