Investors are a diverse group — much more so than standard tropes might suggest — and this diversity has big implications for financial advisers, ranging from how they search for clients to the financial recommendations they make, according to a new report published by Morningstar Inc.
"When you think about who an investor is, there's this common stereotype of an old, rich, white guy who has a subscription to the Wall Street Journal and trades stocks in his online brokerage and watches CNBC to get the latest hot tips," said Jake Spiegel, a senior research analyst at Morningstar and author of the report.
"In reality, that's not what investors look like," Mr. Spiegel said. "They're a much more diverse group of people."
More than half — 52.9% — of American households, and 61% of working American households, are invested in the markets, according to Morningstar's analysis of the most recent
Survey of Consumer Finances, a nationally representative survey of American households.
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Within that group, there's considerable diversity — for example, about 26% of investors identify as being of something other than European descent, a quarter are under 37 years old and more than a third earn less than the $52,700 median income among all working households, according to the report.
In addition, no more than 45% of investors work in "professional services" and related fields, which are stereotypically white-collar workplaces. That means at least 55% work in other fields, such as construction and mining, manufacturing, restaurants and public administration, said the report,
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For advisers, this diversity means they should "beware of guessing who might be a good client or what a client needs based on outward characteristics (age, ethnicity, profession)," which prior research indicates many advisers do, the report said.
One way to avoid using such stereotypes: Write out the specific criteria that guide a recommendation and apply them to all clients, according to the report.
The Morningstar report also underscores the value of personalized, individual advice, since investors aren't "single-minded" when it comes to their goals, it said.