Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Equifax makes money by knowing a lot about you The origin of credit companies

Lightly regulated private credit agencies sell lists of your info

- KEN SWEET

NEW YORK - Equifax knows a lot about you. That is, in essence, how it makes money.

The company and its competitor­s have in their files the personal financial informatio­n of tens of millions of Americans like you, going back decades. Your mortgage loan totals. When you switched from a Macy’s card to a Target card. How much you still owe for college.

“It’s a pretty simple business model, actually. They gather as much informatio­n about you from lenders, aggregate it, and sell it back to them,” said Brett Horn, an industry analyst with Morningsta­r.

Equifax had more than $3.1 billion in revenue last year, largely from selling data to other companies. Experian’s revenue came to $4.34 billion, while TransUnion had $1.7 billion.

The trove of data — Equifax’s largest asset — has become its biggest liability after the company admitted it didn’t keep the informatio­n safe from criminals who stole or accessed the data on 143 million Americans who are now at risk for identity theft. It’s now under investigat­ion at the state and federal level, facing a series of lawsuits, and desperatel­y trying to assuage the anger of the consumers who are its commoditie­s.

What to know about how the credit companies work:

Where the money comes from

Equifax, Experian and TransUnion make most of their money selling bulk lists to banks and credit card companies.

American Express, for example, could purchase a list of potential customers 25 to 30 years old with credit scores above 650. Armed with that, AmEx will send out preapprove­d credit card mailers, hoping to sign up new customers.

Hundreds of millions of credit reports are sold this way each year to companies like Capital One, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup. Since the banks buy the reports in bulk, they pay as little as a few dollars per report. While people can get their credit reports once a year for free, Equifax charges $15.95 for the report plus a credit score, while Experian charges $19.95 for a report and score.

The credit bureaus also sell credit reports to potential employers. About 45 percent of companies with 2,500 to 24,999 employees do background credit checks on some job applicants, according to a 2012 study by the Society for Human Resource Management. While employers cannot get a person’s credit score, they can discover legal judgments or bankruptci­es.

And there are products like fraud protection services and credit monitoring. Equifax normally sells a package of credit monitoring services for $19.95 a month. Experian is more involved in that market but has gotten into some hot water. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau fined Experian $3 million in March for selling misleading credit scores to consumers.

Critics of the credit companies argue that Equifax could make some money off its own security failings. Its TrustedID product, which it is offering free for a year to people whose informatio­n was exposed, could retain some customers.

Finally, the company charges fees to customers who want to freeze or unfreeze their credit files. Those fees vary by state, and Equifax has waived them in the wake of the data breach.

How the circle works

The credit companies get informatio­n, such as whether you’ve paid your bills on time each month, largely for free.

An estimated 10,000 different companies and sources report informatio­n about you to Equifax, TransUnion and Experian, according to a 2012 study by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Industry experts say that figure could be as high as 30,000.

That informatio­n gets compiled into your individual credit report, pooled with data from banks to build a comprehens­ive picture of your financial history and your potential financial risk.

Banks are just as reliant on the credit companies. Without the credit reports, a customer could default on a loan, then apply for another elsewhere without the new bank knowing the person’s history. The U.S. has thousands of individual lenders and banks, so very rarely could one bank offer a complete picture of a person’s financial history.

Often, banks make credit decisions based almost entirely on what they see in a credit report from these companies.

“They are the gatekeeper­s to whether you can get a credit card or an affordable car loan or a house,” said Chi Chi Wu, a longtime critic of the credit-reporting industry and a lawyer at the National Consumer Law Center.

Equifax, TransUnion and Experian are often referred to as credit bureaus or agencies, which lends them an official air. But they’re private companies without government affiliatio­n.

How the companies got to hold informatio­n on so many millions of people in the first place is largely due to their position in a lightly regulated part of the U.S. financial system. The credit companies are governed by one main federal law, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, which requires the companies to give you access to your data once a year and allow for disputes. Most of the regulation in the industry happens at the state level.

It’s also incredibly difficult to opt out of the system. You could live an all-cash lifestyle, but still wind up with your informatio­n in the hands of the credit companies through less-obvious sources like cable or phone companies.

Customers like this are known as “thin file” borrowers because of the lack of informatio­n, but that doesn’t stop Equifax, Experian and TransUnion from building files on you. In these cases, the companies might only have a name, address, maybe a Social Security number — but that data could still be enough to start the process of identity theft.

 ?? MIKE STEWART/AP ?? Equifax — in hot water over a massive data breach — and its competitor­s make most of their money selling bulk lists to banks and credit card companies.
MIKE STEWART/AP Equifax — in hot water over a massive data breach — and its competitor­s make most of their money selling bulk lists to banks and credit card companies.

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