If you want a good understanding of Chase shutdown, you should read about the BustOut Score. To put it simply, a Bustout means when a consumer gets a bunch of cards, then bust out, meaning they would swipe out to the max and then disappears. Banks fear this, so if you have a ton of credit cards, they worry that you would do so. This makes sense, people with LOL/24 going back to chase will trigger this... getting a bunch of credit cards quickly, is also another trigger. Experian released a report on what it thinks of it, where 2-3 cards per 6 month(30% increase), 3-4 cards per 6 month(50% increase) is considered risking, hence */6mos. */3mos and /*12 mos just shows how fast the apps are going and its great into on where the person is at.
Edit: should also note, the */6 */3 */12 should include business cards. If you have multiple single bank business cards, there is a guess that that should be added to total # on credit lines due to inhouse info. ie, if you have a chase ink+, chase Ink cash, adding those into the any above.
A few things i found quite interesting...
What Hurts:
- Having a very high score might actually hurt you.
- Low AoA will hurt you. (remember, your applying for cards yearly so this goes down quite significantly)
- 50% over utilization is a big flag
- MS of course
- High income vs age.
- multiple credit increase requests
- multiple payments from different accounts
- high risk states(Nevada, Florida, Arizona are top 3)
- AU... something about identify theft.
What Helps:
- Having some kind of loan and mortgage actually helps you.
- Having a Credit Union Trade account(unsure what this is exactly)
- Might be a good idea to cancel a card instead of PC and sockdrawing it.
- Lowering your credit limit on other cards might help.
edit: typing mistakes.
This is what ive gathered from it. im sure
@SouthFayetteFan may know more. i see him active on the shutdown thread... :]