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Banks seek to serve new Latino immigrants

Even as Congress debates their legal status, banks are tailoring their products to meet the country’s newest Latino immigrants.
CARRILLO
Maria Carrillo, a financial consultant at El Centro in Kansas City shuffles through a pile of paperwork as she consults with Guillermo Martinez of on his progress toward buying a house.Todd Feeback / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

One of Maria Carrillo’s clients said thieves jumped him on payday because they knew he’d leave the check-cashing business with his pockets full of bills. How was he to know he could open a bank account in this country, Carrillo said, if he was still struggling to read in Spanish?

Carrillo, a financial consultant whose office windows look onto a ward of this city where taquerias have replaced steel plants, knew he was just the kind of client banks want.

As the housing market slows, lenders have come to see the country’s new Latino immigrants as a market with a great upside. By 2010, the disposable income of Hispanics will exceed $1.08 trillion, or 9.2 percent of total purchasing power nationwide, according to the Selig Center for Economic Growth at the University of Georgia.

Even as Congress debates their legal status, banks are tailoring their products to meet the country’s newest residents where they work and live, installing ATMs in meatpacking plants and creating special mortgage packages that don’t require the traditional documentation.

“If I buy a home here, I want to be 100 percent sure of what I’m buying,” said Victor Cruz, a native of Toluca, Mexico, as he met with Carrillo at the Kansas City-based nonprofit El Centro, Inc., an outreach group that helps immigrants with everything from ESL classes to money matters. “Otherwise, you end up feeling like a rabbit, surrounded by foxes lying in wait.”

After experiencing decades of financial crises and currency devaluations in Latin America, first-generation immigrants often prefer to carry cash than to deposit their money in the bank. Concerns about the number of immigrants who do not have bank accounts have prompted officials at Federal Reserve banks across the country to encourage lenders to develop alternative means to bring Latino families into the banking system.

One-third of U.S.-born Hispanic residents and over half of all Mexican immigrants lack bank accounts, according to 2000 figures from the U.S. Census Bureau. But there’s no single formula that meets the diverse needs of the Latino market.

“The number one mistake that banks make is to translate their brochures. They think having their information on a pamphlet in Spanish will produce magical numbers for them,” said Laura Castro de Cortes, a consultant at Latino Banking Solutions, based in Omaha, Neb. “For second generation Latinos, we’re gonna react like the rest of the market and say ‘OK, who has the best price?’ That’s totally different from marketing for the new arrivals, whose biggest problem is that they walk around with rolls of cash.”

Many undocumented Latino immigrants shy away from mainstream lenders for fear that giving over personal identification could result in deportation. The USA Patriot Act requires banks to ask customers opening an account for their name, date of birth, address and a taxpayer identification number.

Before Cruz can get a home loan, for instance, he’ll need to provide Carrillo with two years of tax records and employment records, his taxpayer ID number and three credit reference letters. Carrillo isn’t brokering a loan for him, she’s just helping him find the deal that fits best with his income level.

El Centro is one of few groups to offer that kind of detailed financial education in Spanish in the Midwest. But in recent years, the number of products available to the undocumented has mushroomed.

In Illinois, non-citizens can now qualify for state-administered mortgage loans by providing a government-issued alternative to the Social Security number. In Kansas City, Mo., a family-owned bank with just eight branches started selling stored-value cards, a “starter” product that’s not a bank account, but gets clients ready to open one.

“In the 1960s the more visible issue was urban banks not reaching the urban poor. Now, with immigrants you’ve got a different demographic and you’ve got to understand that’s part of your customer base,” said Linda Schroeder, a vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. “We’re better off as a whole if everyone’s participating in the economy.”

As baby boomers age and their savings leave the financial system, banks see the Latino population’s relative youth as a plus. By 2010, a study by the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University shows Latinos will account for nearly one-third of the homebuying pool.

But to make that happen, more families will need to learn how to handle real estate agents, mortgage brokers and building inspectors in classes like those held at El Centro. Carrillo said of the 850 families she met with last year, only 100 had gotten the financial training necessary to buy a home.

For some clients of Carrillo’s, opening a stored-value card like Central Bank of Kansas City’s “tarjeta segura” is a good first step.

Dual-account cards are another popular option for clients who want to send remittances home — many banks now offer savings accounts that feature a sub-account in Mexico, accessible via a Visa or MasterCard-branded debit card.

In Garden City, Kan., where the Hispanic population more than doubled in the last 20 years thanks to the booming meatpacking industry, several companies are offering their employees payroll cards. It’s another alternative to a bank account, and lets employers like Pizza Hut and McDonald’s deposit workers’ earnings directly to an account in the company’s bank, which employees can then draw on from an ATM.

Bank of the West took a different route to attracting new Latino clients. It has installed a waterproof ATM inside the Holcomb, Kan., IBP/Tyson meatpacking plant. The ATM can cash checks quickly to accommodate workers’ short breaks, and can be hosed down when the factory gets a wash.

“You’ve got to meet people where they are,” said Lydia Contreras, marketing officer for Central Bank of Kansas City. “It’s a long road to have people say ’I’m just going to hand over the $500 I’ve made in the last two weeks and trust that it will be there.’ In Latin America, the government just decides to take it.”

Agustina Chavez said Central Bank’s bilingual tellers reassured her that her $100 wouldn’t disappear from her bank account unless she withdrew funds. But she wasn’t entirely convinced.

“I put my son’s checks in there and I use it to get money orders to pay bills,” said Chavez, as she checked in at her neighborhood branch on Kansas City’s Southwest Boulevard. “I feel like they have hidden fees. It’s hard to save anything.”