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23 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
The use of a statistical model to objectively evaluate and "score" credit applications and credit bureau data in order to assess likely future performance. Scores help businesses make decisions such as whether to accept or decline the application.
Application Scoring
A proceeding in U.S. Bankruptcy Court that may legally release a person from repaying debts owed. Credit reports normally include bankruptcies for up to 10 years.
Bankruptcy
The balance on a credit obligation that a lender no longer expects to be repaid and writes off as a bad debt.
Charge-off
Attempted recovery of a past-due credit obligation by a collection department or agency.
Collection
A credit bureau record on a given individual. It may include: consumer name, address, Social Security number, credit history, inquiries, collection records, and public records such as bankruptcy fillings and tax liens.
Consumer Credit file
A credit reporting agency that is a clearinghouse for information on the credit rating of individuals or firms. Is often called a "credit repository" or a "consumer reporting agency". The three largest credit bureaus in the U.S. are Equifax, Experian and TransUnion.
Credit Bureau
A type of credit score based solely on data stored at the major credit bureaus. It offers a snapshot of a concumer's credit risk at a particular point in time, and rates the likelihood that the consumer will repay debts as agreed.
Credit Bureau risk score
A record of how a consumer has repaid credit obligations in the past.
Credit history
An agreement by which a person is legally bound to pay back borrowed money or used credit.
Credit obligation
Information communicated by a credit reportings agency that bears on a comsumer's credit standing. Most credit reports include: name, address, credit history, inquiries, collection records, and any public records such as bankruptcy fillings and tax liens.
Credit report
The likelihood that an individual will pay his or her credit obligations as agreed. Borrowers who are more likely to pay as agreed pose less risk to creditors and lenders.
Credit risk
This term is often used to refer to credit bureau risk scores. It broadly refers to a number generated by a statistical model which is used to objectively evaluate information that pertains to making a credit decision.
Credit score
A failure to make a loan or debt payment when due. Usually an account is considered to be in "in defualt" after being delinquent for several consecutive 30-day billing cycles.
Default
A failure to deliver even the minimum payment on a loan or debt payment on or before the time agreed. Accounts are often referred to as 30, 60 , 90 or 120 days delinquent because most leners have monthly payment cycles.
Delinquent
Federl legislation that prohibits discrimination in credit. The ECOA orginally was enacted in 1974 as Title VII of the Consumer Credit Protection Act.
Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA)
Federal legislation that promotes the accuracy, confidentiality and proper use of information in the files of every "consumer reporting agency." The FCRA was enacted in 1970.
Fair Credit Reporting Act(FCRA)
Credit bureau risk scores produced from models developed by Fair Isaac Corporation are commonly known as FICO scores. Fair Isaac credit bureau scores are used by lenders and others to assess the credit risk of prospective borrowers or existing customers, in order to help make credit and marketing decisions. These scores are dereived solely from credit bureau reports.
FICO scores
An item on a cosumer's credit report that shows that someone with a "permissible purpose" (unter FCRA rules) has previously requested a copy of the consumer's report. Fair Isaac credit bureau risk scores take into account only inquiries resulting from a consumer's application for credit.
Inquiry
Debt to be paid at regular times over a specified period. Examples include most mortgage and auto loans.
Installment debt
An insurance rating based solely on credit bureau data stored at the major credit bureaus. It offers a snapshot of an individual's insurance risk at a particular point in time, and helps insurers evaluate new and renewal auto and homeowner insurance policies
Insurance bureau score
A delinquent payment; a failure to deliver a loan or debt payment on or before the time agreed.
Late payment
Debt owed on an account that the borrower can repeatedly use and pay back without having to reapply every time credit is used. Credit cards are the most common type of revolving account.
Revolving debt
A statistcal formula that is used, usually with the help of computers, to estimate future performance of prospective borrowers and existing customers. A scoring model calculates scores based on data such as information on a consumer's credit report.
Scoring model