History Following the
Panic of 1837, the first commercial credit reporting organizations formed. By the 1850s, coded reference books were available to wholesalers, merchants, banks, and insurance companies that subscribed. In 1875, typed reports replaced handwritten
ledgers for storage and retrieval. By the end of the 1880s, surveillance of retail customers existed in major urban centers. By the late 1890s, credit management was professionalizing, with retailers and bureau operators systematizing creditworthiness categories. During the early 20th century, stores interviewed, documented, and tracked customers in 35,000 credit departments. Credit spending exploded during the 1910s and 1920s. By the 1920s, credit managers mined customer information for targeted sales promotions. During the 1930s, automobile, finance, petroleum, and direct sales companies sought standardized credit reports and pricing from the more than 1,000 credit bureaus. An antitrust petition was filed in 1933. More flexible card files and widespread telephone usage made credit rating books obsolete. A
teletype report took one minute to send, versus five minutes on the telephone. In 1965, the first computerized bureau went online, starting the automation and consolidation of consumer credit reporting. Credit reports contained probing details about personality, habits, and health. In the hearings on the 1970
Fair Credit Reporting Act lawmakers were troubled that individuals were helpless to clear up errors. In the 1960s,
credit scoring was widely adopted.
Consumer reporting agency In the United States, there is no legal term for a credit bureau under the federal
Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). A
consumer reporting agency is often abbreviated in the industry as CRA. In the United States, key consumer reporting agency
consumer protections and general rules or governing guidelines for both the consumer reporting agencies and data furnishers are the federal
Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACTA),
Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA), and Regulation B. Two government bodies share responsibility for the
oversight of consumer reporting agencies and those that furnish data to them. The
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has oversight for the consumer reporting agencies. The
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) charters, regulates, and supervises all national banks with regard to the data they furnish consumer reporting agencies. Most U.S. consumer credit information is collected and kept by the four national traditional consumer reporting agencies:
Experian (formerly
TRW Information Systems & Services and the CCN Group),
Equifax,
TransUnion, and
Innovis (which was purchased from
First Data Corporation in 1999 by
CBC Companies). These organizations are for-profit businesses and possess no government affiliation. Though they are competitors, they are members of a trade organization called the Consumer Data Industry Association (CDIA) to establish reporting standards and lobby on behalf of their industry issues in Washington. Current reporting standards accepted by the four U.S. CRAs are Metro and Metro2. The Metro2 standard is defined in the annual CDIA publication, the
Credit Reporting Resource Guide. Consumers are entitled to a free annual credit report from each of the three nationwide consumer reporting agencies,
Equifax,
Experian and
TransUnion.
AnnualCreditReport.com is maintained by all three companies. There are dozens of other similar information collection and reporting firms that analyze and sell information about consumers for other purposes, including those who aggregate multiple credit data sources and provide lenders with customized analytical tools. Furthermore, there are also non-traditional credit reporting agencies.
PRBC (Payment Reporting Builds Credit, Inc.) is a national
alternative credit bureau. Incorporated in March 2002, PRBC enables consumers to self-enroll and build a positive credit file by reporting their on-time payments (such as rent, utilities, cable, and phone) that are not automatically reported to the three traditional credit bureaus. In the U.S., there are six business or commercial bureau repositories: •
Cortera •
Dun & Bradstreet • Experian Business • Equifax Commercial •
PayNet • Southeastern Association of Credit Management (SACM) While not a credit reporting agency, Small Business Financial Exchange, Inc. (SBFE) is a trade association for small business lenders from all types of industries. SBFE gathers and protects small business payment data for its members to help build a true and accurate picture of small business then facilitates the exchange of that data to specific business credit reporting agencies that have a Certified Vendor licensing agreement with SBFE. SBFE only allows business credit reporting agencies to license its members' data for risk management purposes, marketing use of the data is not allowed by SBFE.
Tort liability for business defamation In the case of
Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. v. Greenmoss Builders, Inc., 472 U.S. 749 (1985) the U.S. Supreme Court held that a consumer reporting agency may be liable if it was careless in reporting an impending or past
bankruptcy filing of a business that is not a
public figure. == Controversy ==