The New York Times
By RON LIEBER
Published: November 2, 2009
On television it’s hard to miss the
wildly popular band of slackers singing ruefully from a shabby
apartment or while waiting tables in pirate regalia. The ruined
credit that led to their financial misfortune might have been
sparkling if only they’d tracked their status on
freecreditreport.com.
The Federal Trade Commission is not
amused. It has long believed that the company that owns
freecreditreport.com is deliberately diverting people from a
government-mandated site where consumers can get free
credit reports by law, and using the reports as a lure for a
$14.95 monthly service that alerts subscribers to important changes
in their credit status.
In an unusual salvo, the government
has even produced its own spoof videos featuring a trio remarkably
similar to the gang in the earlier commercials, singing a warning:
“Other sites may turn your head; they say they’re free, don’t be
misled. Once you’re in their tangled web, they’ll sell you something
else instead.”
But while the government has taken
issue with the ads, it has had little to say about credit monitoring
services themselves, a rapidly expanding niche approaching $1
billion in sales for which millions of people have signed up, often
unwittingly. The problem, say critics, is that most people really
don’t need it.
Credit monitoring provides customers
with real-time updates about changes to their credit files that
might affect how lenders see them. These services can be useful for
identity theft victims, for example, who want e-mail alerts
about new accounts that thieves might have opened in their name.
Yet for the vast majority of
consumers whose credit status doesn’t change quickly or drastically,
a monitoring service is a waste of money, these critics say. Keeping
a close eye on your bills and checking your credit report several
times a year is enough.
And that can be done without spending
a penny because the government requires the three major credit
bureaus — Experian, which owns freecreditreport.com,
Equifax and TransUnion — to provide one free report annually to
consumers.
“Does the average person really need
to see their credit reports more than once every four months? Do you
need to look at it daily?” asked Edgar Dworsky, founder of
ConsumerWorld.org
and a former member of Experian’s consumer advisory panel, referring
to credit monitoring services. “That’s paranoia.”
While other companies sell credit
monitoring too, Experian is the biggest player in the lucrative
niche of selling monthly monitoring. Nine million people are
spending a total of $650 million to $700 million annually on the
services, according to Carter Malloy, a Stephens Inc. analyst.
Experian’s market share is more than twice that of its three main
competitors combined. To replenish its rolls, the company relies
heavily on its slacker ads, spending $54 million in 2008 to blanket
the airwaves, according to TNS Media Intelligence.
The monitoring business is profitable
enough that big
credit card companies, including
Capital One and Discover, now partner with Experian to sell
private-label versions of the monitoring service directly to
their customers, taking a cut of the fees and giving the rest to
Experian.
So far, the F.T.C. has focused mostly
on the free credit report come-on. In the last five years, Experian
has paid $1.25 million to settle F.T.C. charges that it misled
consumers who may have been seeking their free credit report at
AnnualCreditReport.com, but ended up paying for a subscription
on the similarly named freecreditreport.com.
Still, Experian continued to spend
heavily on marketing that played to the anxiety many Americans feel
about their credit amid the financial crisis. In an attempt to
counter it, Congress attached a measure to a recently passed credit
card reform law directing the F.T.C. to press sites like
freecreditreport.com to provide more prominent disclosures.
Ty Taylor, president of Experian’s
Consumer Direct division, said the company’s process was
transparent. “You get a free credit report and free score for
test-driving our product,” he said, referring to the credit
monitoring service. “We’ve always felt that it’s been very upfront
and a fair opportunity for the consumer to become more aware and
comfortable with the credit reporting concept.”
Profiting From
Confusion
Twenty years ago, the only way for
most consumers to get a sense of their credit history was by buying
their credit report from credit bureaus or getting it free if a
lender rejected a
loan because of something in the report. Credit reports contain,
among other things, a list of past and current creditors and a
record of the borrower’s payment history.
Meanwhile, a company called Fair
Isaac had invented an algorithm for what is known as the FICO credit
score. Scores range from 300 to 850 and helped lenders create
high-priced loans for people with checkered histories while
reserving the best rates for people with high scores.
The FICO score grew in importance in
the mid-1990s as
Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac encouraged
mortgage lenders to use them. Around the same time, a company
called ConsumerInfo.com began selling credit monitoring. It acquired
the freecreditreport.com domain name and gave out free credit
reports (and, eventually, free credit scores) if consumers
subscribed to the monitoring service. Experian bought the company in
2002.
The next year, to grant consumers
better access to their credit information and allow them to check
for errors, Congress required the three credit bureaus to give one
free credit report to every American each year. Almost immediately,
however, consumers started confusing the government-authorized site,
AnnualCreditReport.com, with Experian’s freecreditreport.com site.
Smelling opportunity, Experian bought ads on
Google and other sites that diverted some people looking for
their legally mandated credit reports.
At one point, the F.T.C. asked
Experian to give it the freecreditreport.com URL to end the
confusion, but the company declined. “Experian was not going to give
it up,” said a spokeswoman, noting that the site had been in
operation for years. The F.T.C. has since set up its own site at
freecreditreport.gov.
Evan Hendricks, who used to serve on
the consumer advisory panel for Experian and is now the editor and
publisher of Privacy Times, said the company knew the Web site’s
name would sow confusion.
“We had these roaring debates, saying
you can’t call it freecreditreport.com because it’s not free,” said
Mr. Hendricks, who has also been an expert witness on behalf of
consumers suing to correct errors in their reports and has testified
against Experian. “We had put them on notice,” he said. “But the
money spoke louder.”
Peg Smith, Experian’s executive vice
president of investor relations, said the company had to balance
such feedback “against the overall needs of the nine million
customers we already have, plus the overall commercial needs.”
Experian allows users to cancel the monitoring service during a
brief free trial period and keep the free credit report.
High Turnover
In many ways, this is the perfect
moment for companies like Experian to convince consumers that they
need to track their credit closely. Many people who fell behind on
bills in the economic maelstrom worry about how their credit report
will look to lenders now. A number of employers reject candidates
with poor credit, too.
Even millions of the most careful
consumers worry that they may not have escaped recent damage to
their credit files: card issuers, in an attempt to limit risk, have
cut credit limits, canceled dormant accounts and made other moves
that can harm credit scores.
Preeti Sharma, a 36-year-old
information technology manager in Princeton, N.J., signed up for
Experian’s monitoring service when she and her husband were seeking
a mortgage and worried about surprises that could increase their
interest rate. “It brings in another angle that you don’t think
about on a daily basis,” she said. Some, including Ms. Sharma, stick
with the service afterward.
“Consumers just have an insatiable
appetite to know what other people know about them,“ said Don
Robert, Experian’s chief executive.
But many customers who sign up for
credit monitoring quickly drop it. Michael Schwartz, 63, a retiree
in Little Silver, N.J., canceled his Experian subscription after he
realized he was paying a charge for a tool he didn’t need. With his
house and cars paid off, and his children no longer in school, “it’s
not really going to be critical to check credit on a monthly basis,”
he added. Experian declined to provide turnover figures, but it said
the average enrollment of a monitoring subscriber was under a year.
That is one reason its growing
library of commercials is critical to replenishing its subscriber
base and revenue, especially among the younger demographic profiled
in the ads.
Philip Neustrom, a 25-year-old
software engineer in San Francisco, canceled the Experian service
after paying six months of $14.95 monthly fees and never using the
monitoring. “I knew they had roped me into this thing after I
started getting these e-mails,” he said. It took him a while to get
around to canceling, he added, because he was busy and “there are
only so many things you can do in a day.”
John Ulzheimer, who spent 13 years
working for two rivals, said companies like Experian counted on
consumers behaving this way. “It says it’s free in the song, but if
you don’t cancel, then you start getting hit with a very nominal
fee,” he said. “Consumers are busy, and studies have shown that they
don’t do a very good job scouring their credit card statements. And
they’ll generally discount a charge that is very low.”
‘A Big
Moneymaker’
All of this has been good for
Experian. At a time when many other financial services firms were
struggling, revenue in its consumer credit business grew 20 percent
in North America during the 12 months ended March 31. Experian said
sales grew about 10 percent in the six months that ended Sept. 30
compared with the same period last year.
But even for its most useful function
— spotting identity theft — credit monitoring is not foolproof,
because evidence doesn’t always appear on credit reports or set off
an alert. Thieves can evade notice when opening new bank accounts in
a victim’s name, running up charges on existing accounts or using a
victim’s identity to obtain medical care.
Consumers who don’t want to pay for
monitoring can get one of their three free annual reports from each
credit bureau every four months. New services like
Credit.com, where Mr.
Ulzheimer is the president of its educational services arm,
CreditKarma and Quizzle can also provide free credit snapshots,
though they generally don’t alert customers to changes in their
reports.
Last month, in the wake of the new
credit card legislation, the F.T.C. proposed that companies like
Experian that market free credit reports show customers an entirely
separate Web page before they enter credit card information and sign
up for credit monitoring. The page would remind them that
AnnualCreditReport.com is the only federally authorized site for
free reports.
Experian, which has a less prominent
disclosure, declined to predict how many subscribers a rule like
that could cost it.
But for people like Alex Salb, a
22-year-old freelance copywriter in San Francisco, greater
disclosure would not change perceptions about the underlying nature
of the business.
He went to freecreditreport.com
during his apartment hunt. But once he understood that the true
purpose of the site was to hook people into a continuing monitoring
subscription, he backed away. “It’s a big moneymaker. I’ve seen it
from the inside,” said Mr. Salb, who used to sell subscriptions for
personal life coaching.
“And it’s intentional. It’s not a
slip-up on their part.”