Showing posts with label FICO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FICO. Show all posts

Saturday, June 4, 2011

When It’s Time To Cut The Credit Card Cord

I logged into Mint.com today (I love me some Mint) and I saw that one of my credit cards, of which I have a zero balance and have owned for 7, years has decided to charge me a $50 “membership fee”. My credit limit is…$500.

They are charging me 10% for essentially, nothing. They offer me no services, rewards, points, laxatives, hookers, etc…nothing.

Naw, playa.

The sheer audacity of this company, Capital One, to charge me this membership fee is ridiculous on many levels. Mainly because they haven’t treated me like a valued customer; they haven’t increased my rate in 7 years (yes, I have asked). Frankly, a $500 credit limit is a drop in the bucket to the credit cards I carry on a daily basis (AMEX Starwood, Chase Freedom).

I’ve heard not to cancel your oldest credit cards -- it shows more credit history. But I believe alleviating the hassle of holding onto this card, and straight-up insulting nature of Capital One’s membership fee, far outweighs the slight ding on my credit score. It's time to separate fact from fiction. George Mannes wrote
The most important point made by [FICO] spokesman Craig Watts is that it's a myth that if you close a credit-card account, all trace of it disappears from your credit score. In fact, he says, the credit agencies from which FICO draws information used to calculate your score hold on to payment history for years -- the positive stuff for about a decade and the negative stuff usually for seven years.

You've read -- perhaps from well-meaning people on FICO's own message boards -- that you should never close your oldest credit card because your length-of-credit-history measurement will immediately plummet? Again, that's a myth, says Watts. (Dropping it might affect your credit score a decade from now, he grants, but the impact will be small potatoes compared to that of your credit-related behavior in the interim.)
Like all things, there must be a strategy involved and credit cards are no different.

If your credit card rate, balance aren’t in your long-term plans,
  1. Prepare an Exit Strategy – if you do cancel this card, what happens next? Will you still have a respectable line of credit? Are you still able to get credit? Checking your credit score may be a good idea at this point so you can understand your leverage

  2. Contact the credit issuer and see what can be arranged. NOTE-any limit request increase and/or APR decrease will affect your credit score in the short term(because they will judge this by conducting a hard inquiry against your credit score)

  3. Evaluate its usage – How often are you using this card? If not very often you may have to conduct the standard cost-benefit analysis

  4. Cost-Benefit Analysis – Everything has a cost and a benefit. Some benefits range from superb customer service to balance, APR and cash back. Evaluate these and prioritize them -- keep in mind there may be a cost (fees, protection, etc)

  5. Cut the Cord – after all measures mentioned above are exhausted, and the cost outweighs the benefit, it may be time to walk away.
You should be selective about what type of credit cards you receive (try to cut back on the store cards). Your expectations should be met throughout the duration of the relationship and you set these expectations.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

5 New Rules for a Healthy Credit Score

Thanks to my friend Bobby for sending me this article. I was going to just post a link but instead pasted the entire article (with a JUMP!).
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5 New Rules for a Healthy Credit Score
by Aleksandra Todorova
Tuesday, March 16, 2010

The rules that credit-card companies have to live by changed dramatically with the enactment of new regulations last month. Now, some of the rules for consumers striving to maintain good credit are changing, too.

For the most part, card holders would still do well to pay on time, keep their balances low and refrain from applying for too many credit cards at once. But some of the old tenets may not always hold up, as credit-card companies continue to adapt to the new environment and look for ways to run their for-profit businesses.

Case in point: Many issuers introduced annual or inactivity fees in the weeks leading to or immediately after the Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and Disclosure Act went into effect. "Now folks have to decide -- do they want this card badly enough to pay the fee, or do they close it," says Barry Paperno, the consumer operations manager at FICO (FICO). It's a question of more than just losing a credit line. Closing a credit card can have a big impact on one's credit score. That is, unless you do some groundwork in advance.

With the help of some easy -- if often counterintuitive -- steps, you can improve and retain a healthy credit score even in today's fast-changing credit environment. Here are five: