You ask “Are FICO scores effective?” but to answer that you need to ask a further question, “Effective at what?”.
2b seems to not be important enough to make up a significant portion of the score. The risk from credit not intended to be repaid is separate from risk accounted for via past loan delinquency base rates and future changes in financial situations, mostly as a separate, rare-but-consequential event. I don’t think that adding the two tells you a lot about the person.
The purpose of a FICO score is not to tell you something about a person. The purpose of a FICO score is to not lose money.
If I’m considering lending you $100 for 1 year at 10% interest, the (simplified) outcomes are:
You pay me back and I make $10.
You don’t pay me back and I lose $100.
An important consequence of this is that I care a lot about the case where you don’t pay me back, even if it’s rare. If you pay me back 85% of the time, I still lose money.
So, I might use credit scores for less important things like determining interest rates, but the most important decision to make is “Do I offer you a loan at all?”.
With credit cards this is even harder since a typical customer doesn’t use their full balance (and may not pay interest at all), while nearly bankrupt customers will use as much of their balance as they can. If your average customer pays you 2% in interchange fees and uses 10% of their balance and your worst customers cost you 100% of their balance, even 1⁄500 customers not paying you back is a problem.
So, keeping that in mind, we can look at the pieces again:
Payment history (35%) Amount owed (30%) Length of credit history (15%) New credit (10%) Credit mix (10%)
Payment history is obvious. If you don’t pay other people, you probably won’t pay me. Yes, this is “only” 35% of the score, but 850 x (1 − 35%) = 550. No one will give you a credit card with a FICO score of 550.
Amount owed and new credit is a signal that you’re about to go bankrupt. Yes, this doesn’t tell me much about the person and whether they’re the kind of person who usually pays people back, but it does tell me that I shouldn’t lend them money right now.
Length of credit history matters because a short credit history prevents lenders from using any other metric to determine risk. Losing money is the default, so you’re guilty until proven innocent.
I’m not really sure on credit mix, but the fact that it’s only 10% means it will basically never be the reason you do or don’t get a loan (unless you’re already borderline for some other reason) but it might effect rates. I assume part of this is reducing fraud risk: If you’ve successfully convinced someone to give you a mortgage, you’re probably a real person).
One other part of this is that while the factors are weighted in the way you mention, the factors are not calculated in a straightforward way. For example, amount owed is 30% of your score, but that doesn’t mean that reducing the amount you owe from 50% to 0% improves your credit score by 15%. Each factor is calculated as “Looking at your X, how risky does that make you?”
For length of history, that means a history of <1 year is insanely risky[1], while any history above 5 years is basically the same. Or for amounts owed, anything under 30% is low risk, 80% is getting up there, and 99% is insanely risky.
Even for something that sounds straightforward like credit mix, it’s not necessarily the case that only having one credit account means you get a zero on that factor.
So all of that together:
Credit scores measure something less intrinsic about a person. Lenders care if they’re going to lose money, not if you’re a good person.
Losses per default are much higher than average profit per customer, so it’s expected that the filtering process will look “too strict”.
Credit age matters because a short credit age prevents lenders from using any other signals, and the people are high risk until proven otherwise.
You can try to game your credit score, but lenders don’t care about high credit scores (it doesn’t matter if your credit score is above 780), and gaming won’t save you if any individual metric is bad enough (no one will lend to you at all below 580).
A lot of the magic is how each category is calculated, not the high-level weights.
You ask “Are FICO scores effective?” but to answer that you need to ask a further question, “Effective at what?”.
The purpose of a FICO score is not to tell you something about a person. The purpose of a FICO score is to not lose money.
If I’m considering lending you $100 for 1 year at 10% interest, the (simplified) outcomes are:
You pay me back and I make $10.
You don’t pay me back and I lose $100.
An important consequence of this is that I care a lot about the case where you don’t pay me back, even if it’s rare. If you pay me back 85% of the time, I still lose money.
So, I might use credit scores for less important things like determining interest rates, but the most important decision to make is “Do I offer you a loan at all?”.
With credit cards this is even harder since a typical customer doesn’t use their full balance (and may not pay interest at all), while nearly bankrupt customers will use as much of their balance as they can. If your average customer pays you 2% in interchange fees and uses 10% of their balance and your worst customers cost you 100% of their balance, even 1⁄500 customers not paying you back is a problem.
So, keeping that in mind, we can look at the pieces again:
Payment history is obvious. If you don’t pay other people, you probably won’t pay me. Yes, this is “only” 35% of the score, but 850 x (1 − 35%) = 550. No one will give you a credit card with a FICO score of 550.
Amount owed and new credit is a signal that you’re about to go bankrupt. Yes, this doesn’t tell me much about the person and whether they’re the kind of person who usually pays people back, but it does tell me that I shouldn’t lend them money right now.
Length of credit history matters because a short credit history prevents lenders from using any other metric to determine risk. Losing money is the default, so you’re guilty until proven innocent.
I’m not really sure on credit mix, but the fact that it’s only 10% means it will basically never be the reason you do or don’t get a loan (unless you’re already borderline for some other reason) but it might effect rates. I assume part of this is reducing fraud risk: If you’ve successfully convinced someone to give you a mortgage, you’re probably a real person).
One other part of this is that while the factors are weighted in the way you mention, the factors are not calculated in a straightforward way. For example, amount owed is 30% of your score, but that doesn’t mean that reducing the amount you owe from 50% to 0% improves your credit score by 15%. Each factor is calculated as “Looking at your X, how risky does that make you?”
For length of history, that means a history of <1 year is insanely risky[1], while any history above 5 years is basically the same. Or for amounts owed, anything under 30% is low risk, 80% is getting up there, and 99% is insanely risky.
Even for something that sounds straightforward like credit mix, it’s not necessarily the case that only having one credit account means you get a zero on that factor.
So all of that together:
Credit scores measure something less intrinsic about a person. Lenders care if they’re going to lose money, not if you’re a good person.
Losses per default are much higher than average profit per customer, so it’s expected that the filtering process will look “too strict”.
Credit age matters because a short credit age prevents lenders from using any other signals, and the people are high risk until proven otherwise.
You can try to game your credit score, but lenders don’t care about high credit scores (it doesn’t matter if your credit score is above 780), and gaming won’t save you if any individual metric is bad enough (no one will lend to you at all below 580).
A lot of the magic is how each category is calculated, not the high-level weights.
Source: I made it up.