NAFCU responded to recent attacks launched by the American Bankers Association radio and print ads against credit unions with letters to congressional leaders.
"With the ever increasing regulatory burden on all financial institutions, we would hope that the banking trades and their members would be more focused on working with their counterparts in the financial services industry to achieve meaningful regulatory relief that will allow all financial institutions to better serve consumers," NAFCU President/CEO Dan Berger wrote in two separate letters sent to leaders in the House and Senate. (Click on the letter to expand.)
"Instead, the ABA has put resources into these attacks that could be better dedicated to regulatory relief efforts. The fact remains that if the nation's largest banks were more responsible to begin with, the financial crisis may not have reached such epic proportions, and the kind of regulatory burden the entire industry faces today may not be a reality," he added.
Recommended For You
To support his argument, Berger pointed to fines and settlements paid by large banks in the aftermath of the financial crisis, including $55.7 billion for Bank of America and $23.8 billion for JPMorgan Chase.
"These numbers continue to increase and do not even reflect the fact that UBS, Ocwen Financial, Deutsche Bank, SunTrust, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, S&P and Credit Suisse all have also had over $1 billion each in fines and various settlements and buy-backs stemming from the financial crisis," he said.
Berger said NAFCU hopes the ABA ultimately changes its approach and focuses its resources on issues like regulatory relief and a national standard for retailers on data security, which could help the entire financial services community.
"The banks need our help to pass reg relief and they need to step back and step up," he told CU Times.
© 2025 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.