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We experience the same fluctuation. It's caused by the charge card balance(s) fluctuating high after purchases, even though we pay off all balances monthly. The suggestion to get higher credit card limits can backfire- as the increasing amount of available credit to you dings your score - even if you don't use it.
I just looked at Credit Karma. My score dropped 19 points in July after we had about $4k in charges, then it went up 17 points in August after we paid off the balance and only had about $1k in additional purchases. All this with a Fico that ranges in the 815-830 range. |
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We were audited in our second year because the first year of startup costs we made no money at all, just spent money like a drunk congressman. I spent two weeks putting together a paper copy of every single expense, used two reams of paper and spent lots of money with our CPA. The auditor said we were just $20 bucks short, and she did not even open the file as it was more expensive for the IRS to open the old files than the 20 bucks. I have records of every single expense, and every penny of earnings. My CPA checks it out, and runs the reports and files our taxes. Just like a plumber and his work truck, it is a piece of work only equipment. |
Getting a new credit card will hit you. Actually, any new debt will.
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My score averages about 820 and the only time it went down, was when I had a balance of about $3500 on a limit with about $50,000 for one month.
I always pay off the credit card every month. |
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My father was the target of an over zealous IRS auditor who was new and looking to prove himself. He had to have his CPA/tax preparer endure absolutely moronic demands. Eventually, dad said "enough!" and told the auditor that he would answer no more questions and demanded a decision on the investigation. His CPA said he should go to the auditors boss with legal charges against him. The IRS answers to no one but themselves and have the power to ruin people. |
Interesting topic as this is something I was just thinking about especially about the credit card balance and installment loan thing.
Recently bought a set of Turbo calipers from Sunset (shockingly Brembo did a new run) and paid for construction materials shipping from AZ. Used my Apple Barclays card since 5 figures in charges netted me $250 in Apple gift cards for the new iPhone. Here's the rub. FICO has been 821 for some time now. No debt, card balances paid off every month, Barclay paid off, but I was dinged 13 points on FICO because, I guess, buying stuff. I can understand getting dinged for carrying balances but you should almost be encouraged to use credit by increasing your score if you pay it off every month. There's logic to that. I don't understand how you can be penalized for using credit responsibly AND have a lower score for not having an installment loan which is one reason my score is lower than it can be from what I've read. Someone needs to fix this. |
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See, that is why I have so many posts, to hide all my nefarious tax schemes. :rolleyes: They certainly don't care about the size of the target much. Our first year we only had 20 grand of business, we started in June of that year, and our aerial camera system alone cost way more than that. Much less airplane rental, (we did not own an airplane for a few more years) and a ton of computers. Heck, just the software packages we had to buy were crushing. Starting a business is more expensive than you think. And we did not take a draw (get paid) by the business for a long time, just spent money to get it started. We did not not need to pad the expenses, and we had receipts for them all. It is funny that the credit bureaus look so heavily at the credit card debt as a measure of ones credit ranking. The IRS loves credit card purchases. Your credit card company has every single charge, and to exactly who the charge was to from the day the account was opened. All electronic records and easy to check, and make into a spreadsheet full of purchase data. If we use a business to provide us equipment or a service, and we write a check, or pay cash, we are required to get the business FEI or EIN and send them a 1099 at the end of the year if we spent more than $600 per year with them. Except if we used a credit card, then no 1099 is needed. The IRS loves credit card purchases. I sure don't want the torture and work of another audit. I would far prefer severe sunburn, and a week of oral surgery over another audit. |
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yes, i have an above 800+ credit score, and its still bull****. |
I've opened an email conversation with VantageScore Solutions who is a model developer that provides logic to credit bureaus. It's going as expected with them saying they rely on actuarial tables but clearly their business logic is flawed. I am hoping to escalate it as best I can.
Another thing, my credit limits keep getting raised. Just got an email from Citibank. I guess that's good but who knows. |
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