What’s with the Statue?

The Seated Boxer, an iconic ancient Greek work of art, shows a grizzled veteran of the ring, equal parts resigned and ready to spring into action. 

What I like is a sense of respite from competition, the powerful athletic physique and the tiredness that surrounds his humanity.  Is he a winner this day? Are there more fights to go?  How will his efforts be remembered?

These are questions that all of us encounter, in literal or figurative ways, in our daily efforts. 

Continue reading “What’s with the Statue?”

An Anthem for 9/11 and Today

Words from Into the Fire by Bruce Springsteen.

Into the Fire

The sky was falling

And streaked with blood

I heard you calling me

Then you disappeared into the dust

Up the stairs, into the fire

Yeah, up the stairs, into the fire

I need your kiss

But love and duty called you some place higher

Somewhere up the stairs, into the fire

May your strength give us strength

May your faith give us faith

May your hope give us hope

May your love give us love… 

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OM6lw40VPLg)

By Dr. Andrew Roth, Booknotes #211:

What cannot be permitted to be lost is the heroism and sacrifice of those who ran not away but into danger that day to try to save others. Like Fr. Mychal Judge OFM, Franciscan friar, priest, and chaplain to the New York City Fire Department. Fr. Judge is an alumnus of St. Bonaventure University . . . Fr. Judge is the first official victim of 9/11 – Death Certificate No. 1. He ran into the burning buildings to give aid, comfort, and last rites to “his guys” the firefighters of FDNY. His daily prayer was “Lord, take me where you want me to go; let me meet who you want me to meet; tell me what you want me to say; and keep me out of your way.”

My wife Joan dined at the Windows of the World atop the World Trade Center on the evening of September 10th.  The morning of September 11 she was participating in a NABE economic conference at the Marriott World Trade Center.   She walked to the Hudson river, crossed to New Jersey by ferry, and joined four strangers  renting a car to drive home to DC.

On the Waterfront

Lots of conflicting views on  the US economy.  Was discussing the prospect of state or local funding for an historic restoration project with a retired property developer yesterday.

He had moved to Maryland’s Eastern  shore from Montgomery County where he had many development projects. And of course financial ups and downs and many “interactions” with local and state government regulators.

Here is his observation from one indicator of the state’s economy.  Accurate for the entire situation or just anecdotal, I don’t know.  But it does remind us that as in  politics, all economic issues are ln the first instance local.

You’re right on. State resources??? I think the state declares bankruptcy in 2 years.
I drive across the Bay bridge a lot. Before Covid, always 10-15 tankers/container ships waiting at anchor south of the bridge to get into the port at Baltimore. Covid? Dropped to 3-5 boats waiting.
After Covid it picked right back up to 10-15. The port even retooled and floated in a $400 million  crane system that barely fit under the bridge. Everything was booming.
Now,  zilch….nada.. no boats, nothing waiting to unload.
The cost for that $400 million  crane to sit idle makes me cringe. The owners will go under, the bank that financed it will get hurt, and the loss of employment on top of those costs. Then add in the loss of tax revenues to the state and city and the loss of revenue to the truckers and rail systems every single day will add up.
I do not see resolution.
I see destruction.

Which Members to Serve In a Bifurcated Economy?

In today’s uncertain economy some are doing quite well.  Others are worried about their future.  An analysis from  Louisiana Corporate’s September 2025 Economic & Financial Digest  describes this as the “bifurcated economy”:

“One of the most under recognized trends since the Covidpandemic is the increased bifurcation of the U.S. economy. High income households have thrived, thanks mainly to surging stock and home prices that have greatly enhanced the net worth of this cohort.

“Conversely, lower income households have fared less well, particularly after the generous pandemic related stimulus payments ran out. This cohort has relied primarily on income growth, which has notched decent gains early in the pandemic recovery amid labor shortages but has since tapered off as the economy has slowed. Indeed, recent data show that wage gains of lower-paid workers are not keeping pace with that of higher earners.

“Importantly, lower income households are likely to be more affected by the impact of tariffs because they spend a disproportionate share of their income on the most affected goods. What’s more, they have less of a savings cushion to withstand the hit to incomes that the tariffs on these goods impart.

“. . .wealthier households spend a larger share of their incomes on services and, hence, are less exposed to the tariff impact. They can finance their discretionary spending out of wealth gains and their larger savings cushions.

While a small fraction of the population, high-income households account for more than 50 percent of total spending. That means, of course, that economic growth is more dependent on the drivers of wealth – the stock market and house prices. That’s a positive influence when stock prices and housing values are rising, but a big risk if, and when, they sputter.

The Consumer  is Still Spending

Here’s how the bifurcation affects affects consumer spending from last week’s  Marketplace broadcast ( link) Consumers are feeling pessimistic about the economy, but don’t expect them to stop spending gave this analysis:

The Conference Board reported Tuesday its Consumer Confidence Index fell in August. Americans are getting less optimistic about their future income, and they aren’t sanguine about business and labor-market conditions going forward. In fact, both of those metrics in the Conference Board survey are sitting below the threshold that typically signals a recession is coming.

That lines up with the University of Michigan’s index of consumer sentiment, which deteriorated this month — from a level that was already pretty mediocre. . .. And yet, consumers won’t necessarily be pulling back on spending and hunkering down at home in a miasma of gloom and doom. . .

Consumers are also worried that tariffs will drive up prices and squeeze household finances. They say they plan to spend less going forward.

“For big-ticket items, but also for services, like going on vacation, going to restaurants,” said Conference Board analyst Stephanie Guichard. 

Expect these plans to be more frugal? Guichard of the Conference Board said we’ve heard them before.  “I mean like a year ago, they were telling us they were going to be cautious, and at the end of the day they were not,” she said.

Instead consumers kept spending it up. 

“And the main reason is, as long as U.S. consumers have a job and have income, they tend to spend it,” said Guichard. But here’s the thing: It really matters which consumers we’re talking about.

The Challenge

How should credit unions prioritize their member service needs?

 

A Labor Day Observation

A point of view:

Republicans have held the federal minimum wage to $7.25 for 16 years nowAt that rate, someone working 12 hours a day six days a week with no holidays, sick days, or vacation will earn $27,144 before deductions.  (source: Andrew Tobias daily column)

A Basketball Sonnet

Basketball

by G.E. Johnson

Once after dinner a woman and I walked past
An empty basketball court and she says,
“I played on a team my junior year in Belfast,”
And I say “Want to shoot some?” She says “Yes,”
Though she was wearing a long black dinner dress.
She kicked off her high heels and she caught
My pass and with great finesse
Drove to the baseline, jumped and shot
Swish. Two points. We played for awhile,
Man in a black suit, woman in a long black gown,
I loved her quickness and her heads-up style,
Her cool hand as she beat me hands down —
Her jumpiness, like a blackbird in the night—
Her steady eye, her feet about to take flight.

A Call for an Open Mic on Mergers

From Ancin Cooley, Principal, Synergy Credit Union Consulting,Inc 

What strikes me is less the argument for or against mergers, and more the industry’s reluctance to say the quiet part out loud.

Credit unions have never been a monolith—states differ, people differ, and the movement was built on distinct missions and visions coalescing under a cooperative umbrella. Yet today we’re presented with a veneer of homogeneity, as if there’s only one “right” path forward.

There’s nothing wrong with believing scale is the answer. But the bigger issue is the lack of open, rigorous debate. Too often, positions are communicated by proxy rather than by leaders stepping up to the mic, standing on a stage, or going on camera to assert their view—and defend it against alternatives with factual evidence.

Consolidation, mergers, acquisitions—if these are the strategies, say it plainly. And let’s create space for others who see the model differently to test those ideas in the open. That’s how cooperative strength was built and how it should evolve.

Putin’s Pimp

(Interupting my vacation from blogging to comment on an event today)

The most prominent leader of the free world where the country’s elected President stands up for and believes in democracy will be at the White House today.

That person is Volodymyr Zelenskyy.  His people have fought the second largest army in the world to a standstill.   Today he is on the front lines fighting for liberty from authoritarian rule.  A cause that Americans honor on July 4 or recall from personal experiences of WW II.

His host is President Trump.  Last Friday Trump gave the literal red-carpet treatment to a dictator who has been indicted for war crimes from killings in Bucha to the bombing of a building in Mariupol protecting hundreds of children.  And the kidnapping of tens of thousands of Ukrainian children to convert them to Russian citizens.

In the prelude to their Friday  meeting Trump set the public goal as an immediate ceasefire, or in his words, there would be immediate, severe consequences.  Instead, Trump was transformed into Putin’s messenger to convince Zelenskyy  to give up territory to an aggressor who wants to destroy Ukrain’s identity as a people and country.

I am ashamed by this act of political betrayal of America’s most basic political and moral values.  Trump wants to get a peace prize by brokering Ukraine’s surrender.

No matter the public announcements from today’s discussions, the war will continue.  There will be more talk of further meetings.  As long as Trump believes words and threats will change Putin’s goals, there will be no cessation of hostilities.

Putin positioned Trump  to force Zelenskyy to accept an outcome the two crafted without his presence.  Trump’s pimping for Putin will fail.

Ukraine will persevere, because they know what it takes to be truly free, a spirit and cause Americans used to honor—and fight for.

 

 

 

 

 

A Short Vacation

Credit union email followers:

I will be taking a brief leave for the next ten days to spend some quality time with my yard and in the pool.

Will be available via email for questions, followup or suggestions at Chipfilson@gmail. com.

Jump the Likely Drop in Market Rates

Unless there is a complete change in market sentiment or a “black swan” event, the consenus is that the Fed will lower interest rates by .25% in September.  Or for sure by October.

If that is your assessment, why not get ahead of the market with a special announcement to your members such as:

We’ve lowered our mortgage rates!

If you’ve been waiting for a sign to buy a new home, this could be it. Take advantage of ournew rate discount

Or it could be auto loans, student loans or HELOCS.

If you wait till the Fed makes a move, you will just be part of the market’s noise.

Why not get ahead of the game?  Start your “lowering our rates” campaign while everyone else just talks about it.  The President might even take note of your initiative!

NAFCU’s Founding Story

From Iron Wills to Silver Anniversary, NAFCU Turns 25

Credit Union Times, April 22, 1992

By Frank Diekmann, CU Times Managing Editor

Los Angeles — They were a frustrated group when they met for that first time at the Cockatoo Inn in Inglewood, Calif. The idea had been hatched out of the disappointment felt by a handful of managers at federal credit unions who believed the dominant CU trade association had little interest in them—and even less interest in federal share insurance similar to that insuring bank deposits.

No one even knew how many of their compatriots would show up at the luncheon that was held to explore interest, yet more than 50 did. Now, some 25 years later, the proposal that federally chartered credit unions ought to be federally insured is not just accepted as fundamental—it’s one of the movement’s proudest accomplishments.  And the little credit union group that could has evolved into the National Association of Federal Credit Unions, which today has 750 members and a budget of $4.6 million.

There have been bumps, bruises and victories since the group was issued its charter in 1967 and set off on its engaging journey. The comparably huge Credit Union National Association made a determined effort first to eradicate the new association, then to absorb it via merger, and finally—conceding that the upstart was here to stay—to patch up differences so that the movement could present a unified front on Capitol Hill. . .

The CU Times story continues in these further sections on page 8:

First meeting in 1966

Putting the National in NAFCU 

Early opposition

Early support in Florida 

Trade group tension

Early signs of (some) cooperation 

An electronic future. . .

(Source: Credit Union Times Vol.  3, No.16)