Are Credit Unions Being Disrupted?

Disruption is both an adjective and a noun.  A word to describe changes upsetting the status quo in a market.  And a way to compete against larger and stronger foes.

The business theory with this name was formalized by Clayton Christensen. In this interview with MIT magazine the essential ideas are laid out.  He describes the circumstances as follows:

Disruptive innovation describes a process by which a product or service powered by a technology enabler initially takes root in simple applications at the low end of a market — typically by being less expensive and more accessible — and then relentlessly moves upmarket, eventually displacing established competitors.

Disruptive innovations are not breakthrough innovations or “ambitious upstarts” that dramatically alter how business is done but, rather, consist of products and services that are simple, accessible, and affordable.

In this process identifying the “job to be done” for the consumer is an important insight.  See below for the example of a disruptive example coming at credit unions from below.

The Adjective

A second approach to understanding disruption is to identify some consequences that become visible in markets when the process is at work.   Is the credit union system being disrupted?  What would be indicators?  Who is doing it?

Author and speaker Greg Satell wrote in an April 1, 2023 article “4 Signs Your Industry is Being Disrupted.” Among the four are events that may be familiar.  Note he is not writing about credit unions or even financial services.  Some of his terminology may seem more appropriate to manufacturing, but I believe his observations are still helpful in understanding where competitors are emerging.

One sign is maturing technology.  The truth is that every major technology has a similar life cycle called an S-curve. It emerges weak, buggy and flawed. Adoption is slow. In time, it hits its stride and enters a period of rapid growth until maturity and an inevitable slowdown. That’s what’s happening now with digital technology and we can expect many areas to slow down in the years to come.

A second is consolidation, or mergers.  Yet when an industry is in decline, the forces external to the industry get the upper hand. With new market entrants and substitutes becoming more attractive, customers and suppliers are in a position to negotiate better deals, margins get squeezed and profits come under pressure.

That’s why a lot of consolidation in an industry is usually a bad sign. It means that firms within the industry don’t see enough opportunities to improve their business by serving their customers more effectively, through innovating their products or their business models. To maintain margins, they need to combine with each other to control supply (or I might call it vendor relationships). 

The third response he calls “rent seeking and regulatory capture.”

The goal of every business is to defy markets. Any firm at the mercy of supply and demand will find itself unable to make an economic profit — that is profit over and above its cost of capital. . .

That leaves entrepreneurs and managers with two viable strategies. The first is innovation. Firms can create new and better products that produce new value. The second, rent seeking, is associated with activities like lobbying and regulatory capture, which seeks to earn a profit without creating added value. In fact, rent seeking often makes industries less competitive. . .

It seems like they (rent seeking industries) are getting their money’s worth. . .Occupational licensing, (read new charters) . . . restrictions have coincided with a decrease in the establishment of new firms. If your industry is more focused on protecting existing markets than creating new ones, that is one sign that it is vulnerable to disruption.

His fourth indicator he calls the Inevitable Scandals.   He cites Thernos and WeWork as examples.

He might have included the ongoing compliance problems at Wells Fargo or the recent failures of well capitalized institutions such as Silicon Valley and Signature banks as “scandals”—although it is still unclear who all the contributors to these failures are.

Who Is Coming After Credit Unions’ Members?

Disruption is a constant factor in competitive markets.  Firms try to respond to these pressures in both self-protective ways as well as the more formal response in Christensen’s theory.

Where is credit union competition coming that  would fit both descriptions?  In many credit union consolidations scale is cited as the dominant motive, suggesting that bigger players are the greatest threat to credit unions’ future.   Apple Pay, Walmart Financials services, even some recent fintech firms such as Rocket Mortgage, SoFI or other product centric online platforms will take away critical member-product segments.

But my two favorite examples of disruptive competitors using Christensen’s analysis are Venmo’s peer to peer payment transfer and Chime, a neo bank.

Venmo was described by a 21 year old financial writer in an article last year.   The person-to-person payment application requires a depository account, but then begins to function as a broader transaction option overtime.  While it must synch with an existing account from which to draw funds, this would seem just the first step in becoming a dominant player in processing multiple kinds of consumer financial transactions.

My favorite example is Chime which describes itself as the #1 Most Loved Banking App.   The firm’s goal is to be the entry point to a person’s financial institution by making digital banking easy.  It lists some benefits as follows:

Online banking made easy

No minimum balance requirement or monthly service fees

 Manage money 24/7 with the #1 most loved banking app

 Get paid up to two days early with direct deposit

 Deposit checks from anywhere

One of the most enlightening interviews about Chime is from January 2022 in which founder Chris Britt is interviewed by the CEO of Goldman Sachs.

The whole strategy is easily followed in this 17 minute interview.   Listen carefully to how Britt describes his addressable market description (paycheck to paycheck); “we are not a bank”;  how incumbent providers pay attention to only the top 20% of users;  how direct deposit is the pathway to his customers; and designing the firm’s services to match unmet consumer needs.  Listen also to the role of core values.

Chime is a classic example of Christensen’s theory.  There is nothing in this model that credit unions could not do or have not done in the past.   I believe however that many credit unions have moved “up market.” Now firms like Chime are after the market credit unions were originally designed to serve.

Review again this disrupter’s description of financial strategy–a transaction business with a subscription service.   Note his relationship with regulators: Respect the Rules.

This model is what credit unions were designed to be.   Is Chime signaling that  we left our core members and purpose behind?

 

 

 

 

Easter Hope

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

A citizen inspects a partially destroyed residential building after Russian shelling in the Saltivka district of Kharkiv on April 9, 2023. A prayer for Ukraine.

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N7cPNrpwfs0&list=RDGMEM8h-ASY4B42jYeBhBnqb3-w&start_radio=1&rv=dpEIplVu7Zk

Were You There?

The present does not exist without the past.   This is a factual statement.  However how we  encounter the past, will strongly influence who we are today.  And what we become tomorrow.

This year three of the world’s major religions have some of their holiest days overlap:  Passover, Ramadan, and Easter.

The events, liturgies, and services of all three are honoring past events that shape how their followers live and worship today.  This is more than remembering.  It is continuing a legacy of belief and ideals that are powerful influences still.

An individual example of this commitment is this short interview with Bono about how he practices his Christian faith.

Secular Practices

Organizations also honor their past.   Sporting teams retire star players jerseys or numbers to remind today’s competitors of past glories.

Organizations and universities name buildings, endow scholarships or professorships with the names of founders, donors and leaders who laid the foundations for today’s ongoing work.

Recently a credit union asked if I might speak at their annual meeting.  This is not something I have done recently so asked what he had in mind.

He sent me background on a keynote speaker.  It read:  Michelle Book, CEO of the Food Bank of Iowa, will be one of our keynote speakers this year. She is a friend. . .When Michelle took the helm of this Feeding America affiliate in 2016, it was on the brink of being decertified. Today FBOI serves 55 counties or over half of Iowa . . . Michelle will have an impactful message regarding changes our state legislature will pass into law this week which will result in .  . .another barrier for 300,000 food insecure Iowans to receive their SNAP benefits.  

Every event has embedded in it values, ideals and even prior grievances that motivate or guide its leaders.

Good Friday

Today is part of Easter Holy Week.  Good Friday worship is a time of somber remembering the crucifixion of Jesus.

The spiritual often sung in these services begins:  “Were you there when they crucified my Lord?”

The words are not meant literally.  Rather they evoke the power of worshipping or honoring those who came before to enable us to be who we are.

Religious beliefs are more consequential and longer lasting than most secular traditions, for some but certainly not all people.

However spiritual practice reminds everyone that indeed “you were there” when others created the foundations all stand on now.

And what we will pass on, each in their own way.

An Observation from a Chronicler of American History

Ken Burns: History has never repeated itself. There’s not been a single event that’s happened again.

To be able to perceive larger patterns, that’s our work in life. Why am I here? What is my purpose here? What is the meaning of life? These are the essential questions, but we’re distracted by all of these grievances.

Human nature is always the same. Greed and generosity, puritanism and prurience, virtue and vice, they’re always there. And they’re not just between you and another person. They’re within you and within me.

 

A Holy Week Theme: Money Changers and Temples

Managing money has always been political. And always will be.

A measure for credit unions:  “The extent to which we apply social values more than mere monetary profit.”

FDR and Credit Unions: “Push This”

Temples and Money:  Old and Modern

Cleansing the Temple

by Malcolm Guite

Come to your Temple here with liberation

And overturn these tables of exchange

Restore in me my lost imagination

Begin in me for good, the pure change.

Come as you came, an infant with your mother,

That innocence may cleanse and claim this ground

Come as you came, a boy who sought his father

With questions asked and certain answers found,

Come as you came this day, a man in anger

Unleash the lash that drives a pathway through

Face down for me the fear the shame the danger

Teach me again to whom my love is due.

Break down in me the barricades of death

And tear the veil in two with your last breath.

 

 

Baseball and the Four Stakeholder Credit Union Model

A credit union’s relationship with its local minor league baseball team became more than a promotional opportunity.  It evolved into a strategic expression and expansion of its mission.

The Dayton Dragons (Dayton, Ohio) have the longest continuous sellout streak in North American sports history –1,441 games.   The team is the High-A affiliate of the Cincinnati Reds and plays in the Midwest League.

The team’s 2023 promotional video clearly highlights the credit union’s naming rights: the Day Air Credit Union Ballpark.  However the relationship with the Dragons goes much deeper than naming one of the most iconic venues in Southwest Ohio.

Both organizations have created a partnership that grows Day Air, the Dayton Dragons, and the economic vitality of the region.

Joe Eckley, Director of Marketing for the credit union, describes some of their joint activities:

  • Weekly meetings throughout the season to align strategies and prioritize promotions to drive fan engagement for the Dragons and member growth for the credit union.
  • Each year the two organizations develop a new promotion to meet a credit union-specific goal. The Dragons utilized their vast reach in the community to support this initiative.
  • During the off-season, the Dragons and Day Air work together on numerous events and promotions to benefit the community to enhance  key performance metrics for each organization.
    • College Prep Night
    • Business speaker seminars
    • 50/50 Holiday Raffle fundraisers
    • Annual 5k event.

  • The Dragons utilize their reach and community reputation to drive promotions for Day Air.
    • Special jerseys were only available at the credit union.
    • Food trucks and incentives for Day Air associates.
    • Sponsored donations to numerous organizations on the credit union’s behalf.
    • Mascot visits to Day Air locations.
    • Special ticket pricing for members
    • Discounts at the Dragons team store for Day Air members
    • Early access to exclusive events
    • Special service booth at Day Air Ballpark.

  • Day Air provides Dragons Associates, a SEG group, special member benefits.
  • Day Air supported the the Dragons throughout the pandemic when games were cancelled.

Building Community

The Dragons are a Dayton entity–they draw from the outskirts of the region to provide family friendly entertainment to all comers.

Day Air serves the greater Dayton area– people doing good for friends and neighbors. All the big banks in town are headquartered elsewhere (New York, Cleveland, Pittsburgh).

CEO Bill Burke says that from a strategy perspective, the naming rights partnership made sense because of the close alignment of both organizations for the community.

As a result the credit union changed its three stakeholder model to add a forth criteria when it obtained the naming rights.  All decisions are now run past the lens of the Credit Union, members, associates (employees), and the community.

The opening day on April 11 will continue the record sell out streak.  For the credit union, the Dragons and the Dayton community, it is a local celebration of two great American pastimes—alive and well in America’s heartland.

 

 

 

D. Michael Riley’s Observations on “Creative Destruction”

In response to last week’s post on the impact of mergers on the future of the cooperative system, this former NCUA senior executive sent the following comment.

Mike Riley, December 1984

“Creative destruction” is uncomfortable to see in print. But it existed before Adam Smith, Malthus, Marx. Keynes, Schumpeter, and others began to try to explain the economic drivers and motivations that shape our world.

Cultural changes seem to be the main driver today. The personal seems to have switched to the impersonal, i.e. give me what I want on my terms with not  much regard to others. Fast and low cost are the motivators. (disclaimer: I love Amazon.)

We have to deal with what we have.  I am concerned about sound credit unions merging.  When I was a new examiner, I had 30 -40 credit unions who were below $100,000 and none of the rest I had were over a million. And no, I did not start in 1934.

This was in the seventies. They were basically in small towns or in rural areas where there was a factory of some sort. As I visited them (most were happy to see me, albeit a regulator, to hear about the outside world), it was obvious that the Board and Committees were involved in the credit union. Their members and the Treasurer were most involved of all. They were making loans on washers, dryers, refrigerators. Most of their members had no real access to credit except at an exorbitant rate. No savings accounts available to the members.

The credit unions really cared about their members. I remember one credit union was trying to decide on whether to make used car loans. They wanted some advice from me.  About 8 months later I came back and before I could start the exam they wanted me to go out and look at this used car and meet the borrower.

They were so proud of this accomplishment. (As a good regulator, I did check to see if the loan was to a Board member or family member.)  It seemed to be a good loan. Not to get maudlin, but this shaped my views of what credit unions are. And fortunately, the larger credit unions were much the same.

After I moved on, I tried to keep track of these credit unions. Around 1990 I put together a list of where these credit union were. I couldn’t find a few; but a little other 20 had liquidated because the factory closed down or the key people left or retired. Another 30 or so had merged either voluntarily or involuntarily. About 6 were still alive and functioning. To be fair, at the same time the American economy was undergoing a major transformation and jobs and manufacturing were moving overseas.

Ongoing Mergers

This ongoing march continues. The merger of two sound credit unions without some legitimate reason doesn’t seem to be member oriented. I still think of the members of those small credit unions who received services such as buying a washer that no one else would do.

Bigger is not better if the member does not benefit.  How many of these mergers produce lower loan rates , higher dividends, or distinctly better products at a lower price? Carried to the extreme we will be left with 20 credit unions that are no different than large banks.

NCUA’s Role

Schumpeter opined “If someone wants to commit suicide, it is a good thing if a doctor is present.”