CLEARWATER, FL, February 26, 2013 (Press-News.org) Clarity Services, Inc., the leading real-time credit bureau providing fraud detection and credit risk management solutions for Middle America announces its newest product, Clear Recent History.
Clear Recent History is a trade line report designed for brick and mortar payday lenders. The report provides key information about a consumer's loan activity over the past 90 days, including inquiries, detailed trade line information, outstanding balances, past due amounts, collections and charge off activity, and more.
"Clear Recent History will do for storefront payday lenders what other Clarity products have been doing for the online payday space for years," said Lyndi Mulder, director of product management at Clarity Services. "It will give lenders better visibility into applicant behavior to equip them with the predictive data they need to make optimal credit decisions."
In addition to detailed trade line information, Clear Recent History provides lenders with increased visibility into loan activity and performance, reduces the risk of lending to a consumer with outstanding loans, and helps rule out consumers that exceed state thresholds for the maximum number of open loans without incurring the fees associated with checking state databases.
Clear Recent History can be used with other Clarity products when more information is needed to make an underwriting decision.
Clear Recent History is available now. For more information, contact sales@clarityservices.com, or join a webinar at www.clarityservices.com/webinars.
With over 30 million unique consumer identities, Clarity Services is an industry leader in providing powerful reporting products on under banked, non-prime, thin file consumers with real-time consumer data to facilitate fraud detection, risk management, and more. For more information, visit www.clarityservices.com.
Clarity Services, Inc. Gives Lenders Better Visibility on Their Applicants with Clear Recent History
Clarity Services' newest product.
2013-02-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
ARA Product Services and Alteso Group Enter into an Agreement to Provide Solution to Product Inventory Needs
2013-02-26
Today, the Automotive Recyclers Association (ARA) officially announced that its subsidiary, ARA Product Services LLC has reached an agreement with Alteso Group of Companies (Langhorne, PA) to provide ARA members and ARA affiliated state organization members a robust online auction platform for the efficient procurement of motor vehicles. ARA has seized this opportunity to ultimately increase members' revenue stream, lower operation costs and reduce the number of vehicles being exported. The agreement between the two organizations also provides members access to other critical ...
UCLA researchers further refine 'NanoVelcro' device to grab single cancer cells from blood
2013-02-25
Researchers at UCLA report that they have refined a method they previously developed for capturing and analyzing cancer cells that break away from patients' tumors and circulate in the blood. With the improvements to their device, which uses a Velcro-like nanoscale technology, they can now detect and isolate single cancer cells from patient blood samples for analysis.
Circulating tumor cells, or CTCs, play a crucial role in cancer metastasis, spreading from tumors to other parts of the body, where they form new tumors. When these cells are isolated from the blood early ...
Keck Medical Center of USC offers new treatment for chronic reflux disease
2013-02-25
LOS ANGELES — Clinical trial results published in the New England Journal of Medicine this week offer additional evidence that a new device may help relieve chronic heartburn symptoms that standard treatment cannot. The Keck Medical Center of USC was one of 14 U.S. and European medical centers to test the device prior to its March 2012 approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
John Lipham, M.D., associate professor of surgery at the Keck School of Medicine of USC, led clinical investigation of the device at USC as part of his ongoing work to find alternative ...
Higher income earners more likely to get doctors' appointments than lower income people
2013-02-25
People of high socioeconomic status are more likely to be able to access primary care than those of low socioeconomic status, even within a universal health care system in which physicians are reimbursed equally for each patient, found an article published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
"A person calling a physician's office and asking to be seen as a new primary care patient was more than 50% more likely to be given an appointment if he or she presented as being of high socioeconomic status," says senior author Dr. Stephen Hwang from the Centre for Research ...
Intense acupuncture can improve muscle recovery in patients with Bell palsy
2013-02-25
Patients with Bell palsy who received acupuncture that achieves de qi, a type of intense stimulation, had improved facial muscle recovery, reduced disability and better quality of life, according to a randomized controlled trial published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
Bell palsy is sudden onset of facial paralysis that is usually temporary, resolving within weeks or months, although it can sometimes be permanent.
Acupuncture is used to treat a variety of conditions and is gaining acceptance worldwide. De qi is a combination of sensations stimulated ...
Catfight? Workplace conflicts between women get bad rap
2013-02-25
A new study from the University of British Columbia's Sauder School of Business suggests troubling perceptions exist when it comes to women involved in disputes at work.
"Our research shows that when it comes to workplace conflict, women get a bad rap," says PhD candidate Leah Sheppard, who conducted the study with Prof. Karl Aquino. "We show how the negative stereotyping around so-called 'catfights' carry over into work situations."
The researchers asked experiment participants to assess one of three workplace conflict scenarios, all identical except for the names ...
4 new species of water-gliding rove beetles discovered in Ningxia, China
2013-02-25
Four new species from the Steninae subfamily of the large family of rove beetles (Staphylinidae) have been discovered in the Ningxia Autonomous Region, China, as part of an exploration of the insect fauna of the Liupan Shan Natural Reserve, where a large number of specimens has been collected. The expedition also yielded 11 new records for the Ningxia province of previously described Steninae species. The study was published in the open access, peer reviewed journal Zookeys.
The Ningxia Autonomous Region is mainly known as a dry, desert-like land. The region of the Liupan ...
Research to probe deep within a solar cell
2013-02-25
Engineers and scientists from the University of Sheffield have pioneered a new technique to analyse PCBM, a material used in polymer photovoltaic cells, obtaining details of the structure of the material which will be vital to improving the cell's efficiency. The findings are published in Applied Physics Letters.
Working with the ISIS pulsed neutron and muon source at the Science and Technology Facilities Council Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, the researchers are the first to use a cutting-edge neutron scattering technique called SERGIS to analyse PCBM. The technique ...
A new look at high-temperature superconductors
2013-02-25
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- While the phenomenon of superconductivity — in which some materials lose all resistance to electric currents at extremely low temperatures — has been known for more than a century, the temperature at which it occurs has remained too low for any practical applications. The discovery of "high-temperature" superconductors in the 1980s — materials that could lose resistance at temperatures of up to negative 140 degrees Celsius — led to speculation that a surge of new discoveries might quickly lead to room-temperature superconductors. Despite intense research, ...
Childhood blood lead levels rise and fall with exposure to airborne dust in urban areas
2013-02-25
A new nine-year study of more than 367,000 children in Detroit supports the idea that a mysterious seasonal fluctuation in blood lead levels — observed in urban areas throughout the United States and elsewhere in the northern hemisphere — results from resuspended dust contaminated with lead.
The scientists, who report in the journal Environmental Science & Technology (ES&T), say the results have implications for government efforts to control childhood exposure to lead, which can have serious health consequences. ES&T is among the more than 40 peer-reviewed scientific ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Studying the 12C+12C fusion reaction at astrophysical energies using HOPG target
Bacteria hitch a ride on yeast puddles to zoom around
New non-invasive method discovered to enhance brain waste clearance
A summer like no other: inside 2023’s record-smashing North Atlantic marine heatwave
Many possible futures: How dopamine in the brain might inform AI that adapts quickly to change
Research shows rivers release ancient carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, uncovering a greater role for plants and soil in the carbon cycle
Hypertension, diabetes, and high cholesterol awareness among US adults
Longitudinal outcomes of the COVID-19 pandemic on youth physical fitness
Study shows loss of Y in blood cells hinders immune response to cancer
Loss of Y chromosome leads to poor cancer outcomes
The atmosphere’s growing thirst is making droughts worse, even where it rains
Colorectal cancer leaves lasting toll on women’s sexual health
New technology developed at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University promises faster, earlier diagnosis of deadly form of heart failure
PolyU scholar honored with the Hong Kong Engineering Science and Technology Award for contributions to Web3 and digital economy
Nationwide study finds that leaks in natural gas pipelines contribute to hazardous particulate air pollution
‘Eye’ on health: AI detects dizziness and balance disorders remotely
EyeCare4Kids™ names Maggie Cline as new CEO
Moderate exercise slows brain aging: U-shaped association revealed by accelerometry
Bat viruses similar to MERS have potential to jump to humans
New 3D-printing method makes two materials from one resin
A better understanding of how gene editing tools work
Tool for protecting soldiers’ brain health earns $3.2 million grant
Virginia Tech researcher earns American Heart Association fellowship to explore how obesity increases the risk for heart disease
Study identifies personality traits associated with bedtime procrastination
How late college students go to sleep is influenced by the need to belong
Discovery of giant planet orbiting tiny star challenges theories on planet formation
Blood sugar response to various carbohydrates can point to metabolic health subtypes, study finds
Why AI can’t understand a flower the way humans do
Top scientists call for permanent ban on high seas exploitation
A new blood-based epigenetic clock for aging focuses on intrinsic capacity
[Press-News.org] Clarity Services, Inc. Gives Lenders Better Visibility on Their Applicants with Clear Recent HistoryClarity Services' newest product.