T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
633.1 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Jan 05 1993 11:16 | 8 |
| �While I have not checked lately, the DCU is barely competitive at all with
�commercial operations.
In terms of what? The Worcester Telegram & Gazette publishes interest
rates for savings and checking accounts at a variety of institutions
throughout central MA. The last time I checked, DCU's interest rates
were not only competitive, but were better than most commerical
offerings.
|
633.2 | | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Tue Jan 05 1993 13:44 | 8 |
|
Re: competitiveness
The interest rate on RSVP is high enough compared to the other two
banks that I use (1 S&L, 1 Bank) that I've recently moved some funds
into DCU. Its a nice change.
-craig
|
633.3 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | | Wed Jan 06 1993 12:20 | 28 |
|
RE: .0
Right now the primary emphasis is on rebuilding DCU's equity (capital
ratio) that was brought disturbingly low due to the fraud. The capital
ratio had dipped below 4% which was not goodness for the credit union.
A $400 million operation needs more buffer for long term stability (and
survival should something disastrous occur).
The good news is that DCU is experiencing a banner year in terms of net
income due in large part to the massive re-mortgaging going on. Our
capital ratio will increase at a very good rate. As the capital ratio
approaches the desired levels, I would hope to see a gradual shifting
of the income back to areas that all members see in their day-to-day
dealings with the credit union, namely better rates, maybe even bonus
dividends (which appear to have become extinct in credit unions).
My personal view is that DCU must balance its operational needs with
the needs of the membership. Every decision must be viewed not only
from the DCU bottom line, but from the vantage point of how members
will be affected. My personal goal is to have a credit union that
every eligible person *wants* to join and do business with because
we're the best. I believe it is possible to have a very successful
credit union that has a large customer base on which the credit makes
a *reasonable* amount of income. I'm a firm believer in providing value
while not being greedy. A large, loyal customer base is what I believe
will best serve the credit union.
|
633.4 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | A dark morning in America | Wed Jan 06 1993 12:41 | 14 |
| If I can recall that long ago, I seem to remember dividends
being paid in proportion to what folks had in their accounts,
and also seem to recall a dividend in the form of a rebate
paid to people with loans. The last ticked me off because,
being debt-averse, I didn't have any loans, and felt I was
being punished for my thrift.
I'd urge that any potential dividends be used to reduce the
cost of those products used by the widest range of members.
That encourages more use, as well, which should result in even
better performance in future.
Tom_K
|
633.5 | More good news...for me at least | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Wed Jan 06 1993 22:01 | 8 |
| I just got my quarterly statement from another credit union and the BoD
dropped the rate on their credit card from 13.9% to 11.9% on the entire
balance. 95% new auto loans are now 7.5% and 100% new auto loans are
7.9%.
I guess this credit union knows what to do with the 'Dividend'.
Bob
|
633.6 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | A dark morning in America | Wed Jan 06 1993 23:48 | 7 |
| Hope the DEFCU BoD doesn't do this. It rewards borrowers but not
savers. I'd hope the DEFCU BoD would divide any future dividend
among borrowers and savers, at the very least. We should be
encouraging thrift, not debt.
Tom_K
|
633.7 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | | Thu Jan 07 1993 08:49 | 9 |
|
RE: .6
Tom, you are both right and wrong. While it is preferrable to be
debt-free, a credit union could not survive without borrowers. It is
the loans made to the membership that makes money to cover expenses and
make a "profit". Without that interest income, the credit union
couldn't pay you very good interest rates.
|
633.8 | | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Thu Jan 07 1993 09:25 | 17 |
|
Re: .6 and .7
Sad to say (from my perspective of also being debt-averse), Phil is
right. Without all those folks who carry credit card balances or car
loans or mortgages, etc., the banking industry would cease as we know
it. Well, maybe not, the federal gov't seems to do a good job of
borrowing money... ;-)
"Returning dividends" really means narrowing the gap between
interest paid (savings rates) and interest earned (interest paid to
DCU). I would hope that this range would be narrowed not by moving
just one of the "ends", but rather by moving both ends of the equation
inwards. Lowering both the interest rates charged and increasing the
interest rates paid is the only fair thing I can think of.
-craig
|
633.9 | No simple answer for interest rates | STEVEN::HOBBS | | Thu Jan 07 1993 10:39 | 21 |
| There are several things that combine to set interest rates. Two of
the major factors have been mentioned in .6-.8 but these replies
oversimplify by only considering one factor in isolation.
If a credit union is making a good profit then it returns a dividend
by moving saving and borrowing rates closer together. A loss is made
up by moving the rates apart.
If a credit union has an excess of savings then it moves both sets of
rates lower; if it has an excess of borrowing then it moves both rates
higher.
In a situation, where a good profit is being made and there is excess
savings then a credit union might lower borrowing rates while leaving
saving rates unchanged. This returns a dividend and improves the
mismatch between savings and borrowing.
Of course, there other factors that effect interest rates: inflation,
the FED rediscount rates, government participation in the bond market,
etc. All these factor add extra complexity. This complexity makes
any simple explanation inaccurate.
|
633.10 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | A dark morning in America | Mon Jan 11 1993 10:47 | 6 |
| OK, I'll buy that having attractive rates on loans is a good thing.
I'd still hope that any future profit would be distributed on some
equitable basis to all DEFCU members, not just those with loans.
Tom_K
|
633.11 | I agree | ESBLAB::KINZELMAN | Paul dtn223-2605 | Mon Jan 11 1993 12:09 | 2 |
| Re: .10
That certainly makes sense to me. I'm in favor of it.
|
633.12 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Tue Jan 12 1993 15:53 | 10 |
|
Tom, Was the amount refunded to borrowers an actual dividend i.e. from
profit from all operations or was it an actual rebate figured from
within the loan business before it was rolled into the DCU overall
business? If it was the latter then that's a reasonable thing to do
since it was only paid from the money paid in by borrowers. No?
Steve
|
633.13 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | A dark morning in America | Tue Jan 12 1993 16:44 | 13 |
| > Tom, Was the amount refunded to borrowers an actual dividend i.e. from
> profit from all operations or was it an actual rebate figured from
> within the loan business before it was rolled into the DCU overall
> business?
Dunno.
> If it was the latter then that's a reasonable thing to do
since it was only paid from the money paid in by borrowers. No?
Sure.
Tom_K
|
633.14 | | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Wed Jan 13 1993 11:21 | 21 |
|
Re: .12
> Tom, Was the amount refunded to borrowers an actual dividend i.e. from
> profit from all operations or was it an actual rebate figured from
> within the loan business before it was rolled into the DCU overall
> business? If it was the latter then that's a reasonable thing to do
> since it was only paid from the money paid in by borrowers. No?
I'd disagree since you can't claim that the profit from the "loan
business" is solely from the money paid in by borrowers. Even if the
loan business was segmented out for reporting purposes, that area would
have to factor in its costs -- namely the money paid to depositors to
generate the pile of cash being lent out -- to determine what its
profit is. If/when the loan business is profitable, it could be as
easily argued that it is because interest rates were too high or that
the savings rate paid out was too low. I still believe the dividend,
if and when distributed, should be divided among both borrowers and
lenders.
-craig
|