moneyhoney
Registered User
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Also...Your credit record includes:
So, the ICB reflects a full picture of your credit history, good and bad.
- your name, date of birth and address;
- the names of lenders and account numbers of loans you currently hold, or that were active within the last five years;
- repayments made or missed for each month on each loan;
- the failure to clear off any loan;
- loans that were settled for less than you owed; and
- legal actions your lender took against you
Then there is the recent (last year or two) practise in certain banks to 'pre-approve' you for a loan. In the case of one major bank this involves fishing thru the ICB record , minging up a scoring system out of that fishing and then writing or calling you to say that you have been pre approved for a loan if you 'score' .ClubMan said:I don't see how they could necessarily assume that queries of one's ICB record not followed up by a loan being taken out were credit advancement refusals rather than, say, the borrower simply shopping around for the best deal.
legend99 said:Should I go back to them and address this from the point of view of demanding that this is not reported as a repayment month misssed on my mortgage by the ICB??
legend99 said:1. Worked on an online bank in the UK. Think we used Equifax.
No, its not - it works in exactly the same way as ICB does - info only, no scoring.ClubMan said:Isn't Equifax a credit scoring/rating agency? .
legend99 said:He had to go the business analyst guy we were working with from Equifax and get his score reset as he would have been declined like a hot spud from anything else in the UK.
Money said:What is the Banks policy on savings if they think you own money to another lender in the EU, are banks tell other lenders that you may have debt with your deposit account details ie how much saving you may have in a a deposit account?
Surely there are data protection issues here. The banks can't be going around sharing info with each other.Money said:BoI are in contact with debt collectors in the UK all the time, I have been told this by an exemployee of the Bank, does anyone know if this is true?
Many Debt collection agencies in the UK have Irish operations also - this is probably what your friend meansbond-007 said:Surely there are data protection issues here. The banks can't be going around sharing info with each other.
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