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Monday, January 26, 2026

Huge Artificial Increase in Credit Scores: Economic Ripple Effect?

Courtesy of Mish.

More than six million U.S. adults will have personal bankruptcies disappear over the next five years as bankruptcy data and defaults roll off credit scores.

As a result, credit scores have surged.

Fair Isaac Corp, the inventor of credit scoring algorithms, reports Credit Scores Hit Record High.

Credit scores for U.S. consumers reached a record high this spring while the share of Americans deemed to be some of the riskiest borrowers hit a record low—a potential boon for lending and economic activity.

Consumers’ improving fortunes reflect falling unemployment and continued, if lackluster, economic growth. An added benefit: The passage of time since the recession and housing meltdown are helping household balance sheets.

In ever-growing numbers, the worst personal financial setbacks, namely foreclosures and bankruptcies, are falling off Americans’ credit reports. More than six million U.S. adults will have personal bankruptcies disappear over the next five years, according to a recent Barclays report.

“Higher scores lead to more available credit,” said Cris deRitis, senior director in the economics group at Moody’s Analytics. “We’d see more activity in terms of loan approvals and credit-card approvals, more spending and that would have a ripple effect across the economy, increasing aggregate demand for goods and services.”

The average credit score nationwide hit 700 in April, up one point from last fall, according to new data from Fair Isaac Corp. That is the highest since at least 2005. That was the year Fair Isaac, the creator of widely used FICO credit scores that range from 300 to 850, began tracking the data.

Meanwhile, the share of consumers deemed to be riskiest, with a score below 600, hit a new low of roughly 40 million, or 20% of U.S. adults who have FICO scores, according to Fair Isaac. That is down from 20.5% in October and a peak of 25.5% in 2010.

As credit scores rise, banks and other lenders are likely to make credit more widely available to consumers, and at cheaper cost.

“The domino effect for lenders would be more consumers they can market to [and] more consumers who may be credit-eligible who weren’t in last year’s models,” said Nidhi Verma, senior director of research and consulting at credit-reporting firm TransUnion.

Economic Ripple Effect?

Cris deRitis, senior director in the economics group at Moody’s Analytics suggested the credit boost “would have a ripple effect across the economy, increasing aggregate demand for goods and services.”

Nidhi Verma, senior director of research and consulting at credit-reporting firm TransUnion foresees a “domino effect for lenders”.

Both are way off base.

Home prices are through the roof and sales show signs of weakening. Are these previously foreclosed homeowners about to do it again?


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