New uniform credit agencies’ scoring system not likely to impact insurers

By | April 3, 2006

The recent announcement by the three major consumer credit reporting agencies that they have created a new credit scoring system aimed at simplifying the loan process likely will not have a major impact on insurers’ current use of credit in underwriting and rating for homeowners and automobile insurance policies.

Equifax, Experian and Trans-Union said the new “Vantage-Score” was the direct result of market demand for a more consistent and objective approach to credit scoring, an Associated Press account said. The agencies in the past each used their proprietary formulas to create their own scores, meaning that a lender dealing with a consumer’s application for a credit card or a mortgage might have to reconcile three widely different scores. The new system will allow a single methodology to be used to create the scores.

The new system may make it easier for lenders and may eliminate some of the criticism leveled at the credit scoring companies by lenders and consumers. Several national insurance trade groups don’t feel the simplified approach of the three companies will create any splash in the controversial world of insurers’ use of credit scores.

“Insurers use different systems and scoring models such as Fair Isaac Corp. (FICO), Choicepoint and proprietary scores. These models are different from the consumer lending focused credit scores by Equifax, Experian and TransUnion,” said Jeff Junckas, director of Public Affairs, American Insurance Association. “A likely guess is that this new scoring system from the three companies is designed to rival FICO’s generic credit score, which is designed to predict the likelihood of a bill going 30 days late in a 24 month timeframe. This is not what insurers are looking for when they use credit-based insurance scores. Insurers are trying to predict future claims.”

The Property Casualty Insurers Association of America testified before the Federal Trade Commission last year in the hopes of better explaining why the use of credit is important to insurers and how it is used differently than lenders or credit card companies.

“Credit-based insurance scores can only be developed using insurance claims data, they are completely distinct from scores based on credit histories that are designed and developed for other purposes such as making decisions about the granting of credit,” Diana Lee, PCI assistant vice president, research told the FTC last year. “Data elements that for any reason should not be used for insurance underwriting purposes are held out of the analysis and so do not affect the resulting credit-based insurance scoring model.”

When asked how many different insurance scoring models are in use today, Lee responded that “a survey done by the National Association of Independent Insurers in 2002 found that about 20 percent of participating insurance companies using credit scores created their own models or had customized ones developed with outside help.”

Lee also told the FTC that a survey conducted by Conning found that more than 90 percent of insurance companies do use credit data. She said how much of the data is used and how it is used by companies varies greatly.

Oregon Insurance Administrator Joel Ario said that he thought the standardization of the three major agencies was good move.

“I personally believe insurers would be better off if they had more standardization, much like the banking industry,” Ario said.

Ario is a former chairman of the NAIC’s Credit Scoring Working Group, now disbanded after the group finalized its document, “Insurance Credit Scoring Regulatory Best Practices.” Ario agrees that the insurance industry varies greatly in the types of scoring models it uses and the criteria used in those models, and he doesn’t see that changing dramatically in the near future.

“Standardiza-tion is a good move no matter what because it will benefit consumers who still have difficulty dealing with so many different credit scores from different agencies,” he said.

The National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies agrees that insurer’s use of credit scoring models varies widely but overall said that the decision by the three major credit scoring companies is a positive one.

“Strictly from a consumer standpoint, this move will definitely ease some consumer frustration and is a positive development,” saidNeil Alldredge, NAMIC senior director of State Advocacy.

However, NAMIC said that even with the news about the new methodology, the use of credit by insurers could face another challenge when the FTC releases its study on the use of credit. The study will focus on all uses of credit, not just how the insurance industry uses it. However, insurance industry representatives and rating agencies have cooperated with the FTC in the last year providing data and input for the study.

“The FTC study was supposed to be released in 2005 and at this point there is speculation that it could be released late in 2006,” Aldrege said. “The results could be a bombshell for the industry or the study could be very positive. We just don’t know how it will unfold at this point in time.”

Topics Carriers Agencies Market

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Insurance Journal Magazine April 3, 2006
April 3, 2006
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