Nickels and Community Choice Credit Union Form Strategic Partnership to Empower Members’ Financial Well-being

Author Erin Petro
Read time 3 minutes read time

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (November 16th, 2023) – In their shared mission to improve members’ financial health, fintech Nickels has partnered with Community Choice Credit Union to help members eliminate competitor credit card debt. The partnership will allow Community Choice to identify and reach members carrying costly, revolving competitor credit card debt, and provide them with the support and products they need.

With this partnership, Community Choice will gain access to Nickels Checking Account Analysis, an integrated, secure analysis of competitive card payment behaviors. Based on this ongoing analysis, Community Choice triggers personalized, ready-to-send campaigns to help members in need of lower-cost options to high-interest debt.

This approach aligns with Community Choice’s belief that financial wellness is unique and needed for every individual member and can be improved regardless of age, income, credit score and savings balances.

“At Community Choice Credit Union, we are committed to fostering trust-based relationships with our members, as well as equipping them with the tools required to navigate their financial journey,” says Community Choice Chief Human Resources and Marketing Officer Donna Siejutt. “This partnership will allow us to gain a deeper understanding of our membership base so we can offer specific products and tools, like our Choice Map program. It can help us identify our lending opportunities that best fit with their profile while limiting the likelihood of high-interest debt,” Siejutt adds.

“Community Choice is deeply committed to their members’ financial well-being, and we’re proud to help them create more value for existing members,” said Joseph Gracia, CEO of Nickels. “Nickels has proven that targeted and specific outreach can successfully shift members from high-interest competitor cards to lower rate credit union products.”

This strategic partnership signifies a significant step forward in Community Choice Credit Union’s mission to elevate the financial well-being of their members. By working together with Nickels, Community Choice will now have the insights to help reduce their members’ spending on competitor cards while also growing their card portfolio, and refinance products.

About Community Choice Credit Union

Community Choice Credit Union was established in 1935 in Redford Township. Over the past nine decades, it has grown to expand its membership and impact around the state of Michigan to include 24 member centers from Southeastern Michigan to West Michigan’s Lakeshore region. Community Choice works with approximately 120,000 business and individual members to help them achieve the life they desire. Learn more at www.communitychoice.com.

About Nickels

Nickels is a CUSO that helps credit unions cross sell credit cards, shift spend to their cards, and refinance members’ competitor card debt. Founded in Ann Arbor, MI, their mission is to improve members’ credit card health, in part by shifting members from high interest competitor cards to lower rate credit union products. For more information, please visit nickels.us.

Unveiling Hidden Insights: Leveraging Competitor Card Behavior to Drive Deposit Growth

Author Erin Petro
Read time 5 minutes read time

Discover the untapped potential within consumers spending patterns on competitor cards, and how these insights can reshape marketing and boost overall growth and profitability.

Community banks and credit unions put in a lot of time to better serve their consumers.  I know this because I work with them daily.  Our clients want to better understand their consumers so that they can match them with the right products at the right time.  

Unfortunately, discretionary spending on credit cards represents a large gap in their understanding of their own consumers. This falls outside the scope of most banking relationships because the 15 largest card providers control a staggering 90% of the credit card market.  This means that most credit unions and banks have little insight into how their consumers spend their money on competitor cards. 

Our History Identifying Revolvers

Nickels has long been committed to empowering community banks and credit unions.  We do this by helping them understand their consumers’ credit card behavior.  Our focus to date has been identifying consumers that are revolving (i.e. not paying their statement balances in full) on competitor cards.  This provides our clients with the power to make faster decisions for which consumers will be better served by taking on a balance transfer or a personal loan. To date, we’ve helped consumers refinance millions of dollars in competitor credit card debt. But that’s not the only insight that our checking account analysis yields.

The Opportunity with Transactors

As banks’ and credit unions’ focus has shifted to growing deposits, understanding competitor credit card spending reveals tremendous insight into who can save.

Our data shows that, on average, approximately 16% of a community bank or credit unions’ account-holders use competitor cards solely to transact. And what’s intriguing about this segment is that their total payments to competitor cards can offer valuable insight into their overall spending habits. In a recent analysis of an existing client, we found that nearly 10% of their overall competitor card paying membership spent greater than $1,000 per month on average over the past year. These high spenders are primarily engaging with major banks like Citi, Capital One, Chase, and Bank of America. 

From Insight to Action

Using transaction data to accurately identify these spenders can hold the key to driving your institution’s growth. Below are several approaches that can help yield positive outcomes:  

  1. Increasing Interchange on Your Own Cards: If your bank or credit union boasts a credit card program, using checking account data to identify consumers who use competitor cards elsewhere can provide crucial insights for effective marketing campaigns.
    • For consumers who do not already have a card with you, marketing that targets reward offers and other perks that are personalized to the amounts they’re already spending with competitor credit cards becomes compelling.  You can set target thresholds to ensure that they’re shifting their spend to your cards. 
    • For Consumers who already have a card with you, successful marketing around activation can involve bonuses for shifting that spend amount on competitor credit cards to your card.  Again, personalizing the offers to target the spend you now know that they’re already making elsewhere. 
  1. Building Deposits: Transactors who consistently pay off their credit card balance in full are great candidates for savings products (such as high-yield savings accounts).  These consumers are showing that they’re able to consistently make high volume payments, meaning that they likely have financial surplus for savings.  There are also opportunities to connect the high volume spending with higher volume saving, like how Apple Card cash back is automatically saved in a high yield account. Offering higher interest rates based on institutional card spend can further incentivize spending that helps to foster savings for this specific consumer segment.

Unlock the Insights of Competitor Card Behavior

Marketers know that the key formula for successful marketing is getting the right product in front of the right consumer at the right time.  Most institutions are doing this with a hand tied behind their back because they have no visibility into their consumers’ discretionary spend behavior. Nickels allows banks and credit unions to understand this crucial information and leverage it to build campaigns aligned with their institution’s goals.  By being able to understand how their consumers use competitor credit cards, banks and credit unions will be able to target their products much more effectively, empowering campaigns from growing deposits to refinancing debt to cross selling their own credit cards.

About Nickels

Nickels is a CUSO that helps banks and credit unions take control over their consumers’ third-party credit card debt. Founded in Ann Arbor, MI, their mission is to improve consumers’ credit card health. They do this, in part, by identifying those that are credit card revolvers with the major banks and helping credit unions refinance that third-party credit card debt into their own lower interest products.  Nickels also offers Credit Card Coach, a white-label web app that redesigns the credit card experience to improve members credit card health, regardless of which credit cards they choose to use.  For more information, please visit nickels.us.

InTouch Credit Union Partners with Nickels to Take on High Interest Card Debt

Author Erin Petro
Read time 3 minutes read time

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (July 20th, 2023) – Nickels, the fintech focused on helping credit unions improve credit card health for members, today announced a new partnership with InTouch Credit Union, a financial cooperative focused on creating member value.  The partnership will enhance the overall experience for members with a specific focus on helping them lower their  high-interest credit card debt.

Nickels will help InTouch Credit Union identify members who are carrying unpaid balances on major credit cards and help them shift that debt from high interest cards onto lower-interest loan products.  This unique approach of reaching members at the right time to address a costly debt category is proven to help them save money by avoiding high loan interest and fee charges.

“Credit card debt in our country is the highest it’s ever been, setting new records each month.  Partnering with Nickels allows us to address pressing issues that impact our members’ overall financial health.  And it allows us to highlight products we have that can improve our members’ financial situations and save them money. “  said Kent Lugrand, President and CEO of InTouch Credit Union. “We’re excited about the opportunity to build out programs that will help each member’s specific financial needs.”

Nickels will use its Checking Account Analysis product to create customized analysis of members card payment behaviors, enabling InTouch to target the right products for each member segment, such as focusing refinancing third-party credit card debt, promoting their own lower-rate lending products for light revolvers, and promoting their high-yield savings rate products. 

“Our partnership will help InTouch expand beyond only targeting heavy revolvers so they can offer their members the most helpful products via targeted campaigns during a time when members’ needs are increasingly different.,” said Joseph Gracia, CEO of Nickels. “Nickels is committed to partnering with credit unions to help them achieve their missions of helping members improve their financial health.”

In coming months, Nickels will use their analysis capabilities to help credit unions build deposits amongst their membership base.

Nickels is now helping InTouch and credit unions across the United States help more than 1 million members take control of their credit card health.  For additional  information on how targeted debt refinancing can help credit union members, read more.

About InTouch Credit Union

InTouch Credit Union (ITCU) is a financial cooperative that has proudly served members since 1974. ITCU is committed to creating member value by placing the financial needs and delivery of exceptional service to the membership ahead of profit while maintaining fiscal responsibility. With branches in three states, and assets of more than $1 billion, ITCU serves more than 90,000 members in all 50 states and more than 20 countries around the world. ITCU can also be found on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, and LinkedIn.

About Nickels

Nickels is a CUSO that helps banks and credit unions take control over their consumers’ third-party credit card debt. Founded in Ann Arbor, MI, their mission is to improve consumers’ credit card health. They do this, in part, by identifying those that are credit card revolvers with the major banks and helping credit unions refinance that third-party credit card debt into their own lower interest products.  Nickels also offers Credit Card Coach, a white-label web app that redesigns the credit card experience to improve members credit card health, regardless of which credit cards they choose to use.  For more information, please visit nickels.us.

Important Characteristics of Third-Party Card Revolvers

Author Joseph
Read time 5 minutes read time

New Nickels Console Update Identifies Heavy Revolvers for Improved Targeting

With economic uncertainty all around us and credit card debt setting all-time records each month, consumers are looking to their primary financial institutions to help them manage their financial health and offer products and services that can help them on this journey.  Yet many financial institutions struggle to get this right.  That’s not a surprise; it’s a common marketing challenge to target the right consumer at the right time with the right message.

In an earlier blog, we showed how we’ve developed a reliable and repeatable process to identify which consumers are revolving on third-party credit card debt (i.e. using cards with Capital One, Citi, etc. and not paying their statement balances in full each month).  Targeting third-party card revolvers based on payment behaviors that are identifiable through checking account data can help banks and credit unions identify which consumers are the best candidates to refinance their revolving credit card debt. This is a win/win: it helps consumers save money by moving onto lower interest loan products, and helps financial institutions by adding new loans under management.

In our latest tests, we’ve dug even deeper into the revolving characteristics that make consumers the best candidates for refinancing third-party credit card debt.

Why Revolving Frequency & Recency Matters

We already knew that third-party card revolvers (i.e. those that are not paying their third-party card statement balances in full) refinance at a higher rate than other consumer groups. Beyond just identifying revolvers, our team has conducted additional analysis to better understand which segments of revolvers respond to what messaging, and why.

One key distinction is revolving frequency. Some consumers show signs of constantly revolving; their payment patterns indicate that they almost never pay their statement balance in full. We call these consumers “heavy revolvers.” Other consumers revolve less frequently, they use credit cards to bridge a financial gap a few months of the year, but pay their full statement balance in other months. We call these consumers “light revolvers.”

In a recent test, we looked more closely at revolving frequency. Do heavy revolvers respond to messaging differently than light revolvers?

Heavy Revolvers Refinance at a Higher Rate

We sent the same email campaign offering loan applications to both heavy and light revolvers and monitored their application and uptake rates for personal loans.

We learned that heavy revolvers refinance their third-party card debt at higher rates than light revolvers.  

Moreover, the recency of revolving (i.e. when the consumer last showed signs of revolving behavior) also correlates to being more receptive to offers to refinance their third-party credit card debt.

The Takeaway: Focus on Heavy, Recent Revolvers

While all third-party card revolvers were more responsive to loan refinance offers vs. other consumers at a financial institution, the analysis shows that heavy, recent revolvers take the most action and, therefore, have the highest propensity to refinance their revolving third-party card debt.  This group showed substantially higher loan application rates and higher funded loan rates. 

This deeper analysis of third-party card revolvers can help financial institutions like banks and credit unions more specifically target their consumers, focusing on those who are most likely to take action and refinance their third-party credit card debt.

Looking at data this way helps financial institutions:

  1. Prioritize their heavy, recent revolvers and target messaging that directly speaks to the needs of that consumer segment. For example, organizations can focus high-touch/resource driven marketing tactics like pre-approvals or outbound calling to recent, heavy revolvers to maximize marketing efficiency and ROI. 
  2. Create better consumer service experiences for other consumers by re-prioritizing refinance marketing campaigns based on frequency and recency of revolving behavior. We recommend sending multi-email campaigns to recent, heavy revolvers and recent light revolvers, and a single email to non-recent light revolvers.

Nickels Admin Console Now Identifies Frequent, Recent Revolvers

Nickels recently rolled out an updated admin console that allows financial institutions to see their third-party card revolvers (and transactors) on a monthly basis.  And the analysis now differentiates revolvers between light and heavy revolving characteristics.  This gives them the freshest information and insights on recency plus frequency. Nickels’ clients can use this data to pull monthly reports on revolving behavior to inform their ongoing marketing campaign’s content and cadence.

The updated admin console gives credit unions and banks insights to even better target their products and messaging around refinancing third-party credit card debt to the specific consumer segments that are most apt to respond to refinance offers.  Nickels also updated and refined our turnkey marketing campaign playbooks with messaging developed specifically for each consumer segment.

In the coming months we’ll be running additional tests and analysis for groups with other distinct card payment patterns, including those that are transacting on third-party credit cards (i.e. using cards provided by the major banks and paying their statement balances off in full each month).  We see opportunities to shift transacting card spend to our banks and credit union clients.

To learn more about how Nickels can help your financial institution analyze customer credit card data and target customers via customized marketing playbooks, email connect@nickels.us.

$4m in Refinanced Members’ Credit Card Debt

Author Nickels
Read time 4 minutes read time

Nickels and Michigan State University FCU Case Study on Success in 30 Days

Revolving Credit is at an All-Time High in the US

Americans are experiencing the highest levels of credit card debt in nearly a decade and paying >$110B in interest and fees on credit cards each year.  Credit unions are also feeling the pain of higher interest rates and reduced deposits as their members spend down their accounts to pay bills, leaving credit unions with dwindling assets under management.

Case Study: Michigan State University Federal Credit Union

Michigan State University Federal Credit Union (MSUFCU) is the largest university-based credit union in the world, with more than 330,000 members and $7B in assets. MSUFCU wanted to help members who were depleting their savings and carrying high revolving third-party credit card debt, but didn’t have the insights to run an email campaign targeted to members who could benefit most from offers that could convert debt into lower interest loans.

Identifying Revolvers and Targeting Personalized Outreach

Nickels helped MSUFCU identify which of their members had revolving third-party card debt by leveraging MSUFCU’s checking account data and identified that nearly 200K members  had paid over $1.75B in credit card payments over the past year. Nickels also identified: 

  • 35K members that showed strong signs of revolving through their card payment patterns
  • This equates to over $205M in revolving third-party card debt based on national average revolving balances.
  • This third-party card debt will cost members >$40M in interest and fees in 2023 alone. 
  • Identifying both the third-party credit card Transactors and Revolvers was the first step to understanding which members would benefit from which MSUFCU products.

Transactor vs Revolver: Knowing the Difference is Key

Transactor: Pays their credit card statement balance in full every month.

Revolver: Pays less than their credit card statement balance (at least periodically).

  • Credit unions know that over 50% of their members likely have revolving third-party credit card debt.
  • Yet, because >90% of this debt is held by the major banks and card providers, credit unions do not have visibility into this debt.
  • Credit reports do not show which credit union members are Transactors and which are Revolvers.

Creating a Plan to Help Members Pay Down Debt While Creating New Deposits

Nickels identified MSUFCU’s third-party card Revolvers and Transactors but that was only one part of the equation. Nickels then worked with MSUFCU to create email campaigns with targeted messaging and offers to test with MSUFCU Revolvers and Transactors. 

  • These offers were customized to help Revolvers pay down their revolving debt by converting it into lower interest loans or transferring balances onto 6-month interest-free lines of credit with MSUFCU. 
  • Communications were relevant in ensuring that members received emails and offers applicable to their credit situation. 
  • Nickels also created several variations of emails, text, and push campaigns to provide MSUFCU with simple and effective messages to drive action and produce strong results. 

Using a Nickels’ email campaign playbooks provide financial institutions with ready-to-send, targeted and behaviorally-based communications that drive refinance and engagement opportunities. These playbooks can easily be edited or adapted to the needs of the financial institution, and then placed into an existing content management system for streamlined outreach.

The Results

A single targeted email generated more than $4M+ in new personal loans and $6.5M in new card limits for MSUFCU in just 30 days. 

  • By only targeting a quarter of MSUFCU’s members based on checking account analysis, Nickels helped drive over 40% of their personal loans funded and nearly half of their new credit limits in a 30-day period. 
  • This leaves the other 75% of members free to receive other offers to help boost deposits.

Targeted Outreach Leads to Almost 2x Results

By targeting 28% of MSUFCU’s members, MSUFCU and Nickels were able to help drive 44% of their personal loans funded and nearly half (48%) of their new credit limits issued over 30 days.

Nickels helped MSUFCU successfully identify which members would benefit most from refinance options to manage their third-party credit card debt and designed targeted email campaigns that created new loans and business for MSUFCU within a 30-day window, creating a win/win for both members and the credit union’s bottom line.

To learn more about how Nickels can help your financial institution analyze customer credit card data and target customers via customized marketing playbooks, contact Pierce Sloan at pierce@nickels.us.

Download the Full Case Study via the Link Below

What Checking Account Data Revealed About Revolving Debt and the Opportunities for Financial Institutions

Author Nickels
Read time 8 minutes read time

Nickels partnered with five financial institutions ranging from $200M to $7B in assets. We analyzed a year’s worth of their customer checking account data and collaborated with Filene Research Institute to report the results.

More than half of Americans revolve on their credit card balances, deflating their credit scores and depleting their savings due to the cards’ high interest charges. This is especially true when they prolong their indebtedness by making only minimum monthly payments towards their cards. This indebtedness presents an opportunity for banks to grow their loan portfolios and net interest margin, while bolstering their customers’ financial health.

Analysis by Nickels of five financial institutions’ checking account activity found:

  • Payments to card issuers among those with identifiable credit card accounts equaled an astounding 29% of the spend coming out of their checking accounts.
  • About one-quarter of all checking account holders were identifiable revolvers, demonstrating a large opportunity for the financial institutions to improve their customers’ financial health while growing their own loan portfolios.
  • The financial institutions in the study could increase their overall loan interest revenue and net interest margin by as much as 25% and 17%, respectively, by making card refinance loans to these customers (like those popularized by Lending Club, SoFi, and other fintechs).
  • One financial institution’s market test of refi loan offers among likely revolvers shows how this growth opportunity can be tapped.

In credit cards, scale matters and the largest card providers invest hundreds of millions annually in national marketing campaigns and have the national reach to establish loyalty programs with major airlines, hotel chains, etc. They are subsequently rewarded with dominant market shares. In fact, the top 15 major card providers control 90% of the US credit card market. 

This shouldn’t be a cause for regret: credit cards’ elevated profits depend mostly on chronic indebtedness among the quarter to a third of cardholders who are heavy revolvers and carry unpaid balances through most of the year. Our analysis shows that many consumers are revolving debt on their credit cards—overwhelmingly to the top issuers. And a large portion of them are making sincere efforts to pay down their debt, making them attractive candidates for refinance loans.

Consumers who owe credit card debt are hidden to the majority of financial institutions. We analyzed a year’s worth of transaction data from the primary checking accounts at five participating financial institutions. Of the consumers who used their financial institution for their checking accounts, about sixty percent made identifiable payments each month on credit cards not issued by that bank, and those payments (both to cover recent spending as well as to pay off principal and interest debt) were equal to an astounding 29% of all payments debited from their accounts. That spending includes both lost interchange volume and interest that depletes those customers’ deposits and savings. And three-quarters of those card payments were to the top six national credit card issuers.

Tools that financial institutions can offer their customers, like white-labeled versions of Nickels’ Credit Card Coach, can help customers avoid adding to their debt (for example, by removing recurring expenses from their credit cards—or moving them to their debit cards). And they can help them overcome behavioral biases that issuers have exploited to prolong revolving indebtedness. (An example of such biases is the way many consumers vastly underestimate how long it would take to pay off their card debt if they just made the minimum monthly payment.)

Offering customers who qualify for installment loans to refinance their card debt can enable them to accelerate their debt pay-down by lowering interest costs (allowing a greater portion of loan payments to go to principal) and by providing a commitment device in the form of a fixed term and equal monthly payments that are easy to remember and budget for. And it represents a growth opportunity for financial institutions. Ultimately, helping customers pay down their card debt makes more funds available for them to build savings and resilience, and it can help consumers improve their credit scores.

Our analysis indicates that among the three-fifths of checking account customers who hold one or more “foreign” credit cards, nearly 40% (or about one-quarter of all checking account holders) are identifiable revolvers who are making more than just the minimum payment each month, demonstrating interest and ability to pay down their debt. Among the financial institutions who took part in this study and shared their customers’ checking transaction data, the numbers suggest that making refinance loan offers to such customers could enable the financial institution to triple their personal installment loan balances while immediately lowering their customers monthly interest costs and shortening their time in card debt

The Untapped Opportunity

Translating into dollar figures: the participating financial institutions had combined assets of $17 billion, but only $315 million in personal loans outstanding. Adding another $534 million in personal loans (the amount of revolved balances owed by customers whom Nickels estimates would qualify for refinancing) would add 3% to assets but provide a much larger bump to net interest margin, assuming such loans were made at between 9 and 12% APR, a typical amount for personal loans. 

Card revolvers as a group aren’t a homogeneous bunch. Some use their cards in lieu of installment sales finance (of which newly popular buy-now-pay-later loans are a new form of competition) to make large purchases. Others use their cards regularly as a source of liquidity financing, racking up balances during cash shortfalls or to cover unanticipated expenses and trying to pay down balances when cash isn’t so tight. These borrowers present different levels of risk to refi lenders, but analysis of card spending and checking account transactions can differentiate one from the other. 

Using analysis of checking account holders to target qualified revolvers (using evidence of making more-than-minimum-payments as a proxy for ability-to-pay), one financial institution was able to obtain impressive results from a card refi marketing test: after identifying nearly 22,000 likely revolvers, they sent a single email and/or post card to 15,800 of those customers and yielded a 1.2% conversion rate with over $2.4M of third-party card debt refinanced. The loans averaged $11,000, a 10% increase over their average
personal loan size for the same period of time.

How credit card management tools can build trust, lower credit risk, and bolster refinance opportunities

Refinancing credit card debt helps those customers who can avoid racking up more debt on their cards.  Unfortunately, the experience of Lending Club, Prosper, and others suggests that reloading high card balances is exactly what many refinance borrowers end up doing.  As one employee explained: “I would love to make loans to people who are over their heads in card debt, if I could tell those who will succeed in avoiding more card debt from those who won’t.”

Tools like Credit Card Coach start by asking the customer to link their credit card accounts and make data on their card spending and repayment available to the financial institution. The granular spending data provides more insight into how the customer is using their credit cards that wouldn’t be available on a typical credit report. Moreover, establishing such links enables the financial institution to provide immediate benefits such as helping their customer fully understand how much they’re paying each month/year in interest and what recurring or discretionary card spending they can easily cut down on to reduce or reverse their debt accumulation. Most importantly, the customer’s shared card data can enable the financial institution to serve as a confidential coach, there to help the customer pay down debt, build savings, and improve their credit score and overall financial health. 

As most car borrowers are also card borrowers, such tools are also a promising way to expand relationships with indirect auto borrowers, something that has always seemed attractive in theory but elusive in practice.

Strategically targeting credit card revolvers to help them shed their card debt is a new and evolving art. The benefits to the financial institution—increased loan revenue, expanded debit card use and interchange, and ultimately increased customer savings and deposits—are readily apparent. The financial institutions that participated in the Nickels study are committed to learning when and how customers can best take advantage of coaching tools and refi loans as they test how to capture this opportunity.

To access the full research brief published by Filene Research Institute click here.

The Revolvers Among Us: How Identifying Them Can Unlock Loan Growth and Improve Member Financial Well-Being

Author Nickels
Read time 7 minutes read time

Nickels partnered with five credit unions ranging from $200M to $7B in assets. We analyzed a year’s worth of their member checking account data and collaborated with Filene Research Institute to report the results.

More than half of Americans revolve on their credit card balances, deflating their credit scores and depleting their savings, especially when they prolong their indebtedness by making smaller monthly payments than they could. Members’ card indebtedness presents an opportunity for credit unions to grow their loan portfolios and net interest margin, while bolstering members’ financial health.

Analysis by Nickels of five credit unions’ checking account activity found:

  • Payments to card issuers among those with credit card accounts equaled an astounding 29% of their spending.
  • About one-quarter of all checking account holders were identifiable revolvers who make more than the minimum payment each month, demonstrating both interest and ability to pay down their debt.
  • The credit unions in the study could increase their overall loan interest revenue and net interest margin by as much as 25% and 17%, respectively, by making card refinance loans to these members (like those popularized by Lending Club, SOFI, and other fintechs).
  • One credit union’s market test of refi loan offers among likely revolvers shows how this growth opportunity can be tapped.

Credit unions have long envied credit cards’ profitability, but most lack the size necessary to compete with the dozen or so issuers that dominate that market. In credit cards, scale matters and the largest companies invest hundreds of millions annually in national marketing campaigns and have the national reach to establish loyalty programs with major airlines, hotel chains, etc. are rewarded with dominant market shares. 

This shouldn’t be a cause for regret: credit cards’ elevated profits depend mostly on chronic indebtedness among the quarter to a third of cardholders who are heavy revolvers and carry unpaid balances through most of the year. Our analysis shows that many credit union members are revolving debt on their credit cards—overwhelmingly to the top issuers.  And a large portion of them are making sincere efforts to pay down their debt, making them attractive candidates for refinance loans.

Members who owe credit card debt are hidden to credit unions. We analyzed a year’s worth of transaction data from members’ primary checking accounts at five participating credit unions. Of members who use their credit unions for their primary checking accounts, about sixty percent made identifiable payments each month on credit cards not issued by the credit union, and those payments (both to cover recent spending as well as to pay off principal and interest debt) were equal to an astounding 29% of all payments debited from their accounts. That spending includes both lost interchange volume and interest that depletes those members’ deposits and savings. And three-quarters of those card payments were to the top six national credit card issuers.

Tools that credit unions can offer their members, like white-labeled versions of Nickels’ Credit Card Coach, can help members avoid adding to their debt (for example, by removing recurring expenses from their credit cards—or moving them to their debit cards). And they can help members overcome behavioral biases that issuers have exploited to prolong revolving indebtedness. (An example of such biases is the way many consumers vastly underestimate how long it would take to pay off their card debt if they just made the minimum monthly payment.)

Offering members who qualify for installment loans to refinance their card debt can enable them to accelerate their debt pay-down by lowering interest costs (allowing a greater portion of loan payments to go to principal) and by providing a commitment device in the form of a fixed term and equal monthly payments that are easy to remember and budget for. And it represents a growth opportunity for credit unions. Ultimately, helping members pay down their card debt makes more funds available for them to build savings and resilience, and it can help members improve their credit scores.

Our analysis indicates that among the three-fifths of checking account members who hold one or more “foreign” credit cards, nearly 40% (or about one-quarter of all checking account holders) are identifiable revolvers who are making more than just the minimum payment each month, demonstrating interest and ability to pay down their debt. Among the five credit unions who took part in this study and shared their members’ checking transaction data, the numbers suggest that making refinance loan offers to such members could enable the credit unions to triple their personal installment loan balances while immediately lowering members’ monthly interest costs and shortening their time in card debt

The Untapped Opportunity

Translating into dollar figures: the participating credit unions had combined assets of $17 billion, but only $315 million in personal loans outstanding. Adding another $534 million in personal loans (the amount of revolved balances owed by members whom Nickels estimates would qualify for refinancing) would add 3% to assets but provide a much larger bump to net interest margin, assuming such loans were made at between 9 and 12% APR, a typical amount for personal loans. 

Card revolvers as a group aren’t a homogeneous bunch. Some use their cards in lieu of installment sales finance (of which newly popular buy-now-pay-later loans are a new form of competition) to make large purchases. Others use their cards regularly as a source of liquidity financing, racking up balances during cash shortfalls or to cover unanticipated expenses and trying to pay down balances when cash isn’t so tight. These borrowers present different levels of risk to refi lenders, but analysis of card spending and checking account transactions can differentiate one from the other. 

Using analysis of checking account holders to target qualified revolvers (using evidence of making more-than-minimum-payments as a proxy for ability-to-pay), one credit union was able to obtain impressive results from a card refi marketing test: after identifying nearly 22,000 likely revolvers, they sent a single email and/or post card to 15,800 of those members and yielded a 1.2% conversion rate with over $2.4M of third-party card debt refinanced. The loans averaged $11,000, a 10% increase over their average
personal loan size for the same period of time.

How credit card management tools can build trust, lower credit risk, and bolster refi opportunities

Refinancing credit card debt helps those members who can avoid racking up more debt on their cards.  Unfortunately, the experience of Lending Club, Prosper, and others suggests that reloading high card balances is exactly what many refi borrowers end up doing.  As one credit union loan officer explained: “I would love to make loans to people who are over their heads in card debt if I could tell those who will succeed in avoiding more card debt from those who won’t.”

Tools like Credit Card Coach start by asking the member to link their credit card accounts and make data on their card spending and repayment available to the credit union. The granular spending data provides more insight into how the member is using their credit cards that wouldn’t be available on a typical credit report. Moreover, establishing such links enables the credit union to provide immediate benefits such as helping the member fully understand how much they’re paying each month/year in interest and what recurring or discretionary card spending they can easily cut down on to reduce or reverse their debt accumulation. Most importantly, the member’s shared card data can enable the credit union to serve as a confidential coach, there to help the member pay down debt, build savings, and improve their credit score and overall financial health. 

As most car borrowers are also card borrowers, such tools are also a promising way to expand relationships with indirect auto borrowers, something that has always seemed attractive in theory but elusive in practice.

Strategically targeting credit card revolvers to help them shed their card debt is a new and evolving art. The benefits to the credit union—increased loan revenue, expanded debit card use and interchange, and ultimately increased member savings and deposits—are readily apparent. The credit unions that participated in the Nickels study are committed to learning when and how members can best take advantage of coaching tools and refi loans as they test how to capture this opportunity.

To access the full research brief published by Filene Research Institute click here.

Why Aren’t Smaller Financial Institutions Refinancing Their Consumers’ Third-Party Credit Card Debt?

Author Nickels
Read time 5 minutes read time

Credit cards have become an integral part of most consumers’ financial lives and it’s no wonder why – they provide financial flexibility, revolving access to short-term credit, and often, a range of perks like cash back, travel points, and exclusive member access. 

The benefits for issuers are even greater – they drive billions in revenue, create ongoing (often lifelong) relationships with cardholders, and generate mountains of actionable data. But the industry is incredibly consolidated and notoriously difficult to tap into. Just 15 institutions control over 90% of the $890B market, leaving the other 10,500+ smaller institutions to fight for a small piece of the pie.

Smaller banks and credit unions have made countless attempts to tap into the market, but they’re fighting an uphill battle. Despite offering lower APRs, fewer fees, and greater support, they struggle to compete against larger institutions’ reputations, budgets, and partnerships.

But there’s another way in.

The opportunity 

Despite what the major card issuers would have consumers believe, credit cards are not all sunshine and rainbows. Over 150 million American consumers are indebted to the big 15 institutions, costing them over $115 billion in interest and fees on their credit cards each year. This leaves community banks and credit unions with consumers who have less money in their wallets, lower credit scores, and fewer banking opportunities.

Rather than expanding their credit card programs and trying to compete with the major issuers, smaller financial institutions should look inwards to unlock the revenue opportunity hidden amongst their consumers: refinancing.

By refinancing their consumers’ third-party credit card debt into their own personal loan and balance transfer products, community banks and credit unions can tap into the market while improving their consumers’ financial health.

Obstacles

So what’s stopping smaller institutions from refinancing their consumers’ third-party debt into their own loan products? A few things:

Lack of insight. Unless consumers are upfront about their revolving third-party debt, community banks and credit unions don’t know about it. And even if they are aware, they don’t have processes to keep track of or act on it.

Consumer behavior. The local, community-oriented feel of smaller institutions is a selling point for many consumers. However, since there is often shame associated with credit card debt, consumers may shy away from discussing it or visiting a branch if they don’t want others to know about it.

Nimble competition. Since credit card debt is often a private issue, some consumers take to the internet to find a solution. But as soon as they search for refinance options, they’re targeted by fintechs that spend millions of dollars on ads to beat traditional institutions to the punch.

Limited risk assessment. Revolving credit card debt hurts consumers’ credit scores. And since most banks and credit unions still rely heavily on credit scores to assess risk, many consumers do not meet eligibility requirements, even if they have a long history of making payments.

Lack of resources. Even though most banks and credit unions have the data to unlock these revenue opportunities, few have the resources to analyze it, identify candidates, create refinance campaigns, handle applications, and issue loans.

Rigid operations. Banks and credit unions operate on proven business models that have been in use for centuries. Creating new departments and processes for alternative revenue models is a drastic change that would take time, resources, and money that they are not ready or able to spend.

How can financial institutions take action?

It’s clear that thousands of community banks and credit unions are sitting on a massive opportunity, so what can they do next? In order to move forward, institutions must first consider how they will handle refinancing from an operational perspective:

1. Analysis

Institutions that want to help their consumers overcome debt and tap into the third-party credit card market can start with analysis. The opportunity is clear and the data is there, they just need to find the resources to dive in. By analyzing consumers’ checking account data, they can identify which of its consumers are paying which of the major providers, and how much they’re paying. However, without Nickels, they won’t know how much their consumers owe and whether or not they are revolving on their debt – two key data points for identifying refinance opportunities.

2. Outreach

After an institution has identified which of its consumers are paying the major providers, it can build an outreach campaign to connect with them. With dedicated landing pages and targeted offers, banks and credit unions can drive consumers to apply for their personal loan and balance transfer products. However, without deeper insights into their consumers’ payment patterns, institutions will only have a broad list of consumers paying the major providers and may struggle to target the right consumers at the right time.

3. Review

Once an institution has completed a refinance campaign, it should dedicate time to review and assess outcomes. This will help them better understand what is and isn’t working, where they’re falling short, and how to improve their approach. With the right resources, banks and credit unions can create processes for the entire campaign to turn it into an ongoing revenue stream.

A more effective and scalable solution

As a community bank or credit union, refinancing third-party credit card debt is not as easy as 1-2-3. It requires a great deal of expertise, commitment, time, and resources to execute, and many smaller financial institutions are not equipped to take on such a task. Fortunately, there’s a better way. 

Nickels can analyze an institution’s checking account data to identify the best candidates for refinancing and quantify the market opportunity for refinancing their debt into loan products. Then, we can target the identified revolvers with the right messaging and timing to drive refinance applications. It’s a consistent, scalable process that allows smaller institutions to tap into the third-party credit card market by helping their consumers.

Nickels Announces $4.0 Million Seed Financing Round

Author Nickels
Read time 3 minutes read time

ANN ARBOR, Michigan, Oct. 12, 2022 – Nickels, a fintech company that helps banks and credit unions improve their consumers’ credit card health and unlock new revenue streams, announced the closing of $4.0 million in seed financing. This funding will be used to expand the company’s product capabilities, recruit top talent, and accelerate Nickels’ partnerships with banks and credit unions. The round was led by Flyover Capital and Reseda Group, with participation from Detroit Venture Partners and Michigan Rise.

Americans are charged more than $110 billion in interest and fees on their credit cards every year, and that number is only expected to grow. Inflation and the rising cost of living have caused consumers to take on more credit card debt than ever (averaging $8,942 per household, according to WalletHub), and rising interest rates are making that debt even costlier. Nickels will leverage this funding to expand its reach and increase its impact on improving Americans’ financial health.

In the age of digital banking, more consumers expect their financial institutions to support their financial health, but feel that few are meeting those expectations. “We see an opportunity for innovative financial institutions to stand out from their competition by applying technology to support their consumers’ financial health. We’re excited by Nickels’ opportunity to help community banks and credit unions continue to play an important role in people’s financial lives.” said Thad Langford, Managing Partner at Flyover Capital.

“We strive to help people achieve their financial goals by supporting promising fintech companies in the financial wellness space through strategic investments and partnerships. Nickels’ mission closely aligns with our goals at Reseda, and we’re very excited about their initiative to help credit unions support members’ credit card health.” said Ben Maxim, CTO at Reseda Group.

“The US credit card market is incredibly consolidated with just 15 major banks controlling over 90% of the $850 billion+ card market. Our solution helps the other 10,500+ banks and credit unions support their consumers with whatever credit cards they’re using. This improves an important aspect of their consumers’ financial health and creates opportunities for our banking clients to refinance their consumers’ credit card debt, which is a win-win for the bank and their consumers.” said Founder and CEO Joseph Gracia.

Nickels’ financial wellness solution empowers banks and credit unions to help their consumers overcome credit card debt and build positive habits. It begins with an analysis of anonymized checking account data to identify refinance opportunities within the institutions’ existing consumer base, alongside a marketing toolkit that helps them connect with those consumers to refinance their third-party debt. Institutions then roll out Credit Card Coach, a white-label web application where consumers link in their third-party credit cards to receive personalized advice about managing payments, controlling spending, and improving credit scores. This third-party card data is fed back to the institution to continually identify consumers who would benefit from refinancing their third-party credit card debt into the institutions’ own loan product