Banking on Latino buyers: in recent years, lenders are paying more attention to Chicago's fastest growing population.By the time he was 21, Rafael Yanez had already done what experts say the average American won't do until he or she is 32. He'd bought a home. Prompted by his success, Yanez convinced his parents to do the same, then a sister-in-law, then a cousin. Now he's working on his mother-in-law MOTHER-IN-LAW. In Latin socrus. The mother of one's wife, or of one's husband. . "If you own a house, it's your castle. It's like planting a seed and seeing the tree grow," said Yanez, now 25 and a Chicago police officer patrolling Englewood on the South Side. "It's hard to see working and making all those sacrifices if you're renting. You look back and say, 'What have I done?'" Yanez and his family--his wife, Leticia Lopez, and their children, Rafael Jr., 6, and Xitlali, 3--bought a home in the Back of the Yards neighborhood on the city's South Side. They and their relatives, who purchased homes within blocks of each other, are part of a growing Latino presence in the housing market. In recent years, banks have paid more attention to the burgeoning Latino population because many--including large numbers of Mexican nationals--weren't using the banking system. From 2000 to 2003, the number of home loan applications from Latinos in Chicago grew by 43 percent, from 9,455 to 13,564. Applications from all others grew 10 percent. Some banks are creating new products and rules that weren't in place 10 years ago. Traditionally, for example, anyone applying for either a home loan or a bank account that paid interest had to have a social security number. In addition, banks normally assessed an applicant's credit-worthiness by examining his or her history of malting malt n. 1. Grain, usually barley, that has been allowed to sprout, used chiefly in brewing and distilling. 2. An alcoholic beverage, such as beer or ale, brewed from malt. 3. See malted milk. v. payments on utility bills, loans and credit cards. However, several banks have started to accept nontraditional forms of identification from immigrants. For home purchases, in lieu of Instead of; in place of; in substitution of. It does not mean in addition to. a social security card, nearly two dozen banks across the nation are now accepting an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number An Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (or ITIN) is a United States tax processing number issued by the Internal Revenue Service. It is a nine-digit number that begins with the number 9 and has a 7 or 8 in the fourth digit, example 9xx-7x-xxxx or 9xx-8x-xxxx. , or ITIN ITIN Itinerary ITIN Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (US Internal Revenue Service) ITIN Information Technology in Nursing ITIN Integrated Triangular Irregular Network , issued by the Internal Revenue Service to taxpayers who are not eligible for a social security number. As proof of identity, most people still need matricular cards, photo identification issued by their native countries. Some banks also consider rental history and remittances
Remittances are transfers of money by foreign workers to their home countries. to family back home in Mexico as a basis for credit history since many immigrants don't have traditional forms of credit, said Michael Frias, community affairs officer in the Chicago region for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., or FDIC FDIC See: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation FDIC See Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). . On average, Mexican Americans This is a list of notable Mexican-Americans. Athletes Baseball players
For some banks, it's worth their time, and good for their pocketbooks, to change the rules a bit. Up to 70 percent of the growth for U.S. financial services The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page. between 2003 and 2008 could come from the Hispanic market, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. a 2003 projection by the TowerGroup, a research firm that studies the global financial services industry. That means an estimated $200 billion in new business, Frias said. As a child, Yanez saw how his father netted $50,000 after selling the family's North Side home and returning to Mexico to buy a new one. When the family returned to Chicago a decade later, Yanez' father used the proceeds from the sale of that home to buy in Pilsen. "I witnessed what he was doing and I took good notes," said Yanez, who took free homebuyer home·buy·er n. One who is in the process of buying a home. education classes through Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago, which provides lending and counseling services. He got a loan using traditional identification. But it's estimated that 56 percent of Latinos nationwide do not use the banking system, prompting banks to try to figure out how to draw them in. One way is by bridging the gap of Latino homeownership. Nearly 70 percent of all Americans own their homes, Frias said. But it's 47 percent for Latinos nationwide and 49 percent for African Americans African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. . One San Diego San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay. , Ca.-based organization has put an estimate on the value of undocumented immigrants in the housing market. The National Association of Hispanic Real Estate Professionals in 2004 released a study concluding that roughly 172,000 undocumented renters qualify for $44 billion in real estate. "It's an emerging market and it's literally untapped," Frias said. But not everyone takes the alternate forms of identification. Of the nation's 9,000 banks, just 278 accept them, Frias said. Chicago, however, has proved to be ahead of the game. About 44 of the city's 100 banks accept alternate forms of identification. According to an analysis by The Chicago Reporter, in 2000, applications from blacks outnumbered Outnumbered is a British sitcom that aired on BBC One in 2007.[1] It stars Hugh Dennis and Claire Skinner as a mother and father who are outnumbered by their three children. those from Latinos by about 2,600 in Chicago. Three years later, Latinos submitted 170 more applications than blacks and had more success. "Lending to Hispanics has increased at a much more rapid rate than lending to African Americans," said Geoff Smith For other persons named Geoff Smith, see Geoff Smith (disambiguation). Geoff Smith is a musical performer and composer from Brighton, England. He was previously a member of the group Attacco Decente. , project director for the Woodstock Institute, a Chicago nonprofit A corporation or an association that conducts business for the benefit of the general public without shareholders and without a profit motive. Nonprofits are also called not-for-profit corporations. Nonprofit corporations are created according to state law. that analyzes home mortgage data. "That's kind of the trend." In 2003, 62 percent of all applications from Latinos resulted in home loans, compared with 48 percent of applications from African Americans. Some experts say the growth for black applicants is likely to be gradual in the coming years, mostly due to lack of lender interest. "I think that lenders know that there's a market there, but I don't think they've been aggressive at trying to target it," Smith said. "They've been particularly creative in developing mortgage products to reach that undocumented immigrant market." An example is the recently developed partnership between the Mexican consulate Consulate, 1799–1804, in French history, form of government established after the coup of 18 Brumaire (Nov. 9–10, 1799), which ended the Directory. in Chicago and the FDIC. The two joined forces in May 2003 to form the New Alliance Task Force. The group, made up mostly of community banks and advocacy and community organizations, meet quarterly to discuss ways to improve financial literacy Financial literacy is the ability of individuals to make appropriate decisions in managing their personal finances. Raising levels of financial literacy is now a focus of government programmes in countries including[1] Australia, Japan, the United States and the UK. and banking for immigrants, create mortgage and bank products, and provide scholarship funds for the children of immigrants. Smith said he hopes banks will realize that the market for African Americans is also worth tapping. "We think that if a bank can develop a product appropriate for a person who has no citizenship and no social security number, they can probably use that same creative energy to develop a product for an African American who has a worse-than-average credit score." However, with greater attention being paid to Latinos, Frias said it's important that other underserved markets, such as African American homebuyers, won't get left behind. "This is an issue that I bring to the banks' attention," Frias said. "In your eagerness to go after this market, you should not do this to the exclusion of other groups." THE NUMBERS
In the Market
Home loan applications from Latinos grew faster than those from others
in Chicagoland from 2000 to 2003.
2000 2003 % Change
Latinos Others Latinos Others Latinos Others
Chicago 9,455 55,528 13,564 60,857 43% 10%
Suburban
Cook 6,823 44,703 9,513 47,291 39% 6%
DuPage 1,819 22,599 2,462 22,508 35% 0%
Kane 2,508 10,405 3,652 12,157 46% 17%
Lake 2,259 16,177 2,804 17,074 24% 6%
McHenry 491 8,476 762 9,674 55% 14%
Will 1,463 17,189 3,149 21,386 115% 24%
Total 24,818 175,077 35,906 190,947 45% 9%
Source: Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council; analyzed
by The Chicago Reporter.
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