Key Finding 1: Gen X, Millennials and New Generation have been much more active with financial responses to COVID-19 than Silents and Boomers, sometimes taking ”flurries” of multiple actions.
1.1: Number of Financial Actions Taken: 2014-2019
1.2: Number of Financial Actions Taken (2014-2019) and Financial Responses During COVID-19 (2020)
1.3: Number of Financial Responses During COVID-19, by Generation: 2020
1.4: Number of Financial Responses During COVID-19, by COVID-19 Impact on Household Employment: 2020
1.5: High Action-taking During COVID-19 (7+ Actions): by Generation by COVID-19 Impact on Household Employment, 2020
1.6: Number of Financial Responses During COVID-19 by Impact of Remote Learning on Employment: 2020
1.7: Number of Financial Responses During COVID-19, by Chance Job Will Be Eliminated Due to COVID, by Generation
1.8: High Action-taking During COVID-19 (7+ Actions): by Chance Job Will be Eliminated Due to COVID, by Generation: 2020
1.9: Number of Financial Responses During COVID-19, by Generation: 2020
Key Finding 2: Saving more is the most common overall action in response to COVID-19, as all households shore up liquidity, especially those bracing for work disruptions
2.1: Financial Responses During COVID-19, “Have taken this action”: National, 2020
2.2: Financial Responses During COVID-19, “Have taken this action”: National, 2020
2.3: Financial Responses During COVID-19, “Have taken this action”: Silent & Millennials, 2020
2.4: Financial Responses During COVID-19, “Have taken this action”: by COVID Impact on Household Employment, 2020
2.5: Financial Responses During COVID-19, “Have taken this action”: by Impact of COVID Remote Learning on Employment: 2020
2.6: Financial Responses During COVID-19, “Have taken this action”: by Chance Job Will be Eliminated Due to COVID, 2020
Key Finding 3: Consumers direct most of their saving to opposite ends of the liquidity spectrum, since account types in between bank savings and long-term retirement are not widely held
3.1: Average Household Saving Allocation by Account Type: National, 2020
3.2: Average Household Saving Allocation by Account Type: National, 2020 vs. 2019
3.4: Average Household Saving Allocation by Account Type: by Income Ranges, 2020
3.5: Average Household Saving Allocation by Account Type: by Experience with Investing, 2020
3.6: Average Household Saving Allocation by Account Type: Income $120K+, by Use of Financial Professionals, 2020
3.7: Average Household Saving Allocation by Account Type: by Generation, 2020
3.8: Account Type Ownership Rates: by Generation, 2020
3.9: Taxable Brokerage Account Ownership Rate: by Investable Asset Groups Within Each Generation, 2020
3.10: Online Trading Account Ownership: by Generation, by Year
3.11: Online Trading Frequency: by Generation, by Year
Key Finding 4: As savings spike in an increasing number of households while others struggle, the Saver Spectrum segmentation reveals interesting competitive dynamics with banks best positioned for “Aspiring Savers,” while Fidelity and Bank of America Merrill are strongest with “Big Savers”
4.1: Expected Annual Household Saving Rate: 2012-2020
4.2: Expected Annual Household Saving Rate, by Generation: 2020
4.3: Expected Annual Household Saving Dollars, by Generation: 2012-2020
4.4: Expected Annual Household Saving Rate, by Annual Income Ranges: 2020
4.5: Saver Spectrum Segmentation, 2020
4.6: “Reach” into National Households: 2020
4.7: Reach into Big Savers: 2020
4.8: Reach into Aspiring Savers-High Potential: 2020
4.9: Top 5 Stores With Highest “Reach” into Each Saver Spectrum Segments: 2020
4.10: Composition of Customer Base: by Saver Spectrum Segmentation, 2020
4.11: Reach by Saver Spectrum Segments: 2020
Key Finding 5: While Big Savers are the most valuable customers today, Aspiring Savers-High Potential are looking to make changes in their financial lives right now and could be valuable over the long haul, but they require a different approach
5.1: Household Investable Assets by Saver Spectrum Segments: 2020
5.2: Expected Annual Household Saving Rate, by Saver Spectrum Segments: 2020
5.3: Selected Financial Responses During COVID - “Have taken this action”: by Saver Spectrum Segments, 2020
5.4: Very High Trust: Trust Levels of 9 -10, by Saver Spectrum Segments, By Year
5.5: Agreement with Attitude “The COVID-19 crisis has changed my attitudes towards saving and investing”: Levels of Agreement on a 10-Point Scale, by Saver Spectrum Segments, 2020
5.6: Selected Financial Responses During COVID - “Planning/considering this shortly”: by Saver Spectrum Segments, 2020
5.7: Perception of Experience with Investing, All Experience Levels: by Saver Spectrum Segments, 2020
5.8: Average Asset Allocation by Saver Spectrum Segments: 2020
5.9: Feelings about Financial Future, All Anxiety Levels: by Saver Spectrum Segments, 2020
5.10: Select Concerns About Issues, High Concern (Top 2 on 10-Point scale): by Saver Spectrum Segments, 2020
5.11: Saving & Investing Goals: All Goals, by Saver Spectrum Segments, 2020
5.12: Peak Accumulator Behaviors: by Saver Spectrum Segments, 2020
5.13: Difficulty with Financial Task - Allocating Savings, by Saver Spectrum Segments: by Year
5.14: Agreement with Attitude ”See Value in Paying for Professional Advice”: by Saver Spectrum Segments, by Year
5.15: Agreement with Attitude ”I'd prefer one product that combines different investments to accomplish a goal, over me or an advisor assembling a portfolio of many component investments”: by Saver Spectrum Segments, by Year
5.16: Importance of Selected Wants from Firm: Big Savers vs. Aspiring Savers-High Potential: 2020