tl;dr; There are indications for this effect, but the research is still unconclusive. The claim as stated is probably false.
The evidence
This statement refers to the widely studied Stereotype threat effect, which is often described as the risk of conforming to stereotypes of one's social group.
In particular, it refers to the study STEREOTYPE SUSCEPTIBILITY:
Identity Salience and Shifts in Quantitative Performance by Shih et al.
In this study they tested the math performance of 46 Asian-American women, divided into three groups. The first group (n=14) was primed with questions about their female identity, the second (n=16) with questions about their Asian identity and the third (n=16) with neutral questions.
They found that
Participants in the Asian-identity-salient condition answered an
average of 54% of the questions that they attempted correctly,
participants in the control condition answered an average of 49%
correctly, and participants in the female-identity-salient condition
answered an average of 43% correctly.
In the second part of the study, they did the same experiment in Vancouver, where the asian stereotype is less prevalent with a total of 19 Asian-American female high school students.
They state that
In this population, the stereotype that Asians possess superior
quantitative skills is not prevalent. As predicted (see Table 1),
participants in the female-identity-salient condition performed the
worst (28% accuracy) of the three groups. Participants in the
Asian-identity-salient condition (44% accuracy) also performed worse
than a control group (59% accuracy), contrast t(16) = 4.55, p < .0005,
r = .75.
Note, that in this study there was no mentioning of European men. While there are indications, that a comparison against another gender/ethnicity may invoke a stereotype threat, this was not studied directly.
In Competition in stereotyped domains: Competition, social comparison,
and stereotype threat by Van Loo et al. evidence for a link between competition and the stereotype threat effect was found.
Finally note, that the numbers Fry stated do not fit the numbers from the study.
The criticism
Study design
In both experiments the number of participants was very small (n=46 and n=19), which raises questions about the study's reliability.
Replication issues
In a follow-up study WHEN POSITIVE STEREOTYPES THREATEN INTELLECTUAL PERFORMANCE: The Psychological Hazards of “Model Minority” Status by Cheryan and Bodenhausen they failed to reproduce the effect (again, with a very small sample size, n=49).
In the control, personal-identity condition (n = 16), students
correctly answered an average proportion of .83 of the items (SD =
0.09). In line with the possibility that positive expectations for performance could cause choking under pressure when the positively
stereotyped Asian identity was salient, performance in the ethnicity
condition (n = 16) was markedly lower, M = .71, SD = 0.17. In
contrast, performance in the gender condition (n = 17) was comparable
to performance in the control condition, M = .81, SD = 0.14.
However, they reported that the ethnicity-salient group had more problems to concentrate and conclude
The present findings should therefore certainly not be taken as
evidence against the more general existence of gender-based
stereotype-threat effects in the domain of math performance.
Another replication study by Gibson et al. with a higher number of participants (n=164) found a significant effect after excluding 32 participants, which were not aware of at least one of the stereotypes. Before excluding those participants, the effect was not significant.
See A Replication Attempt of Stereotype Susceptibility
A third replication study with 139 participants by Moon and Roeder did not observe significant differences between the groups.
See A Secondary Replication Attempt of Stereotype Susceptibility
Publication bias and validity of the stereotype threat
In the 2014 meta analysis Does stereotype threat influence performance of girls in stereotyped domains? A meta-analysis by Flore and Wicherts they confirmed the stereotype effect on girls in standardized math tests based on the available publications
Analyzing 15 years of stereotype threat literature with children or
adolescents as test-takers, we found indications that girls
underperform on MSSS tests due to stereotype threat. Consistent with
findings by Nguyen and Ryan (2008), Picho et al. (2013), Walton and
Cohen (2003), and Walton and Spencer (2009), we estimated a small
effect of −0.22.
However, they also found indications for publication bias in the data
Unfortunately the robustness of the stereotype threat effect can be
questioned by the presence of publication bias. All three tests based
on funnel plot asymmetry—trim and fill (Duval & Tweedie, 2000),
Egger's test (Sterne & Egger, 2005), and Begg and Mazumdar's rank
correlation test (Begg & Mazumdar, 1994)—indicated that publication
bias was present. Additionally Ioannidis and Trikalinos's (2007)
exploratory test highlighted an excess of significant findings, which
can be due to publication bias.
They conclude
To conclude, we estimated a small average effect of stereotype threat
on the MSSS test-performance of school-aged girls; however, the
studies show large variation in outcomes, and it is likely that the
effect is inflated due to publication bias. This finding leads us to
conclude that we should be cautious when interpreting the effects of
stereotype threat on children and adolescents in the STEM realm. To be
more explicit, based on the small average effect size in our
meta-analysis, which is most likely inflated due to publication bias,
we would not feel confident to proclaim that stereotype threat
manipulations will harm mathematical performance of girls in a
systematic way or lead women to stay clear from occupations in the
STEM domain.
Conclusion
While there are some indications that the claim might be true, it is still unconclusive if and to what extent the specific claim about Asian females or even the underlying Stereotype threat effect exists.
Since the numbers stated by Fry do not match any results from the studies, it is likely that he invented those numbers to underline his point. Also there does not seem to be direct evidence regarding the claim that Asian women are affected by a stereotype threat due to competition with European men.
There is weak evidence that Asian women perform worse when confronted with the "female" stereotype, than when confronted with the "Asian" stereotype, but these results fail to consistently reproduce.
So given its level of precision, the claim is almost certainly fabricated. Additionally, what studies there are suggest that any effect in that direction is weaker than the claim pretends, and certain difficulties in replication imply that there might be not much, if any, such effect at all.