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The chief executive of Fair Isaac (NYSE: FICO) has a bone to pick with Bill Pulte after the Federal Housing Finance Agency director claimed the company unfairly hiked its prices and was operating like a monopoly.

In an interview with CNBC, FICO CEO Will Lansing insisted his company’s credit score pricing is not creating problems for borrowers.

“We have been accused of raising our prices, and it’s true, we have, but they’re still very, very small relative to what we offer,” Lansing said. “We charge $4.95 for a mortgage score out of $6,000 in closing costs. So, it’s not the cost of a FICO score that’s…creating problems for homeownership.”

Lansing also faulted Pulte’s announcement that mortgage lenders will now be able choose to between a traditional FICO score or one from rival VantageScore. Prior to this, only FICO scores were used by mortgage lenders who sold their loans to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Lansing insisted there were “all kinds of safety and soundness concerns” with Pulte’s action, claiming it “introduces a dangerous precedent that increases adverse selection risk” and “inexplicably favors a less predictive credit score that will undermine the safety and soundness of the enterprises and their counterparties.” He added the company’s newest credit score model, FICO 10T, outperforms VantageScore’s offering.

“We have over 90% market share in all these other markets that have nothing to do with the government,” Lansing said. “And then within the mortgage market, in the non-conforming market where there’s no government mandate, FICO is the clear industry standard.”

Pulte did not directly comment on Lansing’s remarks, but on his X page the FHFA director shared a link to an Investopedia article with the headline “Credit Score Changes Could Help More Renters Get Mortgages.”