Sentences with phrase «serious errors on their report»

It stands to reason this particular segment of the population wouldn't have serious errors on their report dragging down their scores.

Not exact matches

In summary the projections of the IPCC — Met office models and all the impact studies (especially the Stern report) which derive from them are based on specifically structurally flawed and inherently useless models.They deserve no place in any serious discussion of future climate trends and represent an enormous waste of time and money.As a basis for public policy their forecasts are grossly in error and therefore worse than useless.For further discussion and an estimate of the coming cooling see http://climatesense-norpag.blogspot.com
Barring the correction of multiple, serious errors on your credit report, it's unlikely that you'll be able to raise your FICO score from 550 to 700 instantly.
Over 70 % of all credit reports have erroneous information on them, and those errors can cost you serious amounts of points.
One study found that 79 percent of all credit reports had mistakes; one in four contained errors serious enough to have a significant negative impact on scores.
According to the Federal Trade Commission, more than 20 percent of Americans had errors on their credit report as of 2013, and more than 5 percent of those errors were serious enough to negatively impact a credit or interest - rate decision.
Currently one of every five American consumers has an error on his or her credit report and 5 percent of us endure errors so serious that we likely are being overcharged for credit card debts, auto loans, insurance policies and other financial obligations, according to a comprehensive study issued Monday by federal regulators.
In February 2013, the Federal Trade Commission released the results of a comprehensive study of credit reporting errors, finding that 21 percent of American consumers had an error on a credit report from at least one of the three major credit reporting companies.15 Thirteen percent of consumers had errors serious enough to change their credit score.
I love much of Dickey's work, but I have to report that there's a serious error in the paper on LOD and global warming.
Taking a neutral stance at this point on rehashed work from «NIPCC» (Fred Singer and friends), well known for serial, serious errors in overall interpretation, analysis and communication of the science and transparent but largely unexamined ideological bias at play in their playground «reports» — never mind suggesting that this kind of effort «competes» with the work of the world's climate scientists and the 2,500 multidisciplinary specialists contributing to IPCC reports combined with the tens of thousands of additional scientists and many others who raise real questions that result from reading, reviewing, evaluating and evolving the information in both IPCC summaries and domestic science and discussion of the science, knowledgeably and in good faith and with open identification of the nature of the social and political issues — is just not credible.
A 2012 Federal Trade Commission reported found that one in four credit reports contains a serious error, most commonly including inaccurate credit limits, inaccurate loan or account balances, accounts that don't belong to you, and reported late payments that were actually on time.
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