Episodi

  • Homes, Hope, And A Heavyweight’s Heart
    Jan 21 2026

    A bed behind a safe door shouldn’t feel extraordinary, yet for many families it is. We sit down with former MMA fighter and Fight for the Forgotten founder Justin Wren to unpack how land, water, and shelter form a chain that pulls people from survival to stability. Justin shares the turn from fighting people to fighting for people, and the practical steps his team uses to help communities secure land rights, drill wells, build homes, and launch livelihoods. His stories of sweat equity, trust, and dignity reveal a blueprint for real change that resonates far beyond the rainforest.

    We connect those lessons to the challenges facing U.S. homebuyers: constrained inventory, rising costs, and a lending culture that can feel distant. Our conversation explores how credit unions can honor risk while rebuilding the human connection, using coaching, transparent pathways, and “hand up” models that reward effort and readiness. We talk candidly about perception, why community lenders get labeled as overly strict, and how consistent action and clear stories shift that narrative over time.

    From a grandmother opening the door to her first bed to a vocational hub training carpenters and welders, Justin shows what happens when purpose meets persistence. The message for lenders, members, and neighbors is the same: action beats talk. Join us for a grounded, hopeful look at homeownership, community impact, and the everyday choices that open doors, literally and figuratively. If this conversation moves you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help others find the show.

    Sponsored by Xactus

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    54 min
  • How A Credit Union Lender Turned A Conference Debut Into A Career Breakthrough
    Jan 7 2026

    The market didn’t get easier last year, so we sharpened our approach. We invited mortgage loan officer Allie Hager to discuss a year of stretching her skills, finding her voice at ACUMA's Make Your Mark Annual Conference in Denver, and transforming a 10-minute ACUMAx talk into a playbook for sustainable growth at a credit union. The big idea is bold and straightforward: grow where you’re rooted. Instead of chasing new logos or roles, Allie shows how to turn your current platform into a launchpad by doubling down on member trust, Realtor certainty, and workflows that make lending feel human again.

    We walk through the realities of 2025 origination and the tactics that actually moved the needle: clean pre-approvals, proactive updates, and tech that removes friction without losing warmth. Allie shares her favorite moments from ACUMA's Annual Conference, including unexpected connections. She also opens up about ACUMAx. The prep, the nerves, and the momentum it created for a longer talk that blends mindset with execution. Along the way, we delve into why credit unions are uniquely positioned to excel in fairness, transparency, and local market knowledge.

    If you’re a credit union leader, lender, or marketer looking for practical ways to grow when refis are thin and buyers feel stuck, this conversation delivers: better Realtor partnerships, member-first communication, and data-driven insight that keeps you relevant. We close with what’s ahead for 2026 VIEWpoint Regional Summits, community experiences, and a renewed commitment to collaboration over competition. Tune in, take notes, and tell us how you’re growing where you’re rooted this year.

    Subscribe, share with a colleague, and leave a review so more credit union pros can find the show.

    Sponsored by Polygon Research

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    41 min
  • Inside The Road To Housing, CFPB Turmoil, And A Possible Shutdown
    Dec 26 2025

    Housing policy is moving, stalling, and evolving all at once, so we brought in policy analyst Joel Herberman, from Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, to cut through the noise. We begin with the Road to Housing Act, its removal from the defense bill, and how the House’s Housing for the 21st Century Act could still deliver meaningful reforms. From streamlined permitting to higher FHA loan limits and modern definitions that encompass modular and prefab, we identify the areas of genuine bipartisan overlap and the sticking points that will require genuine negotiation and a reliable legislative vehicle to support them.

    We delve into small-dollar mortgages and the affordability conundrum. Joel explains how points-and-fees adjustments or competent pilots could make sub-$200,000 loans workable again in markets that need them most. Credit unions are well-positioned to lead in this area, filling the gap where commission-driven models often overlook low-balance loans. Tie that to modular and prefab growth, and you get a practical pathway to expand entry-level homeownership without compromising safety and soundness.

    Then we turn to the CFPB leadership extensions, legal battles over funding, and what lenders should watch while the courts weigh in. The Bureau’s agenda isn’t disappearing, but timing and intensity may swing. We conclude with the January shutdown odds, what a partial funding landscape means for agencies, and a forward look at 2026: renewed GSE reform efforts, potential stock market movements, and a push for federal-level AI rules to avoid a 50-state patchwork. Throughout, we share practical steps for credit unions and mortgage teams to stay resilient with strong cash management, clear member communication, and model governance as AI matures.

    If this helped you make sense of a chaotic policy map, follow the show, share it with a colleague, and leave a quick review so others can find it. What housing reform do you want Congress to prioritize next?

    Sponsored by Loan Vision.

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    28 min
  • How A Small Team Built Big Momentum And What We’re Planning Next
    Dec 10 2025

    Year-end reflections are only useful if they’re honest, and that’s exactly where we go. We relive the moments that truly moved our community, an after party that validated creative risk, a rock paper scissors icebreaker that turned strangers into allies, and a pet partners activation that brought calm and joy to a packed annual. Alongside the wins, we get candid about what fell short: convention center logistics that thinned out late sessions, AV and lighting cues that needed tighter coordination, and a reminder that food quality can influence how people feel about everything else in the day.

    From there, we lay out a sharper 2026 playbook for credit union mortgage professionals: three experiential summits designed for practical learning and real connection. Dallas adds that honky tonk energy and live music for fast rapport, St. Louis pairs content with a behind-the-scenes look at Anheuser-Busch to mirror operational excellence, and Baltimore brings heritage and innovation together at the Inner Harbor and Guinness Open Gate. We also double down on our network meetings for servicing and underwriting, and expand YPN with monthly meetups so emerging leaders get more reps, more mentorship, and more visibility.

    You’ll hear why we’re shifting back to integrated hotel venues to improve session stickiness and casual collisions, how we’ll sequence general sessions with big panels and solo voices for better rhythm, and what we’re changing about production prep to keep live moments crisp. We also open up about the personal side of delivery, time, balance, and the discipline to slow down when the calendar finally does. Through it all, our focus stays on tangible member value: cleaner messaging around data products like our HMDA-driven analysis, clearer “why now” framing, and formats that make people want to stay in the room.

    If this conversation resonates, subscribe, share with a colleague, and leave a quick review. Your feedback shapes the experiences we build next.

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    37 min
  • Shutdown Ends, Housing Policy Heats Up
    Nov 28 2025

    A budget standoff ends, the lights come back on in Washington, and the housing world braces for what comes next. We examine the real consequences for lenders and borrowers when Congress relies on short-term fixes, including delayed hearings, stalled reauthorizations, and programs like flood insurance that are repeatedly pushed to the next deadline. With the continuing resolution in place, HUD and the CDFI Fund are back to full strength, which is good news for credit unions serving underserved communities. However, the timeline only stretches to January, and the policy stakes are rising.

    Our conversation turns to the CFPB’s funding uncertainty after a new DOJ opinion argues the Bureau can only draw from Federal Reserve profits. With the Fed operating at a loss, future transfers are at risk, and rulemaking could slow just as the market debates bold affordability ideas. We break down FHFA’s high-profile float of 50-year mortgages along with portable and assumable loans, explaining how each tool targets different pain points. Lower payments help some buyers but slow equity growth; portability and assumability fight the rate lock that freezes inventory. The throughline is suitability and guardrails; product design must pair with strong underwriting and clear disclosures to avoid past mistakes.

    We also chart the path of the ROAD to Housing Act, a rare bipartisan package that passed the Senate Banking Committee unanimously and may be included in the NDAA. Even a slimmer version could deliver practical wins for supply, program efficiency, and access, with standalone options if the defense bill route falters. Along the way, we separate the myths from the mechanics: affordability is as much about access to down payments as it is about monthly payments.

    Like what you heard? Subscribe, share with a colleague, and leave a five-star review to help more listeners find the show. For episode links and updates, visit acuma.org and follow us on LinkedIn.

    Sponsored by Loan Vision.

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    32 min
  • Homes Build Wealth, Credit Unions Deliver
    Nov 12 2025

    Ready to rethink mortgages as more than a product line? We sit down with Jerry Reed, President and CEO of Member First Mortgage, to unpack why home lending is the most powerful lever credit unions have to build member wealth, stabilize neighborhoods, and win long-term relationships. Jerry makes a compelling case that mortgages are more than just loans — they’re a mission. They collect the richest data in consumer finance, open the door to personalized guidance, and tie members to the institution at life’s most pivotal financial moment.

    We delve into the roadblocks that prevent many credit unions from committing to mortgages, including regulatory burden, tech complexity, staffing fluctuations, and fear of market cycles, among others. Jerry shares a practical blueprint for entering or scaling with confidence: partner with a mortgage-focused CUSO for overflow fulfillment, compliance, and secondary execution; utilize purchase or INPP channels to add assets and income; then sequence hiring for loan officers, processors, and underwriters as volume and competence grow. Along the way, we discuss the tools that matter: LOS stability, pricing and hedging, and eClose, as well as why realtor outreach and consistent turn times are key to unlocking purchase market share.

    The conversation also tackles mission drift. Jerry traces the movement from people helping people to growth-at-all-costs, and why board leadership must reset priorities around member outcomes: lower closing costs, transparent pricing, real education on credit and affordability, and broader access for first-time and underserved buyers. The payoff is more than brand goodwill; it’s sustainable member loyalty, stronger communities, and resilient balance sheets built on homes rather than hype.

    If you lead lending, strategy, or member experience at a credit union, this is a playbook for acting with purpose and precision in today’s market. Tune in now!

    Sponsored by Optimal Blue

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    57 min
  • Inside DC’s Standoff and the Road to Housing Act: What Credit Unions Need to Know
    Oct 31 2025

    When Washington grinds to a halt, households and lenders feel the tremors long before the headlines fade. We break down the current full federal shutdown, why ACA subsidy deadlines hardened the standoff, how “essential” designations keep some services moving while paychecks stall, and where the real economic bruises show up if this stretches from weeks into months. From missing jobs reports and data gaps that complicate interest-rate decisions to airport slowdowns and household cash flow stress, we connect the dots to mortgages, servicing, and credit union balance sheets.

    Then we pivot to a rare bright beam: the Road to Housing Act. It’s the most extensive housing package to move in years, and it cleared the Senate Banking Committee unanimously before hitching a ride on the NDAA. We unpack how “Senate magic” pushed it forward, why the House lacks a clean counterpart, and what the conference process looks like when the little four corners start trading priorities. For credit unions and lenders, this could mean incremental but meaningful improvements to housing supply, financing access, and community development—provided the final text survives the House-Senate negotiations.

    We also surface risks hiding in plain sight: the lapse in federal flood insurance during peak storm season, the legal and operational uncertainty from RIFs aimed at programs like the CDFI Fund and HUD, and what that means for community institutions already stretched by high rates and tight inventory. Throughout, Zach Fister offers a clear map of the politics, the policy, and the practical steps leaders can take now—member outreach for furloughed workers, skip-a-pay frameworks, pipeline reviews in flood zones, and rate-lock strategies when official data go dark.

    If you value straight, helpful guidance on housing and policy without the noise, you’ll find it here. Subscribe, share with a colleague who needs the signal, and leave a review to help more listeners navigate a tricky moment with clarity.

    Sponsored by Loan Vision.


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    39 min
  • How A Credit Union Lifer Scales Impact With Fintech
    Oct 29 2025

    What if the best way to serve members one-on-one is to scale their guidance to thousands? That’s the question we explore with Homebot’s Nicole Herrick, a credit union veteran who moved from the teller line and branch leadership to a fintech seat where impact multiplies. We dig into how “people helping people” becomes a practical strategy in mortgage lending, why credit unions scrutinize technology differently, and how vendors can genuinely support member outcomes without losing the human touch.

    Nicole shares the journey from community-first banking to platforms that deliver personalized homeowner insights at scale. We talk about speaking the credit union language, aligning tools to culture, and measuring success by loyalty, retention, and clarity for members navigating equity, affordability, and timing. Expect straight talk on vendor fit, the patience required for two- to three-year relationship cycles, and the power of authentic partnerships that outlast budget shifts. Along the way, we trade stories about career pivots, purpose, and the small choices that build trust inside lending teams and across communities.

    You’ll come away with a clear playbook: connect features to member value, prioritize education through the mortgage life cycle, and choose partners who match your cadence, not just your price point. You’ll also meet the human behind the role, family-fueled motivation, a home that doubles as a friendly “petting zoo,” and a sense of fun. Subscribe now, share this episode with a colleague who sells to or leads within a credit union, and leave a review to tell us your best long-game win.

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    41 min