Yes. Specifically in Los Angeles, Asian communities, but more specifically Koreans, emerged as something of a merchant middle-class, and would frequently open stores in areas with the lowest barrier to purchasing real-estate, which is to say low-income black-dominant neighborhoods where they often didn’t live themselves. This created a kind of material tension between the poor residents of an area and this local foreigners who controlled the majority of basic commerce. Each was threatened by the other, with the local black population feeling exploited and robbed of economic opportunity by the Asians who often did not hire black employees or contribute to local community projects, and the Asians feeling threatened by the black overwhelming population in more traditionally racist tropes or perhaps sensing this very real sense of aggrievement. Additionally, Korea is an extremely homogenous society that is largely unaware of the history of American race relations and immigrants from that country were particularly poorly equipped for the multiculturalism of urban America, which further provoked misunderstanding and tension. This was encapsulated by specific flashpoints, perhaps most infamously the murder of Latasha Harlins.