Piggybacking may hurt new credit score
July 15, 2007
Tuscaloosa News
by Michelle Singletary
A pending change to a popular credit scoring system is about to make
it much harder for people to polish their credit by riding the coattails
of someone else’s good payment record.
Fair Isaac Corp., the creator of the widely used FICO credit scoring formula,
is adjusting its scoring method to fight a growing trend called piggybacking.
Piggybacking involves letting another person become an authorized user on your
credit card account. As an authorized user, that person immediately inherits
the payment history of that account. People seeking to boost their credit ratings
typically hitch themselves to folks with histories of paying their cards on time
and keeping their balances low, all of which maximizes their credit scores.
In the past, this arrangement has been between family members or friends. Parents
are often advised to do it for their college-age or young adult children (a move
I discourage).
In recent years, a growing number of companies have begun selling authorized
user services. These so called credit-repair companies, which advertise heavily
on the Internet, promise that people can push up their scores by 200 points or
more. FICO scoring ranges from a low of 300 to a high of 850. The higher your
score, the better the loan terms and rates you can get.
Brokers selling this service also promise that authorized users won’t get
the credit card number or information that could allow them to use the credit
card. However, if the information is included on a person’s credit report,
which is the whole point of this transaction, it’s possible to find a way
to use the card.
Users of a commercial piggyback service might pay $1,000 or more depending on
quality of the accounts. Account holders who let others be added to their accounts
may earn a few hundred dollars per piggyback client. The middleman collects the
difference.
There’s a problem with this service. It allows people, who have no relationship
with the primary cardholder, to embellish their credit histories, making it possible
for them to get loans for which they would otherwise not qualify.
“This is clearly loan fraud," said Craig Watts, the public affairs
manager for Fair Isaac.
Piggybacking has become a major concern to lenders and banking regulators, who
are already dealing with historically high mortgage loan delinquencies and foreclosures.
The damage could get worse if they approve borrowers who only have an illusion
of creditworthiness.
By September, Fair Isaac will begin rolling out its new scoring model, called
FICO 08. Watts said consumers relying mostly on the credit history of another
cardholder could see their scores drop if the new scoring model is used. Fair
Isaac estimates about 25 percent to 30 percent of credit reports have at least
one authorized user.
“While FICO’s move has largely remained under consumers’ radar
screen, its impact will be clearly felt when the change starts taking place in
September, particularly among newly divorced women and a fresh crop of college
students who will face a new hurdle in establishing credit for the first time," says
John Ulzheimer, a former FICO manager and president of Credit.com educational
services.
No question, piggybacking has helped some consumers. But borrowing someone else’s
good credit history doesn’t always have a happy ending.
I’ve heard my share of horror stories from people who allowed a relative
or friend to become an authorized user only to be left with major debt. Or the
authorized user, who was responsible for paying the bill, didn’t make payments
on time, thus ruining the primary cardholder’s good credit name.
Being an authorized user doesn’t give someone a chance to demonstrate that
they can actually use credit wisely. In fact, that’s why in creating its
own credit scoring system, VantageScore, the three major credit bureaus never
included authorized users in calculating a person’s creditworthiness, according
to Lisa Zarikian, who leads Equifax Predictive Sciences and was a member of the
team that created the scoring system.
Although Fair Isaac is updating its scoring model, piggybacking will continue
for now because not all lenders will immediately change over to the updated FICO
version.
I understand the desire to want to help someone qualify for credit or get the
best loan deal. But that person’s inability to qualify for credit could
be a good thing. Just because someone wants credit doesn’t mean they can
afford it. That’s why they didn’t qualify on their own in the first
place. Maybe they aren’t ready for the responsibility.
And consider this. If you never meant to allow an authorized user to use your
card, you’re complicit in helping someone misrepresent themselves as creditworthy.
Bottom line: this is unethical whether it’s being done by somebody’s
mama, daddy, friend or stranger.
Michelle Singletary is a columnist for The Washington Post.