Credit Report Scores - Why It Is Important For Your Finances
The airwaves these days seem to be full of advertisements for consumers to obtain their credit reports and also apply for credit cards. Apart from encouraging consumers to obtain their credit reports, consumers are not told and do not fully understand why it is that important. Most people, after all, can obtain a credit card with an interest rate of say, 24.95%, and can afford to make the repayments spread over a very long period of time. The emphasis seems to be on "yes, I can afford the repayment". And so many consumers start with one credit card and go on to two, then three, four, five, six and on and on it goes. There are consumers who have balances on more than twelve credit cards. They have literally surrendered their financial will to credit institutions that rule over their lives. The sad thing about this situation is that the more credit card balances you have the lower your credit score, and the smaller the chance for you to obtain a loan for an important purchase like a house.
The way credit reports and credit cards are touted these days by financial institutions, one would think that these two "entities" share a common positive association. Nothing could be further from the truth. Yes, you can establish an initial credit profile by applying for one or two credit cards. Nobody is going to argue with that position. When you start on your fourth credit card, that's when trouble begins.
Credit costs a lot of money. Obtaining a loan, any loan is not cheap, and will surely burn a hole in your pocket (take some time to examine and acquaint yourself with how much money your mortgage will cost you). How big a hole it burns depends on you; in other words, the interest rate that you are prepared to pay on the loan. This is what distinguishes the average "Joe" from a millionaire when they both obtain credit from the bank. The millionaire almost certainly has tangible collateral and constitutes less risk to the bank. Joe's tangible collateral, on the other hand, is non-existent.
