If you're aiming to expand your presence in certain markets, you could do worse than to direct the lion's share of your attention to an often overlooked group: Asian-Americans.
Estimated at nearly 20 million, this broad and culturally diverse community — one embracing populations from more than 40 countries and who speak dozens of languages — is impressive by almost any measure.
Just name one benchmark: Household income? Financial assets? Home ownership? Children sent off to college? Asian-Americans surpass (sometimes by a wide margin) statistics for the general U.S. population.
To boot, their numbers and financial clout are growing. That translates into more dollars available to spend on protection products, solutions that Asian-Americans have not, despite a mounting need, adopted as widely as their U.S. peers.
These are among the findings of a 2016 survey by Prudential Financial, "Asian-American Financial Experience." The focus of an August 25 media briefing hosted by Prudential at the Asia Society in New York City, the study delves into financial challenges the community shares with the larger U.S. population, from funding a secure retirement to managing expenses. Conducted by Harris poll in June, the survey authors polled 2,597 Americans (ages 25-70), about 2,100 of whom self-identify as Asian-Americans.
Agents and advisors looking to serve this community, the survey's authors stress, would do well to take a tailored, culturally attuned approach to prospecting, planning engagements and client servicing.
"Our survey results show that the need to for a nuanced, culturally acute roadmap to helping Asian-Americans realize their financial goals has never been greater," the report states. "Companies that take the time to understand and connect with them will be among those best positioned to serve them."
Best positioned, to be sure, if the connecting happens at the appropriate level, for the Asian-American community is hardly monolithic. The major subgroups — Chinese-, Japanese-, Philipino-, Indian-, Vietnamese- and Korean-Americans have "unique cultural experiences, traditions and histories" the report notes, that influence their financial preparedness, needs and outlook.
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Cultural differences
Chinese-Americans, for example, tend to have "higher-than-average" education and asset levels, occupy more professional positions, are "self-described savers," possess greater knowledge of "debt management and investing" and "own a greater diversity of financial products," than their survey peers. Pilipino-Americans, in contrast, are more likely than their counterparts to carry higher credit card debt, be employed in "a mix of manual and professional careers," and plan to work in retirement to supplement income.
The differences extend to financial savviness and access to information. Despite their comparative affluence, Chinese-Americans tend to not leverage the services of insurance and financial service professionals as much as other Asian-Americans.
"Chinese-Americans don't get a lot of exposure to the information and solutions we offer," says Hurong Lou, a Prudential advisor and panelist. "In contrast, Korean- and Indian-Americans get a lot more education about investments, insurance and managing risk. For different subgroups, the levels of financial information and education vary."
More striking than the differences are the commonalities among the groups polled. These shared characteristics — a greater propensity to save for one's golden years, invest in children's college education and prepare for financial emergencies — sets Asian-Americans apart from the general population. Consider these survey findings:
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Twenty-two percent of Asian-American parents surveyed say providing college tuition for their children is "highly important" to them, versus 14 percent of parents in the general population.
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Twenty-five percent say taking care of family members is a priority, versus 15 percent of the general population.
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Buying a home also is a top goal for 24 percent of Asian-Americans, versus 17 percent of the general population.
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Asian-Americans surveyed have a median personal income of $62,000 and median household income of $87,000, versus $42,000 and $62,000, respectively, for the general population.
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Asian-Americans estimate the value of their household financial assets, excluding their primary residence or a business, at $445,600, on average, compared with $385,500 for the general population. Seventeen percent of Asian-Americans — about one in every six — have at least $500,000 of equity in their homes, compared with 8 percent of the general population.
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Differences relative to the general population extend also to financial support and caring for family members. As the report notes:
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Fully a third of Asian-Americans identify themselves as caregivers for another person — typically a spouse, parent, other relative or special-needs child — compared with 21 percent of the general population surveyed.
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Seventy percent of Asian-American caregivers say they pay some of the living expenses of the person they're helping, including 31 percent who pay all those costs. By contrast, 57 percent of caregivers in the general population shoulder some of the living expenses of the person they're helping, including 28 percent who pay all the costs.
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Thirteen percent of Asian-Americans have parents or grandparents living with them, compared with 8 percent of the general population. And 20 percent of Asian-Americans provide financial assistance to relatives, versus only 6 percent of the general population.
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"What is most striking to me is that Asian-Americans, as a group, provide more financial support to relatives by almost a three-fold multiple of the general population — that's staggering," said Srinivas Reddy, a panelist and senior vice president and head of full service investments, Prudential Retirement, at the media briefing. "That says a lot about this demographic segment and their financial priorities."
(Srinivas is pictured here, to the right of Prudential's Smriti Sinha. Photo credit: Vladimir Gitt, Prudential Financial. Click on image to enlarge.)
Added Smriti Sinha, vice president of strategy initiation and development for Prudential individual life insurance: "My personal family experience dovetails with that of the larger [Asian-American] population. Actions do reflect our priorities. The community is doing its best to make sure that the extended family is supported and cared for."
Doing without financial assistance
Asian-Americans often are not cognizant of solutions and advice that might put their own finances on better footing. The report observes that fewer than 1 in 5 Asian-Americans (18 percent) work with a financial professional, compared with 26 percent of the general population.
Why the lower rate? Survey participants cite high fees, insufficient assets and a preference to "do it on my own" as reasons for sidestepping advisors. More so than the general population, Asian-Americans also responded that they "have never found someone I can trust."
The Prudential panelists differed as to the factors underpinning this lack of trust. Moderator Betty Liu, an anchor at Bloomberg Television, cited age as a factor: Older Asian-Americans, she suggested, may be less inclined than digitally-savvy and more culturally assimilated millennials to engaging the services of a financial professional. (Liu is pictured below, first from right. Photo credit: Vladimir Gitt, Prudential Financial. Click on image to enlarge.)
Prudential's Hurong Lou disagreed, arguing that cultural differences — more pronounced among first-generation immigrants than second- or third-generation Asian-Americans —account for the trust gap. As they become more Americanized, he said, they "let their guard down" making them more approachable.