A World Where A 340 FICO Is "Excellent"
At first glance, this ad for CreditReportAmerica seems to have the credit score system reversed, with 350-619 listed as "excellent" and 750-840 listed as "poor"...but then you realize it's actually a graphical depiction of the system shady mortgage brokers used to get when whoring up the sub-prime mortgage orgy. Travel blogger Mark Ashley says he spotted the ad on the frontpage of Yahoo Finance. At the bottom, the ad says the service does not include credit scores. Remember folks, the place to get a free credit report is annualcreditreport.com.
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Comments:
@Trick: Why work so hard to look legit, when you can be obviously shady and then say the victim got what they deserved?
Remember you PAY for the proprietary FICO score. Plus there are other algorithms besides it. I'm not sure you can get these numbers without hitting your credit score -- you could pretend to want to buy a house, and the agent will shunt you off to their in-house mortgage guy, who will run all the numbers and pull your credit and give you (by law) copies of everything he pulls from the three credit companies. I'm not sure if this counts as an inquiry or not, but it probably does. Anyway, you walk away from the house and keep the papers for free.
@Trencher93: Yes, that would definitely count as an inquiry. A hard inquiry, in my opinion, is not worth it unless I'm getting some kind of bonus worth at least $125 or so. FICO scores cost $10 or so at myfico.com, so I think you're better off just going there. They aren't going to include the special-purpose algorithms, but it's not really necessary to know that information, in my opinion. Your regular FICO will get you in the ballpark, and then when you apply for real for a mortgage or whatever you can just get the special-purpose scores like you said.
@Trencher93: Individuals are not allowed to see their true FICO scores. Only companies that order the "real" credit report gets the "real" FICO score. The reports individuals receive have a note in the fine print that this is an "Educational" score.
I read this book by a guy that used to work for the reporting agencies, and he explains alot more about how the agencies are still jerking us around.
@Squot: On the front page I took this to be just some image someone made up to make fun of the lending industry. With this apparently being a real ad, I am now simply confused.
@TMurphy: What happened? Simple: they knew they couldn't do without a designer, but they thought they could save money by doing without a copyeditor/proofreader. Smooth move, CreditReportAmerica.com. (And yes, I am an editor.)










Wow, are companies even trying these days to not appear as they are going to rip you off?