The
Wall Street Journal
Regulators
Have Concerns About Lenders' Use of Facebook, Other Sites
By STEPHANIE
ARMOUR
Jan. 8, 2014 6:51 p.m.
ET
WASHINGTON—More
lending companies are mining Facebook, FB -0.88% TwitterTWTR -1.11% and other social-media data to help
determine a borrower's creditworthiness or identity, a trend that is raising
concerns among consumer groups and regulators.
More lending companies
are mining Facebook, Twitter and other social-media data to help determine a
borrower's creditworthiness or identity, a trend that is raising concerns among
consumer groups and regulators. Stephanie Armour reports. Photo: Getty.
Lending companies—some
of which are backed with venture funding from Google Ventures, GOOG -1.01% the venture-capital arm of Google Inc.,
and Accel Partners, an early Facebook Inc. investor—are looking at potential
problems such as whether applicants put the same job information on their loan
application as they posted on LinkedIn, or if they shared on Facebook that they
had been let go by an employer. A small business that draws negative reviews on eBay EBAY -0.63% also could undermine its chances of
getting more credit, lending companies say.
CREDIT CLICKS: Some
lenders are scrutinizing prospective borrowers' behavior in a range of online
forums as a gauge of creditworthiness. Jason Schneider
The practice is being
used largely by startups that grant smaller loans, but the concept seems likely
to spread. Fair
Isaac Corp. FICO -0.77% , which provides
the credit scoring used in more than 90% of lenders decisions, says it is
weighing possibilities for incorporating social media.
"There could come
a time where certain social media could be predictive and we're looking at
that, but it isn't yet," said Anthony Sprauve, senior consumer-credit
specialist at FICO.
Companies pioneering
the practice generally lend to borrowers with troubled credit histories or no
bank accounts. They say the use of alternative scoring metrics helps make
credit available to people who might otherwise be denied and that they are
careful not to violate federal credit laws.
Consumer advocates say
the trend increases the chance borrowers, including small businesses, will be
unfairly denied credit or saddled with higher interest rates based purely on
their social-media presence. They say federal laws haven't kept up with the
trend, leaving borrowers exposed.
San Francisco startup
Flurish Inc., better known as LendUp, uses a mix of private data including
credit bureaus and information gleaned from social media to help gauge
borrowers' risk and verify identities. Applicants voluntarily share Facebook,
Twitter and other sites, which LendUp executives say provides a fuller picture
of potential borrowers. The more data applicants provide, the better their
chances of approval can be, although they aren't required to give permission to
access social media, according to LendUp.
"It's one of the
tools we use to do underwriting," said Sasha Orloff, co-founder and chief
executive at LendUp, which is backed by companies including Google Ventures and
expects to make 300,000 loans in 2014. "Do you have 4,000 friends but none
are that close, or do you have 30 people but they're very close? There are ways
to measure how engaged and how strong your community ties are," he said.
Regulators are
watching the trend and trying to determine whether to police financial
institutions' use of online data in credit scoring, officials say. The Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau says it is aware that some businesses are exploring
how to use social media to inform credit decisions. And the Federal Trade
Commission will host a series of seminars this spring on emerging
consumer-privacy issues, including the use of alternative scoring.
At Movencorp Inc., a mobile-only
bank that does business as Moven, customers can link up social-media accounts
such as Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter to learn about their own financial
behavior and make payments to friends. The company plans to offer loans and
social-media activity will be one factor used in lending decisions, said Alex
Sion, president of New York-based Moven, which became available to consumers in
May 2013.
"The data we have
on customers via social networks says more about them than their FICO,"
Mr. Sion said, referring to the three-digit credit score widely used to
estimate risk. "You can make credit decisions based not on a faceless
score, but on who you know."
Companies are tapping
into other sources of data, including PayPal and eBay accounts, to determine
not just whether a borrower should get a loan but whether their credit line
should be increased.
Small businesses
seeking loans grant Atlanta-based Kabbage Inc. access to Amazon, eBay, Xero and
other e-commerce or accounting sites to assess creditworthiness. Customers must
link at least one such account for underwriting decisions. The company, which
has extended more than $150 million in loans since launching in May 2011, also
may take Facebook, Twitter and other social accounts into consideration when determining
whether to increase a loan, company officials said. Kabbage looks at what
customers are saying about the borrower's business and the quality of its
customer service.
"We look at
whether you get a lot of 'likes,' are you responding to customers," said
Victoria Treyger, Kabbage's chief marketing officer.
Kreditech, which is
based in Germany and provides microloans in Poland, Russia, Spain, Mexico, and
the Czech Republic, uses data such as social media, cookies, browser behavior
and smartphone use to determine creditworthiness. The company has processed
250,000 applications since its launch in 2012.
"Is someone using
an expensive mobile phone like an iPhone or logging in from a Web
cafe? Is their network on Facebook just drinking buddies from a bar?" said
spokesman Laurent Schuller. "All of that can be important
information."
Under the Fair Credit
Reporting Act, consumer-reporting companies such as Experian and Equifax must
verify that a borrower's credit history is accurate if a consumer disputes the
information. However, companies that use social media in their lending
decisions don't have to verify that information since they don't provide it to
third parties like a reporting agency does, said Maneesha Mithal, the associate
director of the FTC's division of privacy and identity protection.
"There are
privacy concerns. People don't understand the implications or why they may be
considered undesirable" for credit, said Jeffrey Chester, executive
director of the Center for Digital Democracy in Washington, who is calling for
regulation.
Some consumers say
they don't mind if companies check their social-media presence because using
sources beyond traditional FICO scores may allow them to get credit when other
lenders turn them down.
Telemarketer Patricia
Weems doesn't have sterling credit, but in the spring she went online and got a
$200 loan through LendUp. "I have a decent Internet presence. And a lot of
employers already check out people online, so I know you have to be
careful," said Ms. Weems, of Chatsworth, Calif.
Write
to Stephanie Armour at stephanie.armour@wsj.com
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