By Shaina Mishkin
A price cut for VantageScore credit reports might not enough to move the needle on Equifax or TransUnion stocks, a team of Oppenheimer analysts wrote Tuesday. The FICO mortgage origination score, provided by Fair Isaac, still dominates the credit scoring industry.
Equifax and TransUnion are expected to report earnings later this month, according to FactSet. Earnings from Fair Isaac are expected in early May. The earnings will be the first since Equifax, TransUnion, and the London Stock Exchange-listed Experian reduced their prices for VantageScore credit reports last month.
The price cut, to 99 cents at Experian and TransUnion, and $1 at Equifax, could improve the companies' market share in the credit-scoring industry dominated by FICO, Barron's reported in March . The news weighed on Fair Isaac shares: Since March 6, the final trading day before the credit bureaus announced the price cuts, Fair Isaac stock is 26% lower, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
"Investor attention across FICO, Equifax, and TransUnion centers on whether or not VantageScore 4.0 can meaningfully challenge FICO's dominance," a team of Oppenheimer analysts led by Rayna Kumar wrote in a Tuesday report.
The price cut could result in more lenders trying it, but "we see little catalyst for immediate share gains," the analysts wrote, noting that VantageScore usage is limited by ongoing mortgage risk-based pricing considerations "and investor appetite for MBS-backed [VantageScore]-loans."
Still, the team increased revenue estimates across its universe of credit services stocks on macroeconomic factors. Despite the continuing slog in the housing market, "credit trends remain constructive: card/auto balances are growing modestly, and mortgage activity is holding up," they wrote.
The analysts raised their quarterly revenue estimate for TransUnion to $1.212 billion from $1.205 billion; their Equifax revenue estimate to $1.627 billion from $1.619 billion; and their Fair Isaac revenue estimate to $615 million from $600 million.
They have a rating of Market Perform on FICO, while both Equifax and TransUnion are rated Outperform, with $248 and $103 price targets, respectively.
"We prefer Equifax and TransUnion for steadier, more visible growth outlooks," the analysts wrote. "We remain neutral on FICO [Fair Isaac], as lingering questions around sustained pricing power and market-share-cap-upside."
Write to Shaina Mishkin at shaina.mishkin@dowjones.com
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 07, 2026 16:37 ET (20:37 GMT)
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