Can an American pope apply US-style fundraising and standards to fix troubled Vatican finances?
That kind of make-do-with-less, fix-it-yourself mentality could serve Pope Leo XIV well as he addresses one of the greatest challenges facing him as pope: The Holy See's chronic, 50 million to 60 million euro ($57-68 million) structural deficit, 1 billion euro ($1.14 billion) pension fund shortfall and declining donations that together pose something of an existential threat to the central government of the 1.4-billion strong Catholic Church.
As a Chicago-born math major, canon lawyer and two-time superior of his global Augustinian religious order, the 69-year-old pope presumably can read a balance sheet and make sense of the Vatican's complicated finances, which have long been mired in scandal. Whether he can change the financial culture of the Holy See, consolidate reforms Pope Francis started and convince donors that their money is going to good use is another matter.
Leo already has one thing going for him: his American-ness. U.S. donors have long been the economic life support system of the Holy See, financing everything from papal charity projects abroad to restorations of St. Peter's Basilica at home. Leo's election as the first American pope has sent a jolt of excitement through U.S. Catholics, some of whom had soured on donating to the Vatican after years of unrelenting stories of mismanagement, corruption and scandal, according to interviews with top Catholic fundraisers, philanthropists and church management experts.
'I think the election of an American is going to give greater confidence that any money given is going to be cared for by American principles, especially of stewardship and transparency,' said the Rev. Roger Landry, director of the Vatican's main missionary fundraising operation in the U.S., the Pontifical Mission Societies.
'So there will be great hope that American generosity is first going to be appreciated and then secondly is going to be well handled,' he said. 'That hasn't always been the circumstance, especially lately.'
Reforms and unfinished business
Pope Francis was elected in 2013 on a mandate to reform the Vatican's opaque finances and made progress during his 12-year pontificate, mostly on the regulatory front. With help from the late Australian Cardinal George Pell, Francis created an economy ministry and council made up of clergy and lay experts to supervise Vatican finances, and he wrestled the Italian-dominated bureaucracy into conforming to international accounting and budgetary standards.
He authorized a landmark, if deeply problematic, corruption trial over a botched London property investment that convicted a once-powerful Italian cardinal. And he punished the Vatican's Secretariat of State that had allowed the London deal to go through by stripping it of its ability to manage its own assets.
But Francis left unfinished business and his overall record, at least according to some in the donor community, is less than positive. Critics cite Pell's frustrated reform efforts and the firing of the Holy See's first-ever auditor general, who says he was ousted because he had uncovered too much financial wrongdoing.
Despite imposing years of belt-tightening and hiring freezes, Francis left the Vatican in somewhat dire financial straits: The main stopgap bucket of money that funds budgetary shortfalls, known as the Peter's Pence, is nearly exhausted, officials say. The 1 billion euro ($1.14 billion) pension fund shortfall that Pell warned about a decade ago remains unaddressed, though Francis had planned reforms. And the structural deficit continues, with the Holy See logging an 83.5 million euro ($95 million) deficit in 2023, according to its latest financial report.
As Francis' health worsened, there were signs that his efforts to reform the Vatican's medieval financial culture hadn't really stuck, either. The very same Secretariat of State that Francis had punished for losing tens of millions of euros in the scandalous London property deal somehow ended up heading up a new papal fundraising commission that was announced while Francis was in the hospital. According to its founding charter and statutes, the commission is led by the Secretariat of State's assessor, is composed entirely of Italian Vatican officials with no professional fundraising expertise and has no required external financial oversight.
To some Vatican watchers, the commission smacks of the Italian-led Secretariat of State taking advantage of a sick pope to announce a new flow of unchecked donations into its coffers after its 600 million euro ($684 million) sovereign wealth fund was taken away and given to another office to manage as punishment for the London fiasco.
'There are no Americans on the commission. I think it would be good if there were representatives of Europe and Asia and Africa and the United States on the commission,' said Ward Fitzgerald, president of the U.S.-based Papal Foundation. It is made up of wealthy American Catholics that since 1990 has provided over $250 million (219 million euros) in grants and scholarships to the pope's global charitable initiatives.
Fitzgerald, who spent his career in real estate private equity, said American donors — especially the younger generation — expect transparency and accountability from recipients of their money, and know they can find non-Vatican Catholic charities that meet those expectations.
'We would expect transparency before we would start to solve the problem,' he said.
That said, Fitzgerald said he hadn't seen any significant let-up in donor willingness to fund the Papal Foundation's project-specific donations during the Francis pontificate. Indeed, U.S. donations to the Vatican overall have remained more or less consistent even as other countries' offerings declined, with U.S. bishops and individual Catholics contributing more than any other country in the two main channels to donate to papal causes.
A head for numbers and background fundraising
Francis moved Prevost to take over the diocese of Chiclayo, Peru, in 2014. Residents and fellow priests say he consistently rallied funds, food and other life-saving goods for the neediest — experience that suggests he knows well how to raise money when times are tight and how to spend wisely.
He bolstered the local Caritas charity in Chiclayo, with parishes creating food banks that worked with local businesses to distribute donated food, said the Rev. Fidel Purisaca Vigil, a diocesan spokesperson.
In 2019, Prevost inaugurated a shelter on the outskirts of Chiclayo, Villa San Vicente de Paul, to house desperate Venezuelan migrants who had fled their country's economic crisis. The migrants remember him still, not only for helping give them and their children shelter, but for bringing live chickens obtained from a donor.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Prevost launched a campaign to raise funds to build two oxygen plants to provide hard-hit residents with life-saving oxygen. In 2023, when massive rains flooded the region, he personally brought food to the flood-struck zone.
Within hours of his May 8 election, videos went viral on social media of Prevost, wearing rubber boots and standing in a flooded street, pitching a solidarity campaign, 'Peru Give a Hand,' to raise money for flood victims.
The Rev. Jorge Millán, who lived with Prevost and eight other priests for nearly a decade in Chiclayo, said he had a 'mathematical' mentality and knew how to get the job done. Prevost would always be on the lookout for used cars to buy for use around the diocese, Millán said, noting that the bishop often had to drive long distances to reach all of his flock or get to Lima, the capital.
Prevost liked to fix them up himself, and if he didn't know what to do, 'he'd look up solutions on YouTube and very often he'd find them,' Millán told The Associated Press.
Before going to Peru, Prevost served two terms as prior general, or superior, of the global Augustinian order. While the order's local provinces are financially independent, Prevost was responsible for reviewing their balance sheets and oversaw the budgeting and investment strategy of the order's headquarters in Rome, said the Rev. Franz Klein, the order's Rome-based economist who worked with Prevost.
The Augustinian campus sits on prime real estate just outside St. Peter's Square and supplements revenue by renting out its picturesque terrace to media organizations (including the AP) for major Vatican events, including the conclave that elected Leo pope.
But even Prevost saw the need for better fundraising, especially to help out poorer provinces. Toward the end of his 12-year term and with his support, a committee proposed creation of a foundation, Augustinians in the World. At the end of 2023, it had 994,000 euros ($1.13 million) in assets and was helping fund self-sustaining projects across Africa, including a center to rehabilitate former child soldiers in Congo.
'He has a very good interest and also a very good feeling for numbers,' Klein said. 'I have no worry about the finances of the Vatican in these years because he is very, very clever.'
___
Franklin Briceño contributed from Lima, Peru.
___
Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Washington Post
a minute ago
- Washington Post
U.S. citizenship reviews will sharpen focus on ‘moral character,' memo says
The Trump administration has signaled it will further scrutinize immigrants seeking U.S. citizenship by ordering authorities to double down on efforts to determine whether applicants have 'good moral character,' according to a recent policy memo issued by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Wall Street sees stock market rotation charting 'healthiest path' to new highs
The stock market's rally to record highs has started to suggest some investors see life outside of the Big Tech names that have defined markets since 2023, as lagging sectors like Health Care (XLV) and Homebuilders (XHB) — as well as out-of-favor investments like small- and mid-cap stocks — have played a larger role in this summer's move. And some strategists see this rotation as an early sign that an even healthier market dynamic could be emerging. Scott Chronert, managing director of US equity strategy at Citi, sees this broader participation as framing out "two parallel paths" for the S&P 500 — one led by the AI-fueled growth giants and the other driven by more traditional sectors tied to the economy. "The simple answer is that we see ongoing Mega Cap Growth participation, if not leadership, but with fundamental and performance broadening creating a more durable structural setup," he said on Friday. "The healthiest path to higher index levels is a combination of Growth/Tech leadership persisting but with other areas of the market additive more so than has been the case this past year." Data from Bespoke Investment Group published Friday noted investors last week showed signs of moving out of 2025's biggest winners and into less-loved pockets of the market. Over the middle three trading days last week, Bespoke's work found stocks in the worst-performing decile this year among S&P 1500 companies were up an average of 6.7%; the best performers were up less than 1% over the same period. "When momentum names stall or sell-off, it can really hit the major indices hard if no other areas of the market are there to pick up the slack," Bespoke said. "But [last] week, the year's worst performers finally saw some buying interest as investors rotated across the market instead of out of it." Ed Yardeni of Yardeni Research added that rising expectations for a September Fed rate cut helped fuel the shift, sparking a rotation from growth to value and from large caps to small- and mid-cap stocks. "We certainly welcome such a broadening," he wrote in a Sunday note to clients. 'Significant headwinds' remain Sean Simonds, US equities strategist at UBS, described the current broadening setup as "a mixed bag," noting that AI-driven momentum is starting to spill into other adjacent areas like software, power, and re-shoring. Simonds added that after a wave of downward earnings revisions earlier this year, earnings breadth has also shown signs of improving. However, areas such as consumer and healthcare remain weaker, even if the outlook there has turned "less negative." Gerry Fowler, head of European equity strategy at UBS, added that small-cap stocks in particular depend on a 'Goldilocks' scenario in which the Fed manages to cut rates without spooking markets. "If Powell is able to stay out of the headlines and deliver the September cut in line with expectations, there is room for the broader market to remain quite healthy," Fowler said. "On either side of Goldilocks, you've got significant headwinds for the Russell 2000." Read more: How the Fed rate decision affects your bank accounts, loans, credit cards, and investments Fowler's cautious note echoes a broader concern on Wall Street, which is that signs of rotation among styles and sectors overstate the extent to which this shift sees investors actually preferring to put more money behind new themes. DataTrek Research noted in a recent report that just two of the S&P 500's 11 sectors — Technology (XLK) and Industrials (XLI) — have outperformed since the index's April lows. The firm also noted that the top 20 names in the index, or nearly half the S&P 500 on a market cap basis, are up more than 40% on average over that period. That concentration means the durability of the rally may hinge on whether new pockets of strength can sustain recent momentum. Looking ahead, Simonds cautioned that momentum could stall if earnings expectations fade or if the Fed delivers a surprise that clashes with market expectations. "There's still the possibility of earnings expectations slowing into the second half of this year and first half of next year," he said. 'And any disappointment out of Jackson Hole or into the September Fed meeting will definitely take some wind out of the sails as well." Allie Canal is a Senior Reporter at Yahoo Finance. Follow her on X @allie_canal, LinkedIn, and email her at Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Android Authority
30 minutes ago
- Android Authority
Verizon's loyalty discount mess is somehow getting worse
Edgar Cervantes / Android Authority TL;DR Verizon subscribers are reporting that the carrier is tricking them into accepting lower discounts. A new $10 discount on the My Verizon app replaced the existing $20 loyalty discount without warning. Some users say they were able to stack the two discounts, but many others report increased bills after unknowingly accepting the new offer. Verizon's loyalty discount mess seems to be getting worse. Users are now reporting that they are being tricked into accepting lower discounts, replacing higher existing benefits without warning. One Reddit user warned others not to accept a $10 discount prompt in the My Verizon app, since it canceled out their existing $20 discount and left them paying more. 'It prompted me for a $10 discount off my line, so I hit accept. That overrode the $20, increased my bill, and support says there's no way to revert,' the user wrote in frustration. Other subscribers chimed in with similar stories, saying they also felt deceived into accepting smaller discounts. To make matters worse, customers reported receiving follow-up emails with the subject line 'Good news — your bill just got lower,' even though their bills have actually gone up. 'Support agent has no way to revert. It's funny that after my $20 discount being replaced to $10 discount, I received an email titled as: good news – your bill just got lower, while in reality my bill just got higher, up $10 per month. Support agent also confirms my bill will go up $10 per month. The email title is 100% a lie in any means,' wrote a user. Not everyone is experiencing the same outcome, though. Some users say they were able to stack the new $10 loyalty discount on top of their existing $20 discount, suggesting Verizon may be applying these changes differently depending on the plan. Either way, it's worth calling customer care before accepting any new discount offers to make sure you're not losing benefits you already have. This all comes after Verizon confirmed plans to cut loyalty discounts, raise fees, and remove perks earlier this month, sparking backlash from customers who saw their bills going up. Verizon defended the changes as 'adjustments in line with market rates,' similar to what other carriers have done. Still, the company's handling of its most loyal customers has been a particular sore spot. Don't want to miss the best from Android Authority? Set us as a preferred source in Google Search to support us and make sure you never miss our latest exclusive reports, expert analysis, and much more. Loyalty discounts on Verizon are set to end as early as September 1, 2025, with users potentially losing between $10 and $25 per line. After confirming the cuts, Verizon later reinstated discounts for some customers who threatened to leave. In at least one case, a user said they even got a $20 monthly discount restored after filing a complaint with Verizon's CEO. But with these latest reports of misleading discount prompts and contradictory emails, Verizon isn't exactly winning any brownie points from long-time customers right now. Perhaps the carrier should consider clear communication so subscribers can at least know what they're in for instead of being taken by surprise. Follow