Much of that attrition has been from unavoidable forces of market economics, such as liquidations and involuntary mergers that are the result of inability to expand products and services, withering SEGs, or the inability for to attract new senior managers.
But a disturbing trend has emerged. We now are seeing some so-called voluntary mergers that are nothing more than sales orchestrated by boards and senior managers at the expense of members whose interest they’re obliged to represent.
That’s not true of all consolidations, of course, but a look at the pre-merger books and aftermath for some of these takeover targets reveals financially sound institutions sold to larger credit unions for pennies on the dollar, in merger processes opaque at best, followed by senior managers bailing out with golden parachutes.
Left behind, local staff that spent years building those personal relationships now working under a new regime, distant in philosophy, priorities, and practice from the people who had co-existed for years on either side of the teller line and desk. Many move on, and the cooperative financial charter and all it represents sustains another blow.
It doesn’t have to be that way. Here’s a look at what’s happening.
How The Sales Process Work?
A credit union seeking mergers will send offers to smaller credit unions that include:
- Significant bonuses and/or severance packages for senior managers that are multiples of their current annual salaries (the golden parachute so associated with Wall Street excesses).
- Ongoing benefits for board members who now become advisors.
- Offers to employees to continue their employment or receive significant severance offers.
- A one-time nominal special dividend to members.
- A recitation of expanded services, branches, and products available for members.
- A very brief period for public disclosure to members of the intended merger, via the Notice of the Special Membership Meeting.
- The special meeting in short order after the NCUA’s approval, with voting in person or via ballot to approve the merger closing at the end of the meeting.
A Managed Sale
Everything looks proper on paper, except the whole process is designed to keep members in the dark, often long after the boards initially approved the plan and applied to the NCUA for regulatory approval.
The meeting notice contains the minimum information necessary and omits the oral promises and other personal benefits guaranteed. The board’s pretense of having considered alternatives is asserted in communications without any details.
Other potential merger options are not explored. Even if there are objections raised at the special meeting, as has occurred, the merging credit union closes the ballot at the end of the meeting so there’s no real opportunity for dialogue or objections.
The vote period is kept short and often the majority of those voting ends up being a small fraction of the total membership. The process is merely a veneer of compliance with NCUA Rule 708.b.
The intent, and all too often the effect, is to remove any role for owners in the most important decision a member is asked to make.
All the direct merger costs such as the so-called bonuses, severance payments, and/or special dividends are paid from the merged credit union’s resources.
At the merger date the surviving credit union books an immediate gain from the newly added reserves, undivided earnings, and mark-to-market adjustments that is, the collective wealth of the merged credit union through its income statement. All of which, of course, flows directly to its capital account.
Ultimately, these are cases of the surviving credit union buying growth. The top executives get handsome payouts while the members get a special dividend that is a cent or two on the dollar for the wealth that has been created and transferred to the mergedcredit union.
Quite a bargain.
The Members’ Loss
So, what’s wrong with this increasingly commercial way of seeking mergers? It’s simple: The members’ financial interest, accumulated over decades of loyalty, and the ability to exercise an informed vote are compromised by the very leadership that puts its self-interest ahead of the members.
These voluntary mergers often involve credit unions that have stable if not excellent financial results accumulated over generations of member loyalty and participation.
These reserves and the intangible goodwill are in fact sold to the merging credit union and the current leadership is rewarded with one-time bonuses and/or severance packages on top of their existing employment terms. The terms of continuing-employment contracts are often designed to incent management to leave instead of staying to oversee the outcome.
These merged credit unions have built extensive, valuable franchises sometimes with locational advantages that another credit union could not acquire. This franchise value and positioning are rarely reflected in the balance sheet.
Moreover, it’s frequently the case that if members believed the surviving credit union was a better deal, they could have joined. However, the acquiring credit union is unable to compete with the credit union’s local, historical advantages, so it resorts to a private purchase to acquire what it could not win in the market.
These managed deals rarely present information about the strategic or business model of the surviving credit union other than listings of market-leading products and services or additional branch locations. Often the suggestion is that bigger is better and scale will ensure greater benefits. That’s not so true anymore.
Today, many credit unions contrast their value of individual service to the mega-financial alternatives which are both stateless and reliant on uniform processes. This is because most members’ needs are local, whether it be auto, credit card, or housing finance.
Credit unions can adapt quickly to local environments and economic circumstances–that’s one of their advantages. However, there is no comparison of the merged and surviving credit unions’ business models. The decades of local service and presence are not even referred in management’s zeal to get members’ approval.
Every credit union operating today has come through the worst financial crisis (2008/9) since the Great Depression. They have cultivated organizational partnerships, supported local schools and communities, and been an integral part of their area’s economy.
Bigger Is Better? Not Necessarily.
Members elect boards to oversee this local focus. The CEO/managers they select are to execute these principles for the greater good. Selling out to a larger credit union that doesn’t have this local experience and is simply buying unearned growth, is at best irrelevant, and at worst contradictory, to the credit union charter advantage that is being surrendered.
Most of the problems the country faces are decentralized in nature. Creating jobs takes place in local communities, not in Washington. Credit unions are a means to empower and equip people as leaders in their communities.
However, these business contrasts are never presented. Everything is promise and hype; the new reality becomes known only after the merger is complete. Members are not given information about the earlier experiences of employees and members from the continuing credit union’s current performance or even from any previous mergers.
Once Done, It’s Done
A merger is a one-way event; it cannot be undone directly. That’s why members are required to vote to give up their charter. In conversations with employees of credit unions caught up in these situations, the circumstances after the merger are often different from the promises beforehand.
In one situation, almost half of the employees left after six months, the promised technical capabilities were less than before the merger, and, sadly, some members who qualified for loans at the merged credit union are not eligible under the new loan policies.
Not only have the service capabilities deteriorated, but the employees so carefully cultivated in the merger courtship experience a different business culture. Another example is a credit union where member service was so much the focus it was rated he employer of choice in its market area for three years in a row. The credit union had very low employee turnover. Now, after a merger, most of its experienced staff have left.
The Cooperative Model At Risk
The truth is that many of these so called voluntary mergers are managed sales. One response in defense is that everybody does it, so it must be OK.
But not everybody does it. Many boards and managers approached formally with written offers and informally with these self-serving transactions have turned them down.
A defining principle of leaders is taking responsibility for regulating their own behavior. The fact that some boards and senior managers would compromise their fiduciary responsibilities to their members and sell their members’ generations of loyalty to another credit union and then leave the scene, does not make it right.
Examples of temptation that turn dedicated leaders into self-interested beneficiaries of their institution’s sale undermines the foundation of the cooperative model.
Cooperative ownership produces common wealth. Boards and management have the responsibility as agents of the members to always act in their best interests.
If these same boards had decided to sell the credit union under the same terms to a non-credit union entity, there would be an uproar of opposition to this dissipation of members’ financial interests. But selling the members’ cumulative legacy to a much larger credit union, where their pro rata interest and influence is minuscule, is somehow OK?
Defending these manipulated sales compromises the very core of the cooperative alternative to the for-profit banking sector. Instead of focusing on member value and impact, these sales reward an institutional greed for unearned growth.
At a time when many Americans are worried about the ability of government and large financial institutions to focus on their economic well-being, this distortion of the merger process can only reinforce members’ anxiety about their lack of power in the market.
A Perversion Of The Cooperative Model
The cooperative model is perverted when institutional size becomes the end game and not the means to improve members’ financial control of their lives. The visions of lifetime member financial partnerships become nothing more than an asset to be sold to the credit union willing to pay off senior managers and boards who have lost their moral compass.
There is little dispute that the nation’s policies and practices are heavily weighted to favor the rich. In an era in which the inequality between the top 1% of individuals and the rest of the population is increasing, these credit union sellouts compromise the individual and collective benefit cooperatives were designed to create for member-owners.
Cooperatives countervailing role in the marketplace is compromised. The promise that the collective resources of the 115-year-old credit union model can be paid forward to benefit future generations is cast in doubt.
(A current example tomorrow)