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CBS’ 60 Minutes labasted the credit reporting industry on Sunday evening citing an FTC investigation that revealed that upwards of 20% of Americans had “errors” in their credit reports and that 10% had errors that were so serious as to have a dramatic effect on their credit scores.  Credit reports are engrained into the financial culture of our lives at a level where even the smallest errors could cause increases in the cost of many products ranging from life insurance to auto and home loans.  Because I am in the real estate lending industry I’ve seen thousands of credit reports as a necessary part of the loan process I am able to provide a testimonial that a lower credit score can have a dramatic impact on the cost of borrowing home mortgage money.  In fact, if you consider a hypothetical 30 year fixed rate loan for $300,000 and compare the interest rate that would be offered to a qualified borrower with a credit score in excess of 740 as compared to one provided to a borrower with a 639 credit score you will find that the borrower with the lower score would pay $137.66 more per month or an extra $50,000 over the 30 year life of the loan. Layering into that equation the reality that the low credit score borrower’s homeowner and auto insurance policies would command higher premiums its easy to understand why it’s vitally important to know, manage and protect that credit score.  For Boomers entering the phase of their financial lives where every dollar commands an increasing amount of respect, having control over the information in their credit reports takes on even greater importance.

There is a fundamental difference between a Credit Report and a Credit Score.  While consumers are allowed to obtain a free copy of their credit reports annually from all 3 of the primary repositories of credit information those complimentary reports do not include the “predictive” score that lenders and underwriters use in their pricing calculations.  When a consumer logs on to the website, www.annualcreditreport.com , the option is available to obtain at no cost the raw data that exists in the files that each of the credit bureaus maintains for every potential borrower.   However, if the consumer is motivated to find out just exactly what their “score” might be they are directed to the sites of the individual repositories where there are any number of options available for obtaining that score, all of which require the payment of an upfront fee and often times the hard sell to subscribe to a recommended service.  The only other option for knowing a credit score is to request that information from a lender or insurance company that may have recently obtained a credit report on a customer’s behalf.  The exact formula for determining an individual’s score is a closely guarded secret in the industry and one that is changeable based on the performance of the entire database but certain general rules separating good from bad credit scores are typically well-known such as making sure all payments are made on time, the level of outstanding balances on revolving credit accounts is low relative to the available credit amount and there is an absence of foreclosure or bankruptcy activity.

It is important to understand that the repositories of this data, TransUnion (TU), Experian (XPN) and EquiFax (EFX) are best thought of like one would a library. If a reader checks a book out of the library and they are unhappy with the content of that book they are bound to be disappointed if their expectation is that the librarian will have an impact on influencing the author of said book to change the content.   At best, the librarian could contact the author and lodge the complaint on behalf of the reader but changes in the content must come from the author directly in future editions.  In much the same way, consumers that discover erroneous information in their credit reports are best served by making their complaint directly to the provider of that wrong information and then obtaining written evidence that the report is, in fact, erroneous.  While the methodology exists for consumers to lodge their complaints with the credit bureaus reporting said errors, the credit reporting agencies responsibility begins and ends with their attempt to “investigate” said error on behalf of the consumer.  Most often, that involves an electronic message to the creditor indicating that the consumer doesn’t agree with the way the information is reported in their file, followed by the electronic response from the reporter as to their opinion about the validity of that information.  It is NOT the role of the credit bureau to ajudicate a dispute between a creditor and borrower.  On the other hand, if a consumer is armed with written evidence provided by the creditor that the report is in error, the credit bureau will most times immediately make the change to the consumer’s credit profile after validating the written proof.  While other types of errors occur, including those involving mistaken identity, far and away the disagreement about how an account is reported in an individual’s credit file causes most of the challenges for consumers.  There is a good amount of rhetoric floating around as a result of the FTC’s investigation into credit reporting practices that changes in those methods will occur.  However, it’s likely that years will transpire before meaningful modifications in the way those errors are investigated and reported will take place.  The intevening period could be quite expensive for those Boomers needing to borrow money or obtain insurance coverage.

As Boomers approach the promised land of their golden years its important that they know exactly what lenders, insurance underwriters and in many cases, prospective employers will see when they obtain a copy of their credit report.


Health Insurance – that’s a funny name when you think about it.  You virtually never use it when you are healthy; only when you are sick.  I’m thinking about it because I am home – sick with the flu.  I’m waiting for my primary care physician to call me back to let me know when I can visit her office.

We are owner’s of a small Real Estate Broker and Mortgage Company in Palm Springs.  Our Employee Benefits are handled by a provider that bills us for the monthly premiums for all of our insurances along with our payroll.  We are pretty vigilant about making sure we get the appropriate coverage at a good price; especially given my history of 2 major cancer bouts in the last 15 years.  Either of those would have bankrupted us without our insurance coverage.  It’s not a Cadillac plan; probably better referred to as a VW.  The coverage is within a HMO and I can honestly say I believe I have been provided every reasonable service to which I have been entitled since we have been part of this scheme.  Theoretically, we get reduced premiums because we get lumped together with a bunch of other small businesses and pre-existing conditions don’t affect the cost – only age.

Now here’s the rub.  My wife, she works with us in our business, just had what the provider refers to as a Milestone Birthday.   Apparently because she was one day older on January 27 than she was on January 26 the risk to the insurance company became so great that they needed to raise her premium by more than 30%!!  Since we don’t have an employer (other than ourselves) to pay their “portion” we get to see what it really costs – $766 each and every month for just her Illness Insurance – matching what we pay for mine.  The really scary part is I have a Milestone Birthday coming up in June and I have already been warned that my premium will jump from the aforementioned $766 to God knows what.  I suppose that since being 55 and 1 day old is 30% riskier than 54 and 364 days then turning 60 plus that one extra day probably means I will be at least 50% riskier to the insurance company than I am today.  Let’s hope not because our current premiums are more than our mortgage payment, taxes,homeowner’s dues and insurance on our home.  I could drive 3 or 4 different fancy cars for what I pay in illness insurance premiums.

In 5 short years I’ll be faced with the alphabetical decision-making that accompanies the conversion of my illness insurance to Medicare.  The more I read about Parts A through F the more confused I become.  I am not fearful that Medicare will disappear by the time I turn 65 – after all, my congressperson has promised me it won’t.  But, I am more than a little concerned that the my portion of the cost of the combination of the Affordable Health Care Act and whatever supplemental plans I will need to have will escalate to a level that provides no relief in this spiraling illness insurance cost structure.

I think thinking about this is making me sick.  When is that doctor’s office going to call me back?


Under the auspices of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), which sprung from the Dodd-Frank financial reforms, the US Treasury is readying its rules for what is referred to as a Qualified Residential Mortgage (QRM). While the rules are not yet final the advance information indicates there are at least a few things that are of particular interest to anyone hoping to purchase a home with a new loan or refinance an existing one. Boomers in particular will likely be impacted by a number of the proposed restrictions having to do with debt ratios, acceptable methods of documenting income and downpayment/equity. The changes have the potential to put the recovering housing market right back on its ear if they are all enacted as proposed as a large number of potential home buyers will no longer be able to qualify at the level they can today. While the new rules will not fully go into effect until January, 2014 you can bet that lenders will begin to layer the changes into their requirements as soon as they are convinced of the final regulations.

Because almost every loan (save for those made by “private” lenders) will need to conform to the new guidelines, the argument can be made that once again, the rules will serve to protect lenders from themselves while negatively impacting access to home mortgages. Consider that the proposal suggests that no loan can be considered where the overall debt ratio of the borrower exceeds 43% of their calculated gross monthly income – regardless of equity or liquid assets. While the argument can be made that 43% might be an appropriate number for most families, consider that conventional loans are currently approvable with debt ratios as high as 50% and we have seen recent FHA approvals as high as 57% if the loans are approved through a rules based, automated underwriting system. The impact in high-cost housing areas will be staggering when you consider that a 14% reduction in the maximum debt ratio effectively eliminates over 25% of the pool of eligible borrowers that heretofore would have qualified for the financing to purchase a particular home.

Consider, also, that many retired folks live off a combination of social security, income from retirement accounts and savings. To the extent that a borrower uses savings that are in non-retirement accounts to supplement social security, the withdrawal of those funds is not considered income and thus, cannot be considered in calculating the 43% maximum debt ratio under the CFPB rules as currently enacted. From the perspective of a borrower that is interested in mitigating tax liability and is able to draw upon non-taxable savings in deference to taxable withdrawals from IRA or 401K accounts the consequences can be staggering. We have already seen this manifest itself with borrowers that were fully able to purchase their retirement home and qualify for their loan of choice before the previous changes that came to the market in 2010 regarding the prescribed method for income documentation. Now, many of those existing homeowners can no longer qualify to refinance their current mortgages because the use of non-taxable savings for daily living expenses is no longer considered when calculating debt ratios and incomes (regardless of the balances in those accounts or the fact that they have been making the payments previously as agreed) – only funds withdrawn from taxable accounts can be counted. Layering into that reality those newly recommended debt ratios are set to be crunched down to a level that requires more and more income to qualify which can only mean higher and higher tax bills for the borrowers as they rearrange their finances to make themselves more credit-worthy in the eyes of the CFPB. The only alternative is to live with their current financing, which many times is at nearly twice the current interest rates or retire the debt with liquid assets, if available, which very well may trigger a whole new set of tax consequences.

I’ll do my best to try to keep you informed as the rules wind their way through the various governmental agencies. If you own a home and it’s not “free and clear” this is important stuff to understand.


Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata is playing on the “Light Classical” channel on Time Warner Cable’s Music Choice.  The song is so beautiful it’s distracting me from the task at hand which is to get this damn blog under way.  I secured the URL a couple of years ago and put it in the inventory – it’s taken  me that long to figure out what I want to write about.

The truth is, I’ve known what I want to write about but I’ve let too many opinions cloud my thinking:  “Limit the blog to 1 or 2 subjects“: “Make sure you have something to market – and sell, sell, sell!”; “Find out what folks are interested in and then tailor your articles to those interests”. Blah, Blah, Blah.

Bottom Line:  Today’s an anniversary of sorts.  Two years ago this very morning I had my neck and tongue fileted by Dr. Paul Kim at Loma Linda University Hospital.  1/3 of my tongue and 30+ lymph nodes from my neck and shoulder went missing; all in the name of curing tongue cancer.  Dr. Kim is obviously so good at what he does that I sit here today able to eat (too well) and speak as if nothing ever happened in spite of the pre-warnings from well-meaning friends, acquaintances and health care professionals about what might very well have been.  Save for an 8 inch scar that traverses my neck like a badly drawn trail map that I like to call my “tattoo”, tasting or chewing anything on the right side of my mouth, whiCSL12411 (2)stling or sticking out my tongue, everything is back to normal; whatever that is.

Turning 60 this year gives me an absolute right to the name of this blog.  And, since I apparently haven’t totally thought this thing through in the past couple of years while continually mulling it over in my mind it may turn out that other Boomers will have an opportunity to write about their experiences here – I haven’t decided, yet.  If you have an idea that you’d like to share let me know and I’ll give it some appropriate consideration.  That’s the beauty of it:  For a few bucks a year this is all mine and I can do whatever I want.

So, what will I write about?

I know way too much about cancer; something I never wanted to study, believe me.   In 1998 at the tender age of 45 I was diagnosed with lymphoma after 6 months of not understanding why I felt like dog poop and had continually tried in vain to cough up my lungs.  My son, Geoffrey, died in 2010 at the age of 26 from the very same disease – absolutely devastating.  No other genetic link in our family that we can find.  Two of my best friends succumbed to the big “c” last year.  Other non-blood relatives and friends are currently fighting the fight.  I’m a Team Captain and Event co-chair for the American Cancer Society’s Relay For Life because it was the only way I could figure out how to fight back.  Layer all of that together and you’ll come to understand why I will write about cancer.  It has or will affect all of us in some profound way. There is no escape.  It’s important stuff to know about and try to understand.  It was a blog about the death of my son that unleashed the writing beast in me.

A paying writing “gig” tells me at least somebody likes reading the things I write.  I’ll bring some of that to these pages.  TripBucket is a website that is dedicated to helping its registered users complete their bucket lists.  They hired me to provide content because I can occasionally write a complete sentence, I suppose.  TripBucket also motivated me to start designing my own bucket list which is now bigger than I can possibly complete even if I live to be 100.  Not likely, given my history.  You’ll gain some exposure to TripBucket here as well.  The next item awaiting check-off on my list is a 40 kilometer (sounds more impressive than 25 miles, doesn’t it?) bike ride that I hope to complete in the next few weeks within the Tour de Palm Springs.  I’ll tell you how that goes.

I am a licensed Real Estate Broker and Mortgage Broker in the State of California.  I’ve held a broker’s license since 1986; a salesperson’s license before that.  I own a real estate business (with a partner) and I suspect you’ll read a fair bit about the state of real estate and business in general if you decide to follow this blog.

We have a really big family:  GIMG_0800randchild #6 is on the way before June 1.  6 children between my wife and me that have made everything from Public Safety (courtesy of the LAPD) to the art world their vocation.  6 brothers and sisters, lots of in-laws, myriad nieces and nephews, 2 ex-wives, my mom in the Texas Hill Country and my incredibly supportive wife of nearly 18 years – all of whom provide fodder for life’s lessons.

I like to cook.  I once took a class at the Santa Fe School of Cooking, ate the product and lived to tell.  I figure that gives me all the permission I need to share recipes and methodology for some pretty great meals.  I typically forsake the kitchen for the barbecue – I hate calling it the “grill” because it can do so much more.  And, I don’t particularly like to measure but I’ll do my best in communicating the formulas. I think men, in general, struggle for a creative outlet and cooking can so easily fulfill that need.

So here’s the deal.  I’ll write about what I want.  You let me know when you think I’m full of crap or you agree with what I’ve said and if there is something you want me to investigate and report back I will do my best, as long as the subject is interesting to me, too.

Did you know that Beethoven wrote the Moonlight Sonata for his student, an Austrian Countess with whom he was desperately infatuated?  Two years passed before he was able to come to grips with his inability to marry the love of his life due to his station in society and move on.  Hardly anyone knows her name.

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