Saturday, November 23, 2024

Your credit report is missing key data that lenders are refusing to report

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I pay my credit card balance in full each month, but you’d never know it by looking at my credit report.

In fact, I wouldn’t look that much different from someone who pays only the minimum payment, which is considered riskier behavior by lenders.

The weird thing: That information used to be in my credit report up until 10 years ago, when the biggest credit card companies stopped reporting that payment data because it created too much competition among lenders.

As a result, people like me who pay off those balances are missing out on a better credit score and all the perks that come along with that, according to a recent study.

“It’s harming anyone who’s repaying their credit card in full. They’re not being rewarded for that behavior through a high credit score,” Benedict Guttman-Kenney, co-author of the study, told Yahoo Finance. “It’s also not incentivizing people to repay their credit card debt.”

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the government watchdog over financial services, has the power to force lenders to report this critical data, but it’s unlikely the agency will have enough teeth to do so under the next administration.

“I think the CFPB is going to shift a lot in how things are administered,” Brian Riley, director of credit advisory services at Javelin Strategy & Research, told Yahoo Finance.

Read more: How to check your credit score

By keeping payment data out of consumers’ credit reports, lenders are limiting competition between each other — to consumers’ detriment, a new study finds. (Photo: Getty Creative) · NicoElNino via Getty Images

From 2009 to 2013, most credit card issuers shared with the credit bureaus what people were scheduled to pay each month and how much they actually paid, even though they were not required to under the Fair Credit Reporting Act.

The share of accounts on credit reports showing that information was 89% in 2013, Guttman-Kenney’s study found. A year later, that percentage dropped to 55%, and by 2022 only 36% of credit card accounts included that data in a person’s credit report.

What happened after 2013 that prompted such a decline?

That year, TransUnion — one of the three mega credit bureaus — launched a trended data product, which showed whether a potential borrower was getting riskier or less risky based on a historical view of their accounts. One of the pieces of information included in that product was the actual payment amounts on the borrower’s debts.

TransUnion pitched its product this way: The data could help lenders “identify specific credit trends and payment behaviors that allow them to make more precise lending decisions,” an executive said two years after the launch. “These added insights will help our clients confidently engage new credit-worthy and credit-seeking populations. The result: More consumers will gain access to credit.”

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