22 Minutes in Lending: Conversations about Credit Unions, Fintech, and Future of Finance

LendKey: Lending Made Simple

22 Minutes in Lending is a podcast that brings you leading conversations on lending. Join host Vince Passione as he engages with industry leaders and discusses trends and current news in the lending industry. Here, we hone in on how it’s about more than just the balance sheet, and focus on what it takes to build meaningful and lasting lending relationships.

  1. 22 Minutes on The Big Beautiful Bill + Student Loans

    MAR 16

    22 Minutes on The Big Beautiful Bill + Student Loans

    The Big Beautiful Bill is set to upend student lending starting July 1, 2026, with changes to everything from loan amount caps to repayment options to program availability. In this episode, John Volpini, VP of Relationship Management at Sallie Mae, draws on his decades of industry experience to explain how these changes will affect the private student lending market — and how credit unions can seize the opportunity. Key Takeaways 01:35: DOGE cuts eliminated around half of FSA's staff, leaving schools stressed and under-guided as they race to implement major loan reforms by July 1st. 05:14: Grad PLUS eliminated, Parent PLUS capped at $20K/year, and graduate loans now have hard lifetime limits — John ranks this second only to the 2010 federal takeover in significance. 08:50: Federal PLUS loans carry a 4.266% origination fee that inflates the true APR, meaning top-tier credit borrowers will frequently find private loans equal to or cheaper — something most families don't know. 15:26: The Bill cuts $8–10B in annual federal loan volume, with approximately $1.2B shifting to private lending in 2026 and growing to $5.2B over three years — capacity the market can handle. 18:01: Unlike undergrad loans (90% co-signed), John expects 60–70% of graduate private loans to be unsupported, improving approval rates as better-credit grad students enter the private market for the first time. 21:05: For the first time, Pell Grants will cover workforce and trade programs — a move John sees as positive, reinforcing his longstanding advice: free money first, federal second, private gap financing third. Resources Mentioned: https://www.elmresources.com/

    25 min
  2. 22 Minutes on the Proposed 10% Credit Card Interest Rate Cap

    FEB 25

    22 Minutes on the Proposed 10% Credit Card Interest Rate Cap

    While lawmakers debate a proposed 10% credit card interest rate cap, credit unions are asking what this could mean for access to credit, profitability and member relationships. In this episode, credit card expert David Shipper of Datos Insights takes a deep dive into the potential impact of legislative rate caps, what could happen to credit card programs, and what credit union leaders should be doing now. Key Takeaways 02:11: David explains that the bill is extremely blunt: a flat 10% APR cap on all credit card interest, with no distinctions for cash advances, default rates, or risk tiers. 04:50: David outlines how a cap would reduce approvals, shrink credit lines, and push consumers toward worse alternatives like payday loans or BNPL. 09:38: David agrees that credit union leaders are right to be concerned: many programs could become unprofitable, leading to fewer approvals and higher fees. 11:46: Despite the risks, David argues credit unions could gain market share because their rates already average around 12–13%. 16:21: David warns that state-by-state caps would create a patchwork of rules, disadvantaging local credit unions while national banks export higher rates. 20:31: David outlines practical steps that credit unions can do now: speed up digital applications, enable instant approvals, offer digital card issuance, and reevaluate fees to ensure sustainability. Resources Mentioned: https://datos-insights.com/ https://www.americascreditunions.org/

    27 min
  3. 12% in 12 Months: What's Behind Veridian's Impressive Loan Growth

    11/03/2025

    12% in 12 Months: What's Behind Veridian's Impressive Loan Growth

    While many credit unions grapple with low liquidity and a high cost of borrowing, Iowa-based Veridian seems to be bucking the trend. In this episode, the credit union's CLO, Kara Van Wert, discusses how her team is winning with younger members, using fintech to drive growth, and embracing AI to improve underwriting and streamline borrowing ... and the results are there for all to see. Key Takeaways: 01.25: An overview of why Veridian's average membership age is so much younger than their peer set.02.49: Reflections on risk management, particularly relating to ongoing loan portfolios that were inflated in the wake of the pandemic.05.25: Kara discusses how Veridian's mindset regarding fintech has evolved from viewing them purely as competitors to seeing them as critical partners.07.17: The impact of AI on Veridian's lending and underwriting processes, in the past, present, and in the future.11.10: How the credit union looks to mitigate bias in AI models and ensure inclusive lending.14.25: How Veridian has grown loans by 12% year-on-year, from $6.5 billion to $7.2 billion.18.00: Exploring Veridian's auto program and how much that has contributed to their strong loan growth.19.57: The challenges of increasing cost of funds, and how credit unions can navigate them. Resources Mentioned: Veridian Credit Union: www.veridiancu.org LendKey: www.LendKey.com Zest AI: www.zest.ai Thanks for listening to the 22 Minutes in Lending podcast. If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review to help get the word out about the show and be sure to subscribe so you never miss another insightful conversation. #CreditUnions #Fintech #22MinutesInLending

    25 min
  4. Why Education Lending Challenges Credit Unions

    10/14/2025

    Why Education Lending Challenges Credit Unions

    Mick Olson, President and CEO of TopLine Financial Credit Union, joins 22 Minutes in Lending host Vince Passione to talk growth, strategy, and the overlooked opportunity of education lending. With $1.1B in assets and 70,000+ members, TopLine has proven education loans can be profitable, member-friendly, and a pipeline for lifelong relationships. So why do so many credit unions still sit on the sidelines? Mick breaks down the misconceptions, the risk-sharing model that works, and how TopLine turned hesitation into a growth driver. Key Takeaways: 01:10 – From $35 to $1.1B, TopLine’s 90-year glow-up from seven AT&T employees to 70K members.03:27 – Cutting the average member age by a decade, with education lending in the mix.04:49 – Post-conversion lines out the door prove face-to-face isn’t dead.07:44 – Where unsecured and education loans fit without blowing up balance sheet risk.10:27 – Why LendKey’s structure finally made education lending a yes.11:33 – The mindset holding credit unions back from education lending.13:26 – Federal cuts will spike private loan demand, and why credit unions can’t ignore it.16:06 – How TopLine pairs culture, brand, and a balanced product mix to stand out.18:13 – Why the tax exemption fight is always there, and the questions credit unions can ask to stay ready.19:02 – Why credit union’s need their own regulator.20:14 – TopLine’s five-year focus: more education, more counseling, more real help for members living paycheck-to-paycheck.Resources Mentioned: TopLine Financial Credit Union: https://www.toplinecu.com/ Member Student Lending: https://www.memberstudentlending.com/ LendKey: https://www.lendkey.com/ Thanks for listening to the 22 Minutes in Lending podcast. If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review to help get the word out about the show and be sure to subscribe so you never miss another insightful conversation. #CreditUnions #Fintech #22MinutesInLending

    23 min
5
out of 5
14 Ratings

About

22 Minutes in Lending is a podcast that brings you leading conversations on lending. Join host Vince Passione as he engages with industry leaders and discusses trends and current news in the lending industry. Here, we hone in on how it’s about more than just the balance sheet, and focus on what it takes to build meaningful and lasting lending relationships.

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