Krystal L. Green

Single At 40

Depression

Do You Know The Signs?

Living With Diabetes

Silverlady's Road Of Discovery

Beat Breast Cancer

Reduce Your Risk

Natural Beauty

Tips for Traveling

Showing posts with label Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Show all posts

Aug 9, 2014

FICO Score Changes Mean Higher Scores and Lower Interest Rates For Consumers




FICO credit-scoring system is being revised to reduce the negative effect of overdue medical bills and to quit penalizing consumers who pay off debts that had been assigned to collection agencies. The changes to the hugely influential FICO scoring system could make it easier for millions of Americans to get loans at lower rates and eventually save consumers billions of dollars.

For consumers whose only major delinquency is an unpaid medical bill, the changes would increase a credit score by 25 points, according to Fair Isaacs Corp., whose FICO credit ratings are the basis for scores published by the three big credit-rating agencies.

Jan 4, 2012

President Appoints Cordray to Head CFPB

President Obama in Shaker Heights, Ohio, with Richard Cordray, whom he appointed Wednesday to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Here's the story of the Senate's rejection of the President's nominee before the recess apointment:

The Senate rejected Richard Cordray, President Obama's nominee to head the newly formed Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). There was little mystery to the vote -- 44 Republicans pledged in May to block his nomination. The final tally was 53-45, with Republican Olympia Snowe of Maine voting "present." Sen. Scott Brown of Massachusetts, facing the bureau's inventor Elizabeth Warren, was the lone dissenting GOP vote.

Republicans don't like the agency, so they've fought to hamper it by refusing to approve any one as its Director. Once again, they've made new rules and confirm they'll do anything to protect the rich and stick it to the middle class.

Share

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More