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'Piggybacking' Roils Credit Industry
By J.W. ELPHINSTONE
AP Business Writer
Only a low credit score stood between Alipio Estruch
and a mortgage to buy a $449,000 Spanish-style house
in Weston, Fla., a few miles west of Fort Lauderdale.
Instead of spending several years repairing his credit
rating, which he said was marred by two forgotten cell
phone bills and identity theft, the 37-year-old real
estate agent paid $1,800 to an Internet-based company
to bump up his score almost overnight.
The result was a happy ending for Estruch, but the growing
practice is sending shivers through the mortgage industry.
Federal regulators are also reviewing the practice. And
after being contacted by The Associated Press for this
story, Fair Isaac Corp., the developer of the widely
used FICO score, said it will change its credit scoring
system beginning later this year in a way it contends
will end this little-known but potentially high-impact
mortgage loan loophole.
Instantcreditbuilders.com, or ICB, helped Estruch boost
his score by arranging for him to be added as an authorized
user on several credit cards of people with stellar credit
who were paid to allow this coattailing. Parents also
use this practice when they add their children to their
credit cards to help them build solid credit.
The pitch to those who are essentially renting their
credit history for pay is seductive: You don't need to
worry about users of this service receiving duplicate
copies of your credit cards, account numbers or any of
your personal information. It's essentially free money,
they are told.
Brian Kinney, 44, a retired Army officer in Glendale,
Calif., pulls in more than $2,500 a month by lending
out 19 credit card spots on two old Citibank cards with
strong payment histories. Kinney, whose FICO score is
above 800 on the scale of 300 to 850, quit his job working
at a Farmers Insurance agency and uses the ICB income
to tide him over until he starts his own insurance agency.
Lenders are worried, however, that they're taking on
greater default risks by unknowingly offering lower interest
rates than they otherwise would to applicants who artificially
boost their credit scores. Their trade group has complained
to the Federal Trade Commission and is talking with the
credit reporting bureaus in case the practice becomes
more widespread.
Estruch paid $1,800 in December for three credit card
spots, and by January, his FICO score jumped from 550
to 715. In mid-March, he closed on his four-bedroom beige
stucco house after obtaining a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage
from a unit of American Home Mortgage Investment Corp.
It carried a 7.5 percent interest rate and required no
down payment.
"Everything now is score driven. I had a great
mortgage history, but I got hurt because of my credit
score," said Estruch, who also works as a mortgage
broker, had bought and sold two houses previously, and
currently owns another home in New York. Estruch said
he's current on his mortgage payments.
Companies like Largo, Fla.-based ICB are sprouting on
the Internet with little overhead and no-frills marketing.
They post ads on community Web sites like Craigslist
and have sponsored links on Google and Yahoo. Competitors
of ICB have even reached out to mortgage brokers, lenders
and real estate agents, flooding their e-mail with advertisements.
Jason LaBossiere, who founded ICB a year and a half
ago, said his company receives 100 to 150 new leads daily
- a number that has been growing - and those inquiries
lead to 10 to 20 new clients a week.
ICB charges $900 for the first credit card account,
with a discount for additional ones. The cardholder allowing
the piggybacking on his or her credit history can receive
$100 to $150 per slot, depending on the age and credit
limit of each card. ICB pockets the rest.
The effect on a credit score can vary depending on what
else is in a client's report. But one borrowed credit
card account can increase a score between 30 and 45 points,
two between 60 and 90 points, and five between 150 and
205 points, according to ICB. That's because the computer
program that calculates scores is essentially tricked
into believing the credit renter has a better repayment
history when it sees the added accounts, and that helps
lift the credit score.
Once the credit card company files an updated report
to credit bureaus - leading to a higher FICO score -
the credit renter is removed from the account of the
person allowing the piggybacking. However, the credit
card's payment history remains on the authorized user's
credit report forever, and lenders have no way of knowing
how the credit borrower is related to the cardholder.
A higher credit score can save a consumer an enormous
amount of money because it usually means a lower mortgage
interest rate. It also can mean the difference between
qualifying for a loan or not, as in Estruch's case.
According to Fair Isaac, lenders would probably demand
about a 9.8 percent interest rate on a $300,000, 30-year
fixed mortgage for an applicant with a credit score between
500 and 579. That would translate into a $2,585 monthly
payment for principal and interest.
But a borrower with a score between 760 and 850 seeking
the same loan would qualify for about a 6 percent rate
that would cost just $1,796 a month for principal and
interest. That savings of $789 each month would total
$284,040 over 30 years.
Kinney, the retired Army officer in California, said
those borrowing his good credit history don't get his
personal information, full credit card number or credit
card expiration dates. Any sensitive data is handled
through ICB, and Kinney adds the users himself by calling
his credit card company. ICB also destroys any duplicate
cards that are issued to the credit renter, according
to its contract.
Instead of being worried about risks he may be assuming,
Kinney said borrowers are the ones vulnerable to scammers
posing as do-gooders. Those seeking a credit hike give
the cardholder their names and Social Security numbers,
which, in the wrong hands, could lead to identity theft.
Kinney said he also receives credit card offers in the
mail for the credit borrowers on his accounts, opening
up another possibility for fraud, but he throws them
away.
"I know the whole thing sounds kind of odd and
not very legitimate, but it is for now," Kinney
said. "I don't know how long before someone will
decide it's illegal. But I'm not counting on this for
the long-term."
Ginny Ferguson, a mortgage broker in Pleasanton, Calif.,
and a credit expert for the National Association of Mortgage
Brokers, considers the practice mortgage fraud, and the
trade organization is about to release a policy statement
against it.
"These companies are encouraging consumers to commit
fraud. On a standard home loan, there's a clause that
says the consumer is not omitting pertinent facts that
could impact his or her ability to repay the loan," Ferguson
said.
ICB's LaBossiere said he sees his business as a second
chance for the consumer who has had little financial
education to make good decisions.
"People who are our clients are spending an incredible
amount of money to get their finances back in order," he
said. "They've learned through a school of pain
that it's such an important aspect of regaining control
of their lives again."
So far, federal authorities have yet to make a ruling
on the practice. "What I've gathered from attorneys
here is that it appears to be legal" technically,
said FTC spokesman Frank Dorman. "However, the agency
is not saying that it is legal."
Lenders, who depend on credit scores to assess a person's
ability to pay back a loan, are closely watching the
practice's growth. It also comes at a time when the industry
is reeling from the a soaring default rate on subprime
mortgages, home loans for people with bad credit. As
a result, they've tightened lending standards, but the
credit-renting practice threatens to undermine their
efforts to reduce exposure to risky borrowers.
Ninety percent of the largest U.S. banks base their
loan decisions on FICO scores, which currently include
authorized user accounts. However, after discussions
with lenders and industry officials, Fair Isaac said
it intends to announce this week that all future versions
of its FICO score methodology will no longer consider
authorized user accounts, said Tom Quinn, Fair Isaac's
vice president of scoring solutions.
The next version is slated to roll out in September
to one of the three main credit reporting agencies -
Equifax Inc., Experian Information Solutions Inc. or
TransUnion LLC - with the other two agencies receiving
the new version some time in 2008.
The change won't be a quick-fix for lenders trying to
weed out credit renters. Corey Carlisle, senior director
of government affairs for the Mortgage Bankers Association,
said it takes time for lenders to transition from one
scoring system to another.
"All lenders have their own guidelines and parameters
on how to use and incorporate the FICO score. It would
take time to understand what's in a new credit score," Carlisle
said.
Quinn also noted that some lenders generate their own
scores using authorized user accounts in their calculations,
so the practice may not be easily negated.
"It's an industrywide issue and there are other
scores out there," he said. This is a phenomenon
that impacts more than just FICO scores."
Other consumers besides credit renters stand to lose
with the change, namely those for whom authorized user
accounts were designed: college students on their parents'
cards and spouses with little to no credit of their own.
But there's no way to distinguish these from the latest
crop of strangers trying to augment their scores. Lenders
who want to find out more information about others on
credit card accounts are hindered by the Fair Credit
Reporting Act and privacy laws.
"As with any decision, there's a trade-off," Quinn
said. "The many honest consumers who learn good
credit skills with the help from a family member, that
feature will be removed. But the challenge for us is
maintaining the integrity of the FICO score."
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