Consumer credit reporting agency TransUnion launched this week an updated version of its proprietary resident scoring algorithm, called ResidentScore 3.0.
Source: Inman News
TransUnion revamps renter screening model
More from DataMore posts in Data »
- The inventory surge is sputtering. See how your market stacks up
- New client leads, murky waters: October’s mixed bag for real estate
- What Zillow’s marketing genius can teach you about social media
- Median monthly housing payments see sharpest drop in almost 1 year
- Existing-home sales gain momentum in September amid falling mortgage rates
More from evictionMore posts in eviction »
- ‘He didn’t even say he was sorry’: Brooklyn investor gets prison time for 12-year deed fraud scheme
- Single mom in Durham struggles to get rid of Airbnb squatters
- Struggling homeowners may evade foreclosure thanks to surging prices
- Housing insecurity ticks down in most states, but some worse off
- Supreme Court shoots down latest eviction moratorium
More from landlordMore posts in landlord »
More from Property PortfolioMore posts in Property Portfolio »
More from RentalsMore posts in Rentals »
- 6 intelligent tech tools every agent-landlord can leverage
- How to help sellers prepare to list a tenant-occupied property
- Selling a property with tenants living in it? Here’s what to know
- Gen Z is changing the rules of renting. Are you ready?
- Single-family rentals continue to grow as a desirable asset class
More from SelectMore posts in Select »
- HUD shifts homeless policy away from providing permanent housing
- Pulte refers a 4th Democrat, Rep. Eric Swalwell, for mortage fraud
- RateMyAgent and Curated Social merge to form Renowned platform
- ‘He didn’t even say he was sorry’: Brooklyn investor gets prison time for 12-year deed fraud scheme
- NAR scores a victory in buyer commission lawsuit
More from tenantMore posts in tenant »
More from TransUnionMore posts in TransUnion »
- Mortgage giants ‘very close’ to accepting new FICO score
- Why Fannie and Freddie still won’t accept more inclusive credit score
- Equifax cuts VantageScore 4.0 mortgage credit scores to $4.50
- Credit bureaus slam plan to cut them out of FICO score pricing
- Mortgage bankers take a stand against tri-merge credit reporting
Be First to Comment