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02.13.08 | How My Credit Score Dropped 30 Points in One Day

Posted in Credit Information by The Platinum Kid

This is a very humbling blog post. It’s humbling but I also recognize that it’s an incredibly valuable lesson, particularly those with less credit experience than me or who are just starting out. Before I begin let me boil it down to one sentence for those of you in a hurry. READ EVERYTHING YOU GET FROM YOUR CREDIT CARD COMPANY IN DETAIL NO MATTER HOW INSIGNIFICANT IT MAY SEEM.

The Background

In February 2007 I decided to get a Chase Rewards Card in order to take advantage of a 0% APR for 6-months balance transfer option. I wanted to consolidate some smaller debts and free up some cash to pay down other debts faster. My plan was to pay only the minimum for 6-months while cleaning up the other debts and then when the normal APR kicked in I would have compounded available cash from the paid off debts to knock the Chase balance off in about 3-4 months.

I was diligent with my plan and executed it to perfection. When the regular Chase APR kicked in last summer I was ready to go and proceeded to make two consecutive quadruple payments. As I often do I called them one day to ask if I qualified for a lower APR since I was such a good customer (paid on time, more than the minimum, had a good credit score and history, etc.) The rep informed me that not only didd I not qualify for a lower APR but that they were going to move my APR from 11.9% to the maximum of 24%. I asked them why and was told it must be something on my credit report. I had a credit score of 730, no late payments in over 7 years, a great mix if credit including mortgage, auto loan and credit cards older than 10 years. The agent insisted that she didn’t know why then and there was nothing I could do about it.

I strongly suspected the reason that my APR was jacked up was because Chase made no money on me for the first 6 months due the 0% APR offer and some report revealed that I was a classic “gamer”. A gamer is somebody who takes advantage of low intro APR offers and never ends up paying the credit card company much in interest because they pay off or move their balance too fast. Companies who derive tons of money from fees and interest hate gamers.

The next day I made a balance transfer from my Chase Rewards card to my American Express and included an extra few dollars to cover any residual interest. Then since it was a new card anyway I cancelled the Chase Rewards card. I won’t have a long term relationship with a company who pulls out all the stops to earn fees off people unfairly rather than promote a lifetime business relationship.

Fast Forward to Today

All the Chase drama happened in November. I got a statement or two afterwards and tossed them assuming they owed me money and I enjoy when that happens because they owe me a few bucks and then have to spend money every month to tell me. Hey it’s a few cents every month but a small victory nevertheless.

Through American Express I have a service which alerts me of any changes to my credit report. It’s great, I like to tinker and see if I can always move my FICO credit score up but I have never received an actual alert- until today.

My alert informed me that I had a derogatory statement put on all three credit reports. I immediately logged in and saw to my disbelief that I am more than 30 days past due on my Chase bill. How can this be? I logged into my old Chase account to see that my “extra” payment made back in November was a couple dollars short of the interest charge. I had a balance of $3 which I didn’t pay for 2 months in which time it accumulated $60 in late fees and got me a negative comment on my credit report.

The credit report service from American Express allows you to also calculate your FICO credit score on the fly so I did that…30 points on average between the 3 credit agencies. My credit score got blown out of the water from this one thing!
I immediately paid Chase online and then called them to see if there was anything they could do about the negative report to the credit agencies. They passed me around to a couple of different people before informing me: Too bad, late is late and it’s your problem not ours.

So Chase got the last laugh. I now have to work even harder to get my score back up. I’m hoping the change will not be permanent and in a month or two when the balance shows I paid them their $3 and the account is closed it reflects that. I’ll let you know. In the meantime here again is the lesson learned.

READ EVERYTHING YOU GET FROM YOUR CREDIT CARD COMPANY IN DETAIL NO MATTER HOW INSIGNIFICANT IT MAY SEEM.

This goes doubly if you’re a gamer and move balances around frequently! Oh and I would personally not recommend getting involved with Chase for any number of reasons mentioned in this post.


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2 Comments »

  1. Captain Terrible says

    That sounds terrible, and I know terrible in fact I’m the Captain. I wonder how many people out there throw away their credit card stuff without reading it. It doesn’t help that we all get so much junk mail and spam. I think its makes it easy to ignore both email and regular mail in general because people are so conditioned to getting junk.

    Its hard to believe your credit score dropped so much. I’m a member of your student credit forum also and I saw that you referenced this in there. Please do update us with what happens to your score! I bet it goes up soon.

    Later.

    February 14th, 2008 | #

  2. Kemica says

    That really sucks, you were right for leaving them. Thanks for the tip

    October 28th, 2008 | #

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