In your credit report, here are a few areas lenders focus on.
Payment History: This appears in the Account(s) section of your CIBIL credit report.
There are two parts to this information: the Days Past Due (DPD), and the month and year of payment. The DPD indicates how many days the payment is late that month. Obviously, anything other than "000" is considered negative.
Up to 36 months of this payment history (with the most recent month displayed first) is provided in this section.
Current Balances: Also appearing in the Account(s) section of your credit report, the current balances on various loans indicate the depth of your debt. The sum of your current balances helps determine your strength to take on additional debt in relation to your current income.
Naturally, lower the current balance, better the chance of your loan getting approved.
New credit facilities: If a loan provider observes that you have recently been sanctioned a number of new credit facilities, it would mean that your monthly outflow in terms of loan repayments is likely to have increased. Hence, it may be viewed negatively.
Number of new enquiries: If you have applied for a number of loans in the recent past, the chances of your loan getting approved are likely to suffer. Simply because such credit behaviour indicates that you are 'credit hungry' and are in urgent need of money.
By understanding how banks think, you can not only complete a lending application that will showcase your strengths better but you can also pre-qualify for loans by lenders based on their lending criteria.
This will reduce the number of attempts you make to qualify. Fewer attempts at the doors of various lenders for getting loans reduce the short-term damage to your credit prospects.
Ensuring that your 'reputation collateral' is reflected accurately will provide you with access to credit faster and on better terms.
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