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Chapter 1: Executive Summary 
Report Scope 
Report Summary 
Unbanked and underbanked usage trends 
Our topline findings 
Impact 
Income, age and race/ethnicity 
Unbanked but bankable? 
Drilling down: Hispanics 
Hispanics: loan usage, by banked status 
Drilling down: Millennials 
Prepaid and PayPal 
18-34s: demographics and loan usage, by banked status 
Bill payment methods 
Alternative financial services trends 
Banks: trends & innovation 
Why are the unbanked important to banks? 
Bank account usage motivators 
Bank account usage challenges 
Degree of bank distrust on the rise 
Commercial banks gain share amid account usage declines 
Why not go with a large, branch-based bank? 
Fee and expense trends 
“Checkless†checking coming to more banks 
Leadership: Citi Access Account 
Leadership: PaySound 
Small-dollar credit 
Leadership: Key Basic Line of Credit 
The retailer connection: trends & innovation 
Supermarket, discount and club stores 
Leadership: Kroger 
Convenience stores and drug stores 
Leadership: 7-Eleven 
Remittances & payday lending: trends & innovation 
Unbanked and underbanked remitters 
Remittance retail channels 
Leadership: Xoom 
Payday and pawn loans 
A dimmer future ahead 
Debt trap, begone? 
Reloadable prepaid accounts: trends and innovation 
Market opportunity 
Unbanked and underbanked fueling growth 
Reasons for use 
Top cards 
Regulatory checkup 
Leadership: Bluebird 
The mobile connection: trends and innovation 
Unbanked but connected 
Mobile banking engagement 
Chapter 2: Unbanked and Alternative Financial Services Usage Trends 2008-2015 unbanked trends 
43% of unbanked have not used banking institution in past 12 months 
These “institution unbanked†consumers represent almost 1 in 6 adults 
Percentage of “institution unbanked†declines 
Bottom line: less prevalent need for basic accounts 
Table 2-1: Unbanked and Institution Unbanked, 2008-2015 
Lower incomes tie to being unbanked, but high-income consumers joining the ranks 
Table 2-2: Unbanked Consumers, by Demographic, 2008-2015 
Percentage of “institution unbanked†declines across demographic groups 
Table 2-3: Institution Unbanked Consumers, by Demographic, 2008-2015 
Share analysis 
Table 2-4: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: Share, by Demographic, 2015 
Unbanked but bankable? 
Graph 2-1: All, Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: by Vantage 3.0 Score, 2015 
Casting a different net results in finding “credit invisibles†
Loan usage among unbanked 
Loan usage falls off a cliff 
Table 2-5: All, Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: Loans Have, by Loan Type, 2015 
Consistent patronage across lending institutions 
Table 2-6: All, Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: Loans Have, by Lending Institution Type, 2015 
Drilling down: Hispanics 
Trending Hispanic unbanked over time 
Table 2-7: Hispanic Unbanked and Institution Unbanked, 2008-2015 
Hispanics: demographics, by banked status 
Table 2-8: Hispanic Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: Share by HH Income and Age, 2015 
Language preference 
Table 2-9: Hispanic Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: Share by Language Spoken in Home, 2015 
Hispanics: loan usage, by banked status 
Table 2-10: Hispanics: All, Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: Percent Having Loans, by Loan Type, 2015 
Language preference 
Table 2-11: Unbanked Hispanics: Percent Having Loans, by Loan Type and Language Spoken in Home, 2015 
Unbanked Hispanic loan use at commercial banks and credit unions 
Table 2-12: Hispanics: All, Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: Percent Having Loans, by Loan Type, 2015 
Drilling down: Millennials 
Trending unbanked age 18-34 over time 
Table 2-13: Unbanked and Institution Unbanked Age 18-34, 2008-2015 
Prepaid and PayPal 
18-34s: demographics, by banked status 
Table 2-15: 18-34s: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: Share, by HH Income and Race/Ethnicity, 2015 
18-34s: loan usage, by banked status 
Table 2-16: 18-34s: All, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: Percent Having Loans, by Loan Type, 2015 
Type of financial institution 
Table 2-17: 18-34s: All, Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: Percent Having Loans, by 
Lending Institution Type, 2015 
Bill payment methods and forms of payment 
Bill payment methods 
Bank accounts play enormous role in facilitating bill payments 
Unbanked bill payment methods suggest mobile and P2P 
Table 2-18: Methods Used to Pay Bills: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked, by All, Hispanic and 18-34s, 2015 
Bill payment forms of payment 
Cash stubbornly hangs on 
Table 2-19: Always Use Cash to Pay Bills: Unbanked, 2008-2015 
. . . especially among Hispanic and smartphone-enabled unbanked 
Table 2-20: Always Use Cash to Pay Bills: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: All, 18-34s, 
Hispanics, and Smartphone Users, 2015 
Alternative financial services trends 
The topline 
Reasons for using AFS 
Transaction-based AFS 
Table 2-21: Household Use of Transaction-Based Alternative Financial Services, by HH Income and Race/Ethnicity 2013 
Credit-based AFS 
Table 2-22: Household Use of Credit-Based Alternative Financial Services, by Demographic, 2013 
Usage of alternative financial services, by type 
Table 2-23: Alternative Financial Services Household Use in Past 12 Months: Unbanked, Underbanked and Both, by Type of Service, 2013 
Underbanked use: trending over time 
Table 2-24: Underbanked Household Use of Alternative Financial Services, by Type: Use in Last 12 Months, 2011-2013 
Unbanked use: trending over time 
Table 2-25: Unbanked Household Use of Alternative Financial Services, by Type: Ever Use vs. Use in Last 12 Months, 2011-2013 
Chapter 3: Banks: Trends & Innovation 
Why is a bank account important? 
Electronic banking affects need for banking account 
Banking status is dynamic 
Bank account usage motivators 
Ease of use, simplicity, and security 
Local community support, financial advice and references 
Graph 3-1: Factors Important When Opening a Bank Account: Banked vs. Unbanked, 2015 
Bank account usage challenges 
Money and fees 
Documentation 
Graph 3-2: Why Unbanked Households Do Not Have Accounts: Reason and Main Reason, 2013 
Trust and privacy 
Demographic analysis: HH income 
Table 3-1: Main Reason Why Unbanked Households Do Not Have Accounts, by HH Income, 2013 
Demographic analysis: race/ethnicity 
Table 3-2: Main Reason Why Unbanked Households Do Not Have Accounts, by Race/Ethnicity, 2013 
Demographic analysis: Nativity and Spanish-only spoken in home 
Table 3-3: Main Reason Why Unbanked Households Do Not Have Accounts: U.S.-born vs. Foreign-Born 
Hispanic, 2013 
Degree of bank distrust on the rise 
Table 3-4: Comfort Trusting Money to a Bank: Unbanked vs. All, 2008-2015 
Table 3-5: Comfort Trusting Money to a Bank: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked: All, 18- 
34s, Hispanics, Spanish-Speaking Hispanics, and Foreign-Born Hispanics, 2015 
Commercial banks gain share amid account usage declines 
Percentage of banked consumers declines 
But among banked, commercial banks fare better than savings banks and credit unions 
Despite credit union competitiveness 
Table 3-6: Banked Adults: Percentage Banked by Type of Financial Institution, 2008-2015 
Percentage of Hispanic unbanked remains stable; commercial banks gain share 
Table 3-7: Banked Hispanic Adults: Percentage Banked by Type of Financial Institution, 2008-2015 
18-34s take similar path 
Table 3-8: Banked 18-34s: Percentage Banked by Type of Financial Institution, 2008-2015 
Why not go with a large, branch-based bank? 
Fees are too high 
What’s the point? 
Convenience 
Branch-based banking less relevant for 18-34s 
Graph: 3-3: Reasons for Not Having a Checking Account at a Large Bank with Many Physical Branches, 2015 
Table 3-9: Reasons for Not Having a Checking Account at a Large Bank with Many Physical Branches, by Age, 2015 
Fee and expense trends 
Overdrafts still big business 
Consumer advocates argue for more regulation 
Lower-income groups at risk of overdraft hangover 
Post-regulation review raises concern 
Maintenance fees not an issue 
Opting in for trouble? 
Frequent overdrafters on the ropes 
Table 3-10: Distribution of Accounts and Gross Overdraft Fees By Overdraft Frequency: All, Opt-In and Opt-Out, 2014 
Overdraft correlates to debit card use 
And to youth and smaller purchases 
Table 3-11: Distribution of Accounts and Gross Overdraft Fees, by Overdraft Frequency and Monthly Debit Card Intensity, 2014 
Progress not fast enough! 
CFPB shows its teeth 
On the horizon 
Bank innovation 
FDIC Model Safe Accounts 
Encouraging adoption of “checkless†checking 
Low cost to implement and maintain 
Table 3-12: FDIC Model Safe Accounts: Core Features/Fees & Auxiliary Services and Fees, 2013 
Small-dollar credit 
A tough nut to crack 
Deposit advance loans bite the dust 
But $70 billion on the table 
Leadership: Key Basic Line of Credit 
Overdraft 
Enhancements 
Tale of the tape 
Table 3-13: Key Basic Line of Credit: Characteristics, 2012-2014 
$200 generated per account 
Table 3-14: Key Basic Line of Credit: Revenue Analysis, 2014 
Bank accounts 
Leadership: Citi Access Account 
Key features 
Account economics 
Blending needs of traditionally underserved with Millennial-style features 
Table 3-15: Citibank Access Account: Customer Demographics, 2014 
Navigating the ChexSystems blacklist 
Remittance option retired 
Leadership: PaySound 
Table 3-16: Town & Country Bank: Checking Account Options, 2015 
Chapter 4: The Retailer Connection: Trends & Innovation Setting the stage: demographic reach and customer need 
In-store retail bank branches fall by 13% in four years 
Filling a money order void? 
Retailers an AFS stronghold 
Check cashing 
Check cashing still very relevant 
Table 4-1: Check Casher Household Usage: Unbanked vs. Underbanked, by Demographic, 2013 
Retailers a more likely option than stand-alone non-bank financial services store 
Table 4-2: Check Casher Household Usage: Unbanked vs. Underbanked, by Most Common Location, 2013 
Money orders used by two-thirds of underbanked 
Table 4-3: Money Order Household Usage: Unbanked vs. Underbanked, by Demographic, 2013 
Post office to the rescue 
Table 4-4: Money Order Household Usage: Unbanked vs. Underbanked, by Most Common Location, 2013 
Foreign born skew to AFS locations 
Table 4-5: Money Order Household Usage: Unbanked vs. Underbanked, by Most Common Location and U.S. Born/Foreign Born, 2013 
Supermarket, discount and club stores 
Tremendous demographic reach 
Significant unbanked/underbanked sweet spots 
Table 4-6: Adults Shopping at Major Supermarket/Discount/Club Store Brands: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked, by Brand, 2015 
Table 4-7: Adults Shopping at Major Supermarket/Discount/Club Store Brands: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked Share, by Brand, 2015 
Remittance users skew to retail players that don’t offer the service 
Table 4-8: Unbanked Shoppers at Major Supermarket/Discount/Club Store Brands: Share of Those Who Use Remittances, by Brand, 2015 
Prepaid cards should be a foregone conclusion . . . but are they? 
Table 4-9: Unbanked Shoppers at Major Supermarket/Discount/Club Store Brands: Share of Those Who Have Reloadable Prepaid Cards, by Brand, 2015 
Spanish speakers up to a quarter of shoppers 
Table 4-10: Unbanked Shoppers at Major Supermarket/Discount/Club Store Brands: Share by Race/Ethnicity and Spanish-Speaking Hispanics, by Brand, 2015 
Foreign-born customers 
Table 4-11: Unbanked Shoppers at Major Supermarket/Discount/Club Store Brands: Share among Hispanic Foreign Born, by Brand, 2015 
Leadership: Kroger 
Nice card! 
And that’s not all 
Convenience stores and drug stores 
Table 4-12: Adults Shopping at Major Convenience Store/Drug Store Brands: Banked, Unbanked and 
Institution Unbanked Share, by Brand, 2015 
Prepaid card usage and remittances 
Table 4-13: Unbanked Shoppers at Major Convenience Store/Drug Store Brands: Share of Those Who 
Have Prepaid Cards and Use Remittances, by Brand, 2015 
Crafting multi-ethnic marketing messages 
Table 4-14: Unbanked Shoppers at Major Convenience Store/Drug Store Brands: Share by 
Race/Ethnicity and Spanish-Speaking Hispanics, by Brand, 2015 
Foreign-born customers 
Table 4-15: Unbanked Shoppers at Major Convenience Store/Drug Store Brands: Share among Foreign 
Born, by Brand, 2015 
Leadership: 7-Eleven 
Trending forward with cash conversion options 
Self-service check cashing 
Money transfer and prepaid 
Chapter 5: Remittances & Payday Lending: Trends & Innovation The market 
Table 5-1: U.S. International Remittances: Top 10 Recipient Countries, 2014 
Unbanked and underbanked remitters 
Table 5-2: Remittance Household Usage: Unbanked vs. Underbanked, by Demographic, 2013 
Domestic and international money transfer trending 
Table 5-4: U.S. Adult Money Transferors: Domestic and International, 2008-2015 
Remittance retail channels 
Table 5-3: Remittance Household Usage: Unbanked vs. Underbanked, by Most Common Location, 2013 
Western Union and MoneyGram most prevalently used, but other methods gaining ground 
Table 5-5: U.S. Adult International Money Transferors: Methods Used in Past 12 Months, 2010-2015 
Leadership: Xoom 
Mobile leadership 
Overcoming security concerns 
Major future potential 
Payday and pawn loans 
Usage among unbanked and underbanked 
Payday loans 
Table 5-6: Payday Loan Household Usage: Unbanked vs. Underbanked, by Demographic, 2013 
Pawn loans 
Table 5-7: Pawn Loan Household Usage: Unbanked vs. Underbanked, by Demographic, 2013 
A dimmer future ahead 
Pew makes its case 
CFPB reviews the data 
Debt trap, begone? 
The solution: prevention and protection 
But where and how will these borrowers access the money they need? 
Banking small-dollar loans 
Chapter 6: Reloadable Prepaid Accounts: Trends and Innovation 
Setting the stage: changing the game 
The market 
U.S. prepaid card market growth 
Market opportunity 
Unbanked and underbanked fueling growth 
Table 6-1: Prepaid Card Usage Penetration: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked, 2012-2015 
Table 6-2: Reloadable and Non-Reloadable Prepaid Card Usage Penetration: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked, 2015 
Table 6-3: Prepaid Card Use in Past 12 Months: Fully Banked, Underbanked and Unbanked, 2014 
Demographic analysis 
Table 6-4: Reloadable Prepaid Card Usage Penetration: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked, by Demographic, 2015 
Table 6-5: Reloadable Prepaid Card Household Usage: Unbanked vs. Underbanked, by Demographic, 2013 
Usage and reasons for use 
Using like a checking account 
Meeting financial transaction needs 
Table 6-6: Prepaid Card Use & Main Reason Why Household Used: Unbanked vs. Underbanked, 2013 
Overdraft management 
Top cards 
Bank-issued cards lag 
Graph 6-1: Reloadable Prepaid Card Usage, by Brand, 2015 
Serve skews to banked; NetSpend and Green Dot skew to unbanked 
Table 6-7: Reloadable Prepaid Card Usage: Banked vs. Unbanked, by Brand, 2015 
Regulatory checkup 
CFPB analysis and impact 
States of affairs 
Table 6-8: Prepaid Account Agreements: Overdraft Service, Negative Fee Balance, Insurance, Fee Disclosure and Limited Liability Analysis, 2014 
Further education on benefits and protection needed 
Leadership: Bluebird 
Graph 6-2: “Say hello to Bluebird†Marketing Graphic, 2013 
Strength: fees 
Graph 6-2: Bluebird Benefits: Marketing Graphic, 2015 
Strength: features and funding options 
Money management draws 
Graph 6-3: Bluebird SetAside Account and Family Account: Marketing Graphic, 2015 
Graph 6-4: Bluebird Financial Management: Marketing Graphic, 2015 
Table 6-9: American Express Bluebird: Fees and Characteristics, 2013-2015 
Strength: mobile connectivity 
Graph 6-5: Bluebird Financial Management: Marketing Graphic, 2015 
The economics 
Reception 
Chapter 7: The Mobile Connection: Trends and Innovation 
Introduction 
Setting the stage: unbanked but connected 
Who’s got a smartphone? 
Table 7-1: Cell Phone and Smartphone Usage: Unbanked and Institution Unbanked, 2012-2015 
HH income remains unbanked smartphone stumbling block 
Older unbanked left out of smartphone frenzy 
Table 7-2: Smartphone Usage: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked, by Demographic, 2015 
Mobile phones more important internet conduit than home computers 
Table 7-3: Internet Usage at Home: Any, Mobile Phone, Desktop Computer: All vs. Unbanked, 2012- 2015 
Mobile banking engagement 
Underbanked engaged with mobile banking—and more so than fully banked 
Table 7-4: Mobile Banking Methods Used in Past 12 Months: Fully Banked and Underbanked, 2014 
Banking app usage: demographics 
Table 7-5: Banked, Unbanked and Institution Unbanked Who Have Used Banking/Finance App in Past 
30 Days: All, 18-34s and Hispanics, 2015 
Appendix 
Methodology 
Consumer survey methodology 
Report table interpretation 
Color coding 
Indexing 
Terms and definitions 
Unbanked and underbanked 
Other terms and definitions