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The new federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau recently announced that it would begin looking into the credit reporting industry and ways it can increase oversight for the companies that issue credit reports, according to a report from Sioux Falls, South Dakota television station KELO. Among the aspects of the credit reporting industry that the CFPB hopes to tackle is creating greater clarity for consumers in the scoring and reporting process, and helping to engender greater understanding of what these ratings mean. Further, the agency would also like to make the process of reporting and correcting mistakes on a credit report quicker and easier.
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“We are going to be supervising these institutions very closely to make sure they’re complying with the law,” CFPB director Richard Cordray, a former attorney general of Ohio, told the news station. “We are actually going to have firsthand knowledge of their operations because we have authority to go in and seek information about anything we want to know and they’re not at liberty to withhold it from us. That can be a really quick way to get a bird’s eye view of what’s going on.”
Currently, consumers who notice a mistaken or unfair entry on their credit report have to let the bureau that issued the document know about the situation, and usually provide proof that they are not responsible for the account listed on their file. And while this type of error can usually be resolved fairly quickly, recent studies have revealed that as many as 80 percent of all credit reports contain at least one such erroneous marking, necessitating that most consumers work with at least one credit bureau to clear up the issue.
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For this reason, experts recommend that consumers check their credit reports as regularly as possible. Americans are entitled to at least three free copies of their credit report per year—one from each of the credit bureaus through AnnualCreditReport.com—by federal law, but some states allow their residents more. (Consumers can also use Credit.com’s free Credit Report Card for an overview of their credit standing and an explanation of how it works.) Doing so will likely give borrowers insight into what work they may need to do to improve their standing.
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