All I have gotten are denials or delayed denials in the past few days
- FrankN
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- Joeyman
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Replied by Joeyman on topic Re: Reply to Joey
Joey, stop giving unfounded and INCORRECT advice !!
Finance Globe is about helping each other to gain the best credit & financial knowledge, if you believe I am stating wrong information please do not hesitate to explain why.
- Joeyman
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Replied by Joeyman on topic Re: Reply to Joey
Joey, stop giving unfounded and INCORRECT advice !! I worked as the Operations Officer of a bank and oversaw the Lending Department (Auto, Mortgages & Personal LOC's). What you said in your post is COMPLETELY FALSE.
After performing a Google search (to confirm your assertion), I found that hard pulls are required to stay on your credit report for one year, and typically stay for two years (obviously most common). -- Just as I assured in my past post. Do you disagree?
The reason why I stated creditors typically look at the last six months is because I was personally denied for having too many inquiries in the last six months, when I first started building credit in 2008. I have also read numerous posts here at Finance Globe of the same denial from our members. Also, working at one bank doesn't mean all the banks operate the same; I try and represent the majority of banks when giving advice? Do you disagree?
- Joeyman
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Replied by Joeyman on topic Re: Reply to Joey
On top of that, you only have good credit because your mom hooked you up when you turned 18, which was a measly 3 or 4 years ago. But just to be clear, that doesn't make you a financier or a credit whiz - by ANY standards!
You need to review the post you're referring to because that clearly was not me. I built all my credit on my own and my "mom" never helped me in anyway. In fact, during those years my single mom had financial hardship.
- PhynanciallySavvy
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Replied by PhynanciallySavvy on topic Reply to Joey
Typically creditors look back at the last six months of inquiries, however, credit bureaus will keep the last two years on your report. Each inquiry can lower your credit score by 1-30 points... You may be better off obtaining credit from your main bank, especially if it's a credit union.
Joey, stop giving unfounded and INCORRECT advice !! I worked as the Operations Officer of a bank and oversaw the Lending Department (Auto, Mortgages & Personal LOC's). What you said in your post is COMPLETELY FALSE.
-P.S.
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Replied by PhynanciallySavvy on topic Reply to Jodie
Truly, it isn't as much the score - no matter what branding model (FICO, Vantage, standard CB score) - that matters anymore. Since the 2009 CC Bill, lenders look for ANY collection/negative/delinquent/charge-off account that shows within the last 4-5 years... Because when they get your CR, that's the first thing they see... The NEGATIVE stuff - even if it's resurfacing in the late stages of the statute of limitations. If you have any collections/delinquent accounts - including a measly doctor's bill for $150 or a 6 year old account that went bad, lenders will most likely decline your application.*****
However, it's worth noting that as crappy as it will be having those hard inquiries for the next 24 months - with no new lines of credit to show for it, hopefully some of the old/bad will fall off your reports in the meantime. One word of caution though: don't try to fix an old (bad) debt by paying the lingering balance. This will NOT help you whatsoever... It will just take away money that could have been better applied to current existing LOC's. If it's old and a charged-off account, let it be.
In the mean time, just be patient... I promise - I was in your shoes three years ago... But now my score is in the 760+ range and I have over $27K of revolving credit. Plus, if you stop inquiring and submitting credit apps, this will also boost your score - gradually. If you're trying to go up, just take care of your current financial obligations and pay at least the minimum on time -- and stop applying for credit for at least the next 12 months. Keep us posted!*****
-P.S.
- jodiescha68
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