T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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391.1 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Mon Nov 18 1991 10:15 | 10 |
| That some credit unions don't make annual reports available is
not completely surprising. There are some very small credit unions
around. If the membership is small, assets are small, and most of
the members know each other and their board personally I can understand
them not wanting to spend money to print up a lot of reports. Did
the person at NCUA say if not making annual reports available was
common for large credit unions or were they not specific?
Alfred
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391.2 | Oversight must start with US | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | Someday, DCU will be a credit union. | Mon Nov 18 1991 10:31 | 21 |
|
>He also said that some credit unions don't make annual reports available(!).
Absolutely, positively incredible. This statement says a LOT to me
concerning the NCUA. The fact that the federal oversight body
considers complete and accurate annual financial reports optional
equipment is sheer incompetentcy in my eyes. Why are these annual
reports any less important for a $383 million federal credit union than
for a $383 million bank or company? Looks like the "blind trust"
extends even to the federal government.
But after hearing the sole reason for their getting involved with a credit
union, how much value can we place on NCUA audits and "investigations"?
If what is stated in .0 is indeed the case with the NCUA (I have also
been given the insolvency line), then it is more important than EVER
that we as members know what OUR credit union is doing. And that
STARTS with complete, accurate financial statements that an auditor has
put their name on.
Why do I get the sinking feeling that everybody thinks somebody else is
watching the barn door???
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391.3 | But - with a small credit union | STAR::PARKE | True Engineers Combat Obfuscation | Mon Nov 18 1991 10:38 | 12 |
| To reiterate 1,
How many <$1,000,000 credit unions,where Evrybody knows everybody,
might there be ?? In that case, anyone could see the real numbers
at any time.
In the case of a credit union as geographically diverse as ours,
I would hope that Annual reports, with full auditor notes, would
always be forthcomming. Whereas, if I was in a $100,000,000
credit union where all members were in one town (city) a formal
annual report COULD be optional. All it would take is an OPEN
operating environment.
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391.4 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | Someday, DCU will be a credit union. | Mon Nov 18 1991 11:01 | 17 |
|
The default behavior should be one of REQUIRED, FULL DISCLOSURE. To
deviate from this behavior should require extensive justification and
the proper controls, checks and balances. IMO, having this as any type
of standard behavior is inviting disaster. As we have witnessed first
hand, fraud and mismanagement seek a dark environment. I have stated
this before and I'll state it again. Complete and accurate financial
reports are NOT a luxury or the first item to cut for the sake of cost
savings. PLEASE "waste" $1 of mine! If we, as owners of DCU, aren't
willing to make this type of commitment then WE will be partly
responsible the next time DCU sends money out the back door.
We have seen the NCUA only willing to get involved if a credit union
is insolvent. They ASSUME we are watching our own money and
interests. This cannot happen without complete and accurate annual
reports. I find the NCUA's position a contradiction.
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391.5 | Good question | PLOUGH::KINZELMAN | Paul Kinzelman | Mon Nov 18 1991 11:34 | 10 |
| Re: .1
I don't know, I didn't ask, but it's a good question. Give him a call
at 202-682-9600, I spoke to Alan Meltzer.
He emphasized very clearly that they have 15,000 credit unions, and not
enough examiners to do everything. They operate completely on the basis
of financial solvency. If it's solvent, they don't care what the credit
union does. Everything else is taken as merely one faction agains
another and they don't get involved.
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391.6 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | Someday, DCU will be a credit union. | Mon Nov 18 1991 12:26 | 28 |
|
>They operate completely on the basis of financial solvency.
I guess expecting a federal agency to act to PREVENT insolvency would
be asking too much. But don't worry, all our money is protected by the
government who will just ask us for more money to replace what is lost.
No wonder criminals are targeting financial institutions. Why is a can
in the back yard looking safer and safer?
>If it's solvent, they don't care what the credit union does.
>Everything else is taken as merely one faction agains
> another and they don't get involved.
Did they actually say this? Even violations of Bylaws and NCUA regs
and laws? So anybody can do whatever they want as long as they don't
steal that last dollar that will push them over the threshold of
insolvency? Anybody got any extra coffee cans I can have?
They should state this on the stickers and signs that they give credit
unions that imply something quite different. So using their logic,
what Mangone did was perfectly fine. It was the down-turn in Cape real
estate that was the REAL problem. Had the market continued to grow,
then the fraud would not have been found out, Barnstable would have
plugged right along, DCU funneling millions to them unbeknownest to its
members and we'd all be fat, dumb and happy...
Pretty scary stuff if you stop to think about it.
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391.7 | They care only for solvency | PLOUGH::KINZELMAN | Paul Kinzelman | Mon Nov 18 1991 12:36 | 13 |
| Re: .6
The issued about NCUA not caring unless the credit union is insolvent is
of course not a direct quote, but it's a paraphrase to the best of my
ability. I didn't ask directly how an issue of a bylaw violation would be
handled. It would be an interesting question.
Oh and he said that under the FOIA, they only charge $.10/page of copying
rather than $.25/page at DCU.
I said that their outrageous fees and information refusal were to
discourage us from requesting documents. He pointed us at the court system
to resolve access to even the annual reports.
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391.8 | seems I've heard this before | TLE::INSINGA | Aron Insinga, zk2-3/n30 office 3n50 | Tue Nov 19 1991 16:06 | 10 |
| re: .6:
> It was the down-turn in Cape real
> estate that was the REAL problem. Had the market continued to grow,
> then the fraud would not have been found out
I think that this is exactly the BoD's position: they claim that they are guilty
only of trusting Mangone, and they saw no problem with such participation loans
since, over the years, they collected $7m interest (was that the figure?) from
such loans.
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391.9 | Sound decisions start with a sound philosophy | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | Someday, DCU will be a credit union. | Tue Nov 19 1991 17:17 | 21 |
|
RE: .8
>I think that this is exactly the BoD's position: they claim that they are guilty
>only of trusting Mangone, and they saw no problem with such participation loans
>since, over the years, they collected $7m interest (was that the figure?) from
>such loans.
Yes, IMO they are "guilty" of the same thing as the people who send their
money to a stranger at the end of a phone line who promises 100% return
in a year.
I guess everybody should be asking themselves, "Do we need people on the
Board who are capable of more than 'trust'? Do we need people on the
Board who understand that "investing" in Cape Cod real estate does not
serve the membership of DCU?" $7 million or not. I believe it was the easy
rationalization of the second question which I, personally, have the
biggest problem with. That's why a credit union philosophy should be
high on the list of desireable qualities of BoD candidates. Otherwise
DCU will continue to operate as a bank, and not a credit union.
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391.10 | Downturn = cancer cure? | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Wed Nov 20 1991 09:08 | 40 |
| .8> re: .6:
.8>
.8> > It was the down-turn in Cape real
.8> > estate that was the REAL problem. Had the market continued to grow,
.8> > then the fraud would not have been found out
.8>
.8> I think that this is exactly the BoD's position: they claim that they are
.8> guilty only of trusting Mangone, and they saw no problem with such
.8> participation loans since, over the years, they collected $7m interest
.8> (was that the figure?) from such loans.
True. They'd like to overlook things like the Information Protection Policy,
the decision to pass off fee increases as "choices", and their view that
DCU is a bank which belongs to them instead of a credit union which belongs
to its shareholders. So Mangone, who they ALLOWED to commit fraud, would
be very convenient if he could be made into a sole villain. At the least,
concentrating attention on the participation loans has the merit of keeping
the conversation away from other subjects.
(Although at a price: that line of argument from the Board makes them run the
risk of sounding like they would have been willing to put up with the fraud,
if only it had continued to make money.)
But just for fun, let's try to finish that sentence realistically...
It was the down-turn in Cape real
estate that was the REAL problem. Had the market continued to grow,
then the fraud would not have been found out
UNTIL LATER.
During which time the eventual damage would have been continuing to grow.
We'd have been stuck for far more than $18M. We were lucky.
The downturn was not the problem. Lack of a functioning Supervisory
Committee was the problem. Failure to adhere to DCU's Bylaws was the
problem. Lack of commonly-accepted internal controls was the problem.
The downturn was only a trigger for events which caused the problem to
stop growing.
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391.11 | | STAR::BANKS | A full service pain in the backside | Wed Nov 20 1991 10:41 | 21 |
| I guess I have a lot of trouble trusting my money to a BoD who says things
which eventually boil down to "Well, if there wasn't a downturn in the market,
then there wouldn't have been a problem." I've seen a lot of people with the
"real estate is a sure thing" philosophy, I don't think I've ever met one that
I'd want to be in charge of my money.
ANY market, be it real estate, credit cards, stock, or doughnuts will see
strong times, and will also see downturns. The difference is that real estate
likes to talk about loans of about 30 years in length, while the other markets
tend to be a lot more short term.
I don't care what the market is, I personally would be d*mned careful before I
stuck my money into ANYTHING (including a box full of gold burried in my back
yard) for 30 years. That's just not something to be undertaken lightly.
That the BoD doesn't get that point is in my mind staggering. It almost sounds
to me like a kid whinning "Well, it isn't MY fault that the real estate market
crashed". No, it wasn't. It was their fault for not considering it as a
possibility.
BoD: Can't run a credit union with them. Can't run it without them...
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391.12 | board doesn't see DCU's purpose is MEMBER loans | VAXWRK::TCHEN | Weimin Tchen VAXworks 223-6004 PKO2 | Mon Nov 25 1991 18:59 | 50 |
| .11> I guess I have a lot of trouble trusting my money to a BoD who says things
.11> which eventually boil down to "Well, if there wasn't a downturn in the
.11> market, then there wouldn't have been a problem."
At the first meeting w/ the board, I asked if they would acknowledge
that the participation loans were a mistake. Mark Steinkrauss would
only make statements like "Our mistake was to trust Mangone". Susan
Shapiro gave the example that she had been a loan officer in Rochester
that had issued many loans to Kodak employees (which is based there).
When Kodak had large layoffs, many loans defaulted but Susan's bank
supervisor told her she had not made a mistake in granting these loans
since she couldn't have foreseen the layoffs.
I agree that it isn't a mistake if the DCU gave loans to DEC employees
who were laid-off and force to default. Member loans are the purpose
behind a CU. Holding long-term house mortgages isn't wrong - of course
it would help the CU to use variable rates and to have a balanced loan
portfolio. It's interesting the DCU sells it's mortgages - probably
because it sees them as being risky. However the DCU pushes credit
cards since they are highly profitable even though they're more risky
and it's bad for members to build unnecessary debt in this recession. I
wonder if the % profit on the Mangone loans was much more than on
mortgages.
At the second meeting, I asked why it couldn't be foreseen that
participation loans in vacation areas (rather than primary homes) was
inherently risky and there were many past examples of speculative boom
and bust cycles in Cape Cod & Florida vacation real estate. The answer
was that the board felt the return justified the risk.
I also asked how money was generated from land under development to
make payments (thus implying that the loans were for more than the
purchase of the land - since part was needed to make payments while
waiting for a buyer). The response was that some land had money
generating structures - but no figures were given.
The board stated that DCU needed to reserve earnings since it expected
defaulting member loans due to layoffs. When I asked for figures on the
cost of member defaults vs participation loan defaults, I got a
confusing long answer implying the member defaults were a large factor.
However it's turns out that in the past, member defaults were 0.4% -
which lead the NCUA to use the DCU as a training example of a well run CU.
I wonder what changed in '85 when the participation loans began?
Perhaps one factor is that Mark Steinkrauss became chairman and shifted
the philosophy of the DCU more into the high-flying Wall Street
investment world in which he is proficient. (That's why we need a board
of experienced financiers to deal w/ DCU's farflung finances instead of
ordinary members who only know about the conservative & mundane world
of mortgages, car loans & checking accounts. :-} )
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391.13 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | Someday, DCU will be a credit union. | Tue Nov 26 1991 09:12 | 23 |
|
RE: -.1
> I wonder what changed in '85 when the participation loans began?
> Perhaps one factor is that Mark Steinkrauss became chairman and shifted
> the philosophy of the DCU more into the high-flying Wall Street
> investment world in which he is proficient. (That's why we need a board
> of experienced financiers to deal w/ DCU's farflung finances instead of
> ordinary members who only know about the conservative & mundane world
> of mortgages, car loans & checking accounts. :-} )
It's enlightening to read DCU's annual reports from 1980 until 1990.
The earlier years of the credit union were true to the credit union
philosophy. You see it in the writings (best rates, etc.), you see it
in the behavior (dividends). Then in 1985, you see a very interesting
change of words (competitive) and behavior (participation loans). You
see a budding credit union turned into a bank. 1985 was a turning
point for DCU in many ways. Personally, I believe Mark Steinkrauss'
role as chairman of the board in 1985 had something to do with this.
His banking experience along with Susan Shapiro's (DCU Treasurer)
banking background have had a lot to do with where we are today IMO.
That's why I believe that banking experience on the Board is not
necessarily a good thing for the credit union.
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