DATA
PROTECTION ACT
Disclosure & Use
Of Your Information
It is important you read the following information,
this explains how your data will be used.
Data Protection - updated
01/12/2000
In simple terms the Data Protection Act requires companies
and individuals who process and retain information about
their customers to tell the customer how the information
will be used and to what purposes it will be put. The
act does not restrict itself only to information kept
on a computer, it is relevant to any ordered filing
system, If you have applied to a FISA company the information
below describes how your data will be processed. If
your information is to be processed differently the
trader will tell you.
Credit Brokers
The information you provide will be retained on our
system and used by us for the purposes of assessing
your application. It will be submitted to a lender (s)
who will use it for the same purpose. In considering
your application both we and the lenders will search
your record at one or more Credit Reference Agency.
They will add to your record details of our search and
your application and this will be seen by other organisations
that make searches.
Information held about you by
the Credit Reference Agencies may already be linked
to records relating to one or more of your partners.
For the purposes of this application you may be treated
as financially linked and your application will be assessed
with reference to any "associated" records.
If you are a joint applicant
or if you have told us of some other financial association
with another person you must be sure that you are entitled
to;
- disclose information about your joint applicant and
anyone referred to by you
- authorise us to search, link or record information
at Credit Reference Agencies about you and anyone referred
by you
An "association" between
joint applicants and between you and anyone you tell
us is your financial partner will be created at credit
reference agencies. This will link your financial records,
each of which will be taken into account in all future
applications by either or both of you. This will continue
until one of you successfully files a disassociation
at the Credit Reference Agencies.
We may use a credit scoring or
other automated decision making system when assessing
your application. It is important you give us accurate
information. We will check your details with fraud prevention
agencies and if you provide false or inaccurate information
and fraud is suspected, this will be recorded.
If we are unable to accept your
application we may pass this onto other members of our
group or selected third parties who may also search
your records at credit reference agencies. A record
of these searches will also be kept and seen by other
organisations that make searches. The other group members
or selected third parties to whom we pass your application
may also use automated systems and carry out the checks
referred to above for the purposes set out below.
Your records will be shared with
other organisations and used by us and them to;
- Help make decisions about credit and other credit
related services for you and members of your household
and
- Trace debtors, recover debt, prevent money laundering
and fraud and for statistical analysis about credit,
insurance and fraud
Fraud Prevention Agency records
will also be shared with other organisations to help
make decisions on motor, household, credit, life insurance
and other insurance proposals and insurance claims,
for you and other members of your household. Please
telephone the Data Protection Commissioner on 01625
545700 if you would like to have details of those Credit
Reference and Fraud Prevention Agencies from whom we
obtain and to whom we pass information about you.
You have a right to this information.
If you have applied to a credit
broker they will use the information you have provided
to:
- Process the application you have made;
- Make, or cause a search to be made, at a credit reference
agency (see the note further on) - this search will
be shown in any other searches which are made in connection
with applications made by yourself and other members
of your household. The disclosure of multiple searches
may adversely affect your credit profile and may make
credit harder for you to obtain.
The broker may also use the information:
- To offer you other products which they make available;
- To pass your details on to a lender or lenders they
feel may be willing to lend you money;
- To pass on your details to another broker, if your
broker is not able to arrange finance for you;
- To write to you in the future with a view to offering
you products they feel may be of interest to you;
- To pass your details to another broker in the future
with a view to them offering you products they feel
may be of interest to you;
- To permit access to your information by the FISA or
other regulatory bodies to ensure that the broker is
processing information correctly and complying with
regulatory requirements.
The broker may keep the information
for several years. You can ask for the information not
to be used to offer you other products.
Any other broker or lender to
whom the information is passed during processing your
application may use it in the same way. Every company
or person who processes or keeps data has a duty to
keep that information up to date and accurate.
Lending Companies
Use of information when application is being processed.
Lenders to whom the application
is passed will make wider use of the information than
the broker. If you have received any lender documents,
they should include a statement telling you what they
will do with the information, or telling you where to
look to find out what use they will make of it. This
statement will usually be near any signature box, or
clearly placed on the front page. If the information
is not by the signature box there may be an 'information
padlock' sign (like the one above) drawing your attention
to where the information is.
Almost all lending companies
will check the information supplied on loan or mortgage
applications with data held by credit reference agencies.
Every time a search is made it is recorded by the agency
and disclosed to other organisations on any later searches.
Lenders will use the information obtained in the credit
reference search to help them assess the application
and they may use the result of any search in a credit
scoring system.
A credit scoring system is a
system by which points are given for various factors
like your age, your job or even for information obtained
from a credit reference agency, such as how you have
repaid previous or existing credit. Lenders use different
methods of scoring depending upon their interpretation
of the importance of different factors and the level
of risk they are willing to accept.
You should be told if a lender
is going to use a credit scoring system.
The lender may check your details
with the credit reference agency or with other agencies
(see pages 24 and 25) to satisfy itself that all the
details on the application are true, and that the application
has really been made by you. If it suspects information
is false or inaccurate it may report it to a fraud prevention
agency. Please ensure the information you give is true
as lending companies will check with fraud prevention
agencies and if you give false or inaccurate information,
and the lender suspects fraud, it will record this.
NOTE - OTHER AGENCIES
SEARCHED
As well as the credit reference agencies, there are
agencies dealing specially with the checking of application
details to identify possible fraud. This is a protection
for honest applicants, although it can sometimes cause
delays. Details of these other agencies, and a brief
outline of their purpose, are given further on in this
text.
Nobody has a right to receive
a loan. Loans are always granted at the discretion of
the lending company.
What if my loan application
is not accepted?
Sometimes a lender may not wish to lend. This may be
for a number of reasons.
The lender may think you cannot
afford the loan. If it is a secured loan, your property
may not be of sufficient value.
A lender does not have to tell
you exactly why you have been refused a loan but you
can ask them for the name and address of any credit
reference agency used and they will supply this information
free of charge.
If you are refused credit because
of a computerised credit scoring system you can ask
the lender for an explanation of how their credit scoring
works (this applies only if the decision has been made
on the basis of a computerised system alone.)
The lender may charge a small
fee for providing this information, You also have the
right to require a personal, non automated, review of
the decision.
Use of information once
a loan has been made
All lending companies keep information about their customers
in their own records. This will include all the initial
information given by you, and extra information about
how your account has been run and any other dealings
between you and the lender.
Lenders will record the conduct
of any loan throughout its duration, including how punctually
the payments are made and other information, with one
or more of the credit reference agencies. This enables
them, and others to make decisions about credit and
credit-related services for you and members of your
household including decisions on motor and household
credit, life and other insurance proposals and insurance
claims.
Information may also be provided
to the other agencies mentioned further on. These will
help lenders and other subscribers to those agencies
to trace debtors, recover debt, prevent fraud and to
check your identity to prevent money laundering. In
particular, any difference between the information given
by you or your broker and any later information discovered
by the lender is likely to be noted.
Lenders may also use your information
for statistical analysis about credit, insurance and
fraud. This may be done by them or by third parties
contracted to do the work by them. If they use a contractor,
they are obliged to ensure that your data is properly
secure. Many lenders will also need to give information
about you and your account to their bankers, other providers,
insurers and re-insurers of funding for their lending
or any other product they have offered to you.
If your broker or lender intends
to use your information for any purposes not included
above, it will explain this in its documents.
Brokers and lenders are under
a legal duty to keep all the information they hold accurate
and up to date.
Credit Reference Agencies
The two main credit reference agencies are:
Equifax Plc
Credit File Advice Service
PO Box 3001
Glasgow, G81 2DT
Experian Limited
Consumer Help Service
PO Box 8000
Nottingham, NG1 5GX
All the FISA lending companies
use one or both of these agencies.
The agencies do not keep 'blacklists'
nor do they give any opinion about whether or not credit
should be granted. They do have a duty to keep information
up to date and accurate.
Credit reference agencies keep
a wide range of information. This includes information
from the electoral roll (sometimes known as the voters
roll) and records of most county court judgements and
bankruptcies. They also retain information relating
to previous and existing credit and a record of searches
made against the file. The lenders share information
through the agencies providing a history of how punctually
payments are being made or have been made. Loan information
is usually held on file for 6 years. Details of the
voters roll may be held for much longer. Information
about credit searches is kept for up to two years.
Other Agencies
CIFAS
Reports from CIFAS relating to fraud and fraud avoidance
are also available to its members (most lenders) - these
contain information indication that fraud, or attempted
fraud, has been notified by a lender. The information
might not directly relate to you, it might relate to
someone who has tried to impersonate you. Data available
to members of CIFAS, may also be used to help make decisions
on motor, household, credit, life and other insurance
proposals for you and members of your household.
CML Repossession Register
The Council of Mortgage Lenders, Repossession Register
is available to its members through the main credit
reference agencies. If you have had a property repossessed
or have given it up voluntarily this will show on the
register.
GAIN
A file may also show a 'gone away' marker indicating
that a member of the ' Gone Away Information Network'
has reported that they cannot trace a customer who is
in arrears with payments. Alternatively, the marker
may indicate a new address which the 'gone away' has
been traced to.
HUNTER
Files in this register contain detailed information
on applications made and loans given. It is aimed at
tracing fraudsters who use different combinations of
information to obtain credit dishonestly. It checks
and counter checks information given on application
forms.
If your broker or lender used
any of the above agencies they will be able to confirm
their contact addresses.
All Agencies, Brokers
and Lenders
You are able to see what information any of the above
hold about you. You can ask them for a copy at anytime.
They must also tell you where the information was obtained.
You will need to write and they may charge a small fee
(£10 maximum). The firm will have to reply within
40 days from receipt of their fee.
If you wish to see the information
contained on a credit reference agency file you can
do so by writing to the relevant agency. The agency
must respond within 7 working days. There is a small
fee of £2 required. If your credit reference file
contains information about other people with whom you
have no financial connection or if it contains information
which is incorrect you can ask for the entry to be corrected,
removed, or have a note put on the file explaining why
you think the information is wrong. The agency will
not remove correct information.
The Data Protection Commissioner
provides a useful leaflet which explains how to request
changes to your credit reference file. The easy to read
leaflet includes examples of letters and details of
various actions you may take to amend a file.
You can obtain copy of the free
leaflet by writing to:
No Credit Leaflet, PO Box 99, Nelson, BB9 8GS.
Information is also available at www.dataprotection.gov.uk
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