In fact, Nielsen analyzed the top 10 Spanish language ads among Hispanics in the U.S. from earlier this year and found that 3 of the top 10 ads featured mobile banking and payments. According to the findings, "U.S. Hispanic mobile subscribers are highly engaged in mobile banking and shopping activities. Forty-one percent of U.S. Hispanics are mobile bankers, vs. 36% non-Hispanic. Hispanics are also heavy users of digital platforms and quick adopters of new technology. And as a result, they’re more likely to shop using their mobile devices (36% vs. 32% non-Hispanics)."
Now compare that to a report yesterday in the Latin Post, citing The Checking Experience Index produced by the banking institution TD Bank. According to this report released on Oct. 12, 2015, the numbers could be even more impressive than what was estimated earlier this year. This report found that 93 percent of Hispanic respondents favored online banking and 81 percent preferred the use of their bank's mobile options when handling day-to-day transactions. Could these overwhelmingly large figures possibly be accurate of the U.S. Latino population's use of mobile banking?
On some further research, it appears the TD Bank study is from a much smaller subset of respondents than the much larger, nationwide Nielsen report. The Checking Experience Index surveyed 1,500 total respondents with only 150 identifying themselves as Hispanic. So the extraordinarily high numbers reported yesterday by the Latin Post are deceivingly high due to the relatively small sample size, but there is no doubt the Latino market is growing fast for mobile and internet banking products.
This is not exactly breaking news... Back in a 2012 report, The Federal Reserve indicated that 60 percent of Hispanic mobile phone owners have smartphones, illustrating the importance of mobile banking options. That same report also found that Hispanics were the most interested in adopting mobile banking programs than any other banking product, and more than any other cultural market segment. It was speculated then, over 3 years ago, that this population would represent a huge market opportunity. That time has no doubt come. It was predicted in 2012: "If mobile banking is what Hispanics are most interested in, then banks and credit unions will divert the most attention to meeting that demand."
So while the numbers reported in the news this week may be overinflated, it would seem that the predictions of 2012 have come to fruition, and U.S. Hispanics continue to be a prime market for credit unions to promote mobile banking and mobile payments such as Google Wallet, Pop Money, PayPal and more.