Despite underwhelming loan growth, so far this year we have seen net interest income and profitability expand at most credit unionsThe as cost of funds pressures have eased and more assets have rolled over into a higher rate environment. This sets up what could be a “bumper” year for net interest income in 2025. But what can we expect as we look forward to 2026?
The market increasingly expects the Federal Reserve to cut short-term interest rates by 100 basis points over the coming year. But unlike past cycles, this won’t necessarily unleash a wave of mortgage refinancing.
Why? Because long-term rates, like 10- and 30-year Treasury and mortgage rates, remain relatively elevated, holding steady near 7% for most conforming mortgages. That leaves most existing mortgage borrowers “out of the money” to refinance.
But that doesn’t mean balance sheets are immune from income pressure. In fact, the next rate environment could quietly compress margin and create reinvestment challenges for credit unions that aren’t prepared.
Here’s what you should be watching, and doing, now.
While we don’t expect heavy mortgage refinancing, moderate prepayments could still pick up in:
📌 Why it matters: The result is earlier-than-expected principal return on both loans and investments. That forces you to reinvest in a lower-yielding environment, even if you don't face a classic refinance surge.
While falling short-term rates may ease your funding costs, the impact is limited:
📌 Why it matters: Your cost of funds may only come down modestly, while asset yields slowly decline due to early paydowns and reinvestment at lower rates—compressing margin over time.
📌 Action: Build a reinvestment strategy that prioritizes yield preservation and predictable cash flow, even if modest runoff occurs.
Rather than shortening or extending duration outright, restructure it to protect yield and retain flexibility:
📌 Action: Shift toward assets with less optionality and more consistent income in a falling-rate, while slowing rate of reinvestment.
📌 Action: Use CD repricing as a tactical lever to defend margin without triggering deposit runoff. Remember, it is significantly more expensive to bring in a new deposit relationship than it is to maintain a deposit relationship.
📌 Action: Ensure income-at-risk simulations reflect the real behavior of your members and products, not just what the model assumes.
This isn't a classic falling-rate environment. We're not expecting a flood of mortgage refinances or an immediate earnings shock.
But we are entering a phase where moderate loan runoff, embedded option risk, and limited relief on funding costs will gradually pressure margins—especially for credit unions with large prepayable loan and investment portfolios, and CD funding from new (or non-) members who are rate sensitive.
The best-positioned institutions will act now, before rates move, by rebalancing investments, refining their funding strategy, and building income resilience from the inside out.