Opportunity 1: Lack of Access. Solutions. o Opportunity 2: Too Much Access

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Personal Finance: U t Untapped dw Wealth-Building lth B ildi O Opportunities t iti National Conference of State Legislatures July 22, 22 2009 Matt Fellowes, Director Pew Safe Banking Opportunities Project

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Opportunity 1: Lack of Access o

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Opportunity 1: Lack of Access The unbanked market, at a broad level, is the share of households that we think do not have a basic bank account. For example: Source: Estimates based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau and the Federal Reserve s 2004 Survey of Consumer Finances

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Unbanked households widely use very expensive nonbanks for their basic financial services needs. Estimated typical fees paid to nonbank check cashers over one year by an unbanked, working household: h Amount spent on check-cashing cashing fees: $1,042 $21,908 Remaining income Additional i Unknown Direct Costs: Money orders, bill payment services, remittances Additional Unknown Indirect Costs: OPPORTUNITY COST = No or limited access to wealth-building credit or loans, often with higher prices than might be otherwise possible Source: Analysis of data from Fellowes and Mabanta, Banking on Wealth: America s New Retail Banking Infrastructure and Its Wealth-Building Potential (The Brookings Institution, 2008); profile fits the median household without a DFI account. Note: Check-cashing rate is based on the 50-state average. For more information, see Fellowes and Mabanta, Banking on Wealth

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access The majority of unbanked households would be financially better off by opening a basic bank account. This could potentially create tens of thousands of dollars in savings for millions of low-income workers.

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access In response, a growing number of cities and states have launched Bank On campaigns low-cost, public-private partnerships with the goal of connecting gqualified unbanked households with starter checking accounts. They are being motivated by evidence that indicates that the majority of unbanked households would financially benefit from opening a bank account. Here are six reasons why.

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access First, most unbanked households have acceptable financial profiles for most banks. Many households without t checking accounts, for instance, have steady, full-time jobs, and about half have never had a checking account in the past. Share of unbanked households that 64% Work full- time 25% Work part- time 11% Do not work 55% of these households have never had a bank account Source: Fellowes and Mabanta 2008, Converting Basic Financial Services Fees Into Prosperity: An Untapped Opportunity for Consumers and Banks (The Pew Charitable Trusts, 2008)

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Second, the most important reasons why people indicate they don t have a checking account point to trust and misperception barriers which can be broken down with the right marketing and partnerships, which Bank On provides. Size and distribution ib ti of unbanked segments Olde er 0.7 M 2.1 M 2% 6.9 M 20% 4.8 M 26% 69% 67% Younge er Age 31% 31% Limited Price Access Constrained 73% 7% Grown Skeptics 74% Young Doubters Age Distribution > 65 35-65 < 35 Structural Constraints Rationale Perception Constraints Note: Data relevant to 2.2 percent margin of error with 95 percent confidence level Source: Booz & Company

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Third, banks have the grounds to compete with the nonbank check cashers currently serving the segment of the qualified market. For example: Share of full-service check cashers located within one mile of a bank/credit union, by state Located within 1 mile of a bank/credit union More than 1 mile however, recent survey findings indicate that service hours may remain an access barrier. Source: Analysis of data from state licensing agencies, FDIC, and U.S. Census Bureau

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access For instance, this is Crenshaw Boulevard, a major thoroughfare in the low-income Crenshaw district of south Los Angeles. Check casher, payday lender, or pawnshop Bank or credit union This points to an overlooked marketing opportunity to connect lower-income consumers to the already existing depository financial service infrastructure.

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Fourth, the majority of demographic segments that have a higher probability of being unbanked already have a bank account and we think are using it, suggesting banks have relevant experience that they can put to use. Share of households that have bank accounts, by demographic segment Source: Analysis of data from the Federal Reserve s Survey of Consumer Finances

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Fifth, low depositors tend to be more reliant on self-service. Retail bank customer interaction costs, by deposit amounts (Index: average household = 100) Average Deposits: Average per Interaction ti Cost: $3.0 $3.0 $3.8 $3.6 Note: Based on composite bank customer level data, analysis on database of over one million households Source: Booz & Company analysis

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Finally, the majority of unbanked households are already relying heavily on paper checks; they do not live in a cash economy. Share of unbanked households that Use money orders to Are paid wages pay bills every month in checks 84% 16% 79% 21% Only 25 percent of unbanked households report paying one or more monthly bills in cash. Source: Fellowes and Mabanta 2008, Converting Basic Financial Services Fees Into Prosperity

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access There are also very valuable opportunities to create savings for consumers in the financial mainstream. Those opportunities generally relate to the democratization of financial services that occurred in the 20 th century.

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access During the 20th century, there was a broad democratization of access to a broad array of financial services and products. While much remains to be done, there has been quite a bit of progress. individual market investments education savings product consumption savings accounts mortgages retirement savings checking accounts years in the workforce

Source: Analysis of the Federal Reserve s Survey of Consumer Finances. Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Overall, utilization of financial services products has greatly expanded in recent decades. Growth in the ownership of major financial services products, 1960-2004 1960 90% 2004 59% 54% 62% 69% 14% checking accounts market investments homes

Source: Analysis of the Federal Reserve s Survey of Consumer Finances. Opportunity 1: Lack of Access But this is not to say that the democratization in the low- and moderate-income market is complete. In fact, the use of many of these products is still heavily concentrated in the wealthier segment of the population. This is true for both basic and more sophisticated financial services products: Participation rates in financial services products, by household income, 2004 73.5% checking accounts 88.0% 98.2% tax-advantaged retirement savings 15.7% 49.7% 81.9% primary home mortgages 14.2% 37.9% 65.4% low income market investments 14.8% 25.4% 59.7% moderate income higher income

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access This evidence indicates that across nearly every financial product category, there was a broad expansion in access that occurred over the last 50 years. While this created powerful new opportunities to get ahead, it also created new pitfalls to economic mobility and prosperity.

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access For instance, tens of billions of dollars were lost over the past decade because of mortgage g borrowers paying substantially higher prices than they yqualified for. 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% Distribution of subprime loan recipients, by FICO score range and quarter Below 620 620-659 660 and up 0% 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Source: First American LoanPerformance via the Wall Street Journal ("Subprime Debacle Traps Even Very Credit-Worthy," 12/3/07)

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Similarly, recent research indicates that majority of stock market investors are under-diversified diversified, unnecessarily exposing themselves to risk and earning lower-than-possible returns. For instance, of the 23 million households that directly manage their own stock market investments, the majority own stock in 3 companies or fewer. Only 40.5 percent of investors own stock in more than 3 companies while 59.55 percent own stock in 3 companies or fewer. Source: Analysis of the 2004 Survey of Consumer Finances

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Mortgages and stock market investments are only two examples from a growing body of evidence suggesting that most Americans struggle to effectively convert their wages into sustainable economic prosperity.

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access For example: Of the 84 million households with a credit card in 2004, as many as 40 percent may have been paying a higher rate than what they qualified for. Of the 75 million households that owned homes in 2004, as many as half failed to refinance even though they may have saved money on a lower rate. As many as 10 million eligible workers were not participating in an employer-provided provided retirement plan in 2004. Most consumers still fail to sufficiently understand the important role that credit scores and reports have on shaping their financial i futures. And so on Source: Analysis of the 2004 Survey of Consumer Finances

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access Professional financial advisers could help households avoid these expensive problems, yet only 20 percent of American households use advisers. The mismatch between the need for advice and the demand d for the service exists because financial advice today is expensive, unnecessarily complex, dependent on a business model that works with only high-income individuals, and hard to find.

Opportunity 1: Lack of Access In response, I have been building with a team of 20 over the last year and a half a new financial advice service based on an entirely new business model, so we can scale to tens of millions of households by utilizing powerful new technology, new findings from behavioral economics, and a network of national partnerships. We will be able to offer high-quality, individualized g q y financial advice that is affordable to all Americans.

For more information, please contact: Matt Fellowes Project Director, The Pew Charitable Trusts mfellowes@pewtrusts.org www.pewtrusts.org/safebanking