FICO (legal name: Fair Isaac Corporation), originally Fair, Isaac and Company, is a
data analytics company based in
Bozeman, Montana, focused on
credit scoring services. It was founded by
Bill Fair and
Earl Isaac in 1956.[2] Its
FICO score, a measure of consumer credit risk,[3] has become a fixture of consumer lending in the United States.
In 2013,
lenders purchased more than 10 billion FICO scores and about 30 million American consumers accessed their scores themselves.[4] The company reported a revenue of $1.29 billion dollars for the fiscal year of 2020.[5]
History
FICO was founded in 1956 as Fair, Isaac and Company by engineer William R. "Bill" Fair and mathematician
Earl Judson Isaac.[6] The two met while working at the
Stanford Research Institute in
Menlo Park, California.[7] Selling its first credit scoring system two years after the company's creation,[8] FICO pitched its system to fifty American
lenders.[9]
FICO went
public in July 1987[10] and is traded on the
New York Stock Exchange.[6] The company debuted its first general-purpose FICO score in 1989.[3] FICO scores are based on credit reports and "base" FICO scores range from 300 to 850,[3] while industry-specific scores range from 250 to 900.[11]
Lenders use the scores to gauge a potential borrower's creditworthiness.[12]
Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac first began using FICO scores to help determine which American consumers qualified for mortgages bought and sold by the companies in 1995.[13]
Name changes
Originally called Fair, Isaac and Company (hence the abbreviation FICO), this name was changed to Fair Isaac Corporation in 2003.[8]
Headquarters moves
Originally based in
San Rafael, California, FICO moved its headquarters to
Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 2004, a few years after Minnesota resident Thomas Grudnowski took over as CEO.[14] In 2013, it moved its headquarters to San Jose, California, a year after CEO William Lansing joined.[15] In 2016 it opened an office in Bozeman, Montana which later became its headquarters.[16]
In March 2020, the US
Department of Justice (DOJ) opened an antitrust investigation into FICO, which was reported to be closed in December 2020.[39][40] In March 2024, US Senator
Josh Hawley sent a letter to the DOJ's
Antitrust Division urging them to open an investigation into FICO for
anti-competitive practices, stating that the company "appears to be using its monopolistic power over the credit scoring market to increase costs for mortgage lenders."[41][42][43]
Between 2020 and 2023, at least 10 antitrust
class-action lawsuits were filed against FICO involving "business to business" purchases of FICO scores, with the plantiffs alleging that that FICO maintains monopoly power through anticompetitive agreements and charges artificially inflated prices for FICO scores.[44][45] In September 2023 US District Judge
Edmond Chang ruled that the plantiffs, which include credit unions, real estate brokerages, auto dealers, and other companies, had presented enough evidence that FICO had violated antitrust law to allow the lawsuits to proceed.[44][45]