There are 21 black owned banks in America

ridedolo

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The other day I researched black owned Banks and found this list from 2013

Did You Know There Were 21 African American Owned Banks In The Country? | Urban Intellectuals

I found one in my area, went down there and opened up an account. I'm about to toss Bank of America to the bushes and make this bank my primary one Carver Federal Savings Bank
They have multiple account tiers so there's one to suit your banking needs. Most of the monthly fees are waived if you follow pretty typical spend patterns. I downloaded the app for iphone and so far I have no complaints besides the fact that you can't deposit checks through their mobile app. Not a big deal for me though and I'm sure that it will eventually change.


The young breh who opened my checking and savings was professional and knowledgable. He filled me in on their company mission and their support of the local community. He also said that they must give out x amount of small business loans, but a lot of the times they go untouched because people don't apply for them.

Just thought I'd share my experience because I never really thought about the importance of banking with your own until the coli.

update - after finding out carvers technically not black owned i moved my money over to CNB. havent had any complaints at all. heres a review.

 
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↓R↑LYB

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Been banking with citizens trust bank for a while and I've had 0 problems with them. Great customer service and everyone who works/banks there is black. My girl gonna open an account with them next week she said.

IMO if you black and don't keep your money in a black bank you're a c00n :scust:
 

ridedolo

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Been banking with citizens trust bank for a while and I've had 0 problems with them. Great customer service and everyone who works/banks there is black. My girl gonna open an account with them next week she said.

IMO if you black and don't keep your money in a black bank you're a c00n :scust:

Yeah man. There's really no good reason not to. They actually give back to the community and hire blacks. If we concentrated our money like other ethnic groups we would wield more political power. Besides, it just feels good to be around your people, knowing your not being judged strictly because of your skin.
 

Apollo Creed

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Been banking with citizens trust bank for a while and I've had 0 problems with them. Great customer service and everyone who works/banks there is black. My girl gonna open an account with them next week she said.

IMO if you black and don't keep your money in a black bank you're a c00n :scust:

You use the one on MLK?
 

Stay Seeking

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There are in nyc. They have locations in queens brooklyn and Harlem

I opened with them and downloaded the app


https://www.carverbank.com/


:wow::dwillhuh::wow::dwillhuh::wow:

Largest U.S. Black-Owned Bank Gets Bailed Out By Wall Street Just In Time To Keep The Doors Open




The good news is Carver’s doors will stay open, the bad news is that control of the bank has shifted from the community to corporate America. This is a prime example of why the black businesses need more support from the community. Instead of banking with Bank of America and Citibank, should black people have put their money (and faith) in Carver instead?

From Crain’s:

Carver Bancorp’s shareholders confronted a painful choice on Tuesday. They could vote to cede control of the Harlem-based institution to a consortium of Wall Street firms and the U.S. government in return for $55 million of cash to rescue their ailing bank. Turning the money down would likely have doomed Carver Federal Savings, the nation’s largest bank founded and run by African-Americans.

In the end, the shareholders voted to approve the rescue package—but not without first voicing considerable anguish over the options they faced. “This represents a significant shift from community ownership to corporate,” said an investor who identified herself as Wimberly Edwards. “What’s our future with all the outsiders whose interests may be different from ours?”

Carver Bancorp CEO Deborah Wright tried to assure the audience at Harlem’s Studio Museum that Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley, Citigroup and the other new owners are “keenly attuned to our mission” and “wouldn’t have stepped up” if they didn’t think Carver was worth preserving.

“I understand the optics,” Ms. Wright said in an interview after the shareholder meeting. “But there was no alternative. The amount of capital we needed wasn’t available locally.”

Carver’s clients, who generally live and work in the city’s poorer precincts, have been hit especially hard by the recession. The bank posted a $40 million loss last year, more than wiping out the prior decade’s worth of profits, as seriously delinquent real-estate related loans soared to more than $120 million—well in excess of Carver’s $24 million set aside in reserves.

In February, federal regulators ordered the bank to raise additional capital. Ms. Wright, a former Giuliani administration housing official who sits on such powerful boards as the Partnership for New York City and Time Warner, began searching far and wide for money.

In June, she announced she’d been able to raise $55 million, mainly from the city’s biggest banks, while the U.S. government agreed to convert into common stock a preferred stake it got upon bailing out Carver two years ago during the financial crisis.

But tempering that good news was the fact that the price of salvation was terribly steep for Carver’s stockholders, many of whom are long-time customers of the bank. Under the terms approved at Tuesday’s meeting, the Wall Street banks will hold 73% of Carver’s shares, the U.S. government 25%, with the rest going to Carver’s existing stockholders. The new owners didn’t demand any changes to Carver’s board and allowed Ms. Wright to remain in the CEO post she has held since 1999.

Wow. Just wow. So this means Carver is no longer the largest black-owned bank anymore right? Cuz that’s what it sounds like to us.



The sad part is that this may have been preventable. In an op-ed piece on TheGrio Karen Hunter argues for blacks to support local and community banks:

As I watch Occupy (fill in the blank) movement spread across the country and the world, there has been an outcry for an agenda. A real agenda. Well, here’s one for them: Urge people to support local and community banks. Put the pressure of the conglomerates (the Bank of Americas, the Wells Fargos and the Citibanks, etc.), to really service the community that bailed them out.

This is a can-do action that can get real results. This is the kind of thing that will put the power back in the hands of the people.

While blame can definitely be laid at the feet of government (namely the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill) for the banks lack of accountability, nothing is stopping the banks themselves from doing the right thing.

They certainly can’t cry broke.

Bank of America earned $6.2 billion in profits last quarter. Wells Fargo announced a record third-quarter profit of $4.06 billion. And Citibank’s earnings rose 74 percent to $3.8 billion in the third quarter — the seventh straight quarter of income growth for the bank.

While we, the people, are experiencing one of the worst financial crisis in our generation, the banks are experiencing record profits. And have the audacity to raise fees?

This is one case where you can be mad as hell and actually do something about it…

Yes. And the demise of the black banks can be directly tied to the high unemployment and record poverty in the black community. According to theGrio, between 1888 and 1934, there were more than 130 U.S. banks owned by African-Americans, which is believed to have been the force behind the explosion of African-American businesses, which grew from 4,000 in 1867 to approximately 50,000 by 1917.

Today, according to a March 2010 Federal Reserve Board report, only 30 U.S. banks are black-owned.

By putting our money behind Carver and community banks like it, we are securing our own futures and jobs and economic survival.

Under Wright, while the bank has struggled, it has even during its struggles served the community — providing loans for small businesses and launching a check-cashing program, “Carver Community Cash,” to counter the often-predatory check cashing spots in our neighborhoods. Giving people who have to use check cashing places as an option, dignity without the exorbitant fees.

The question is, how many people are willing to give up the convenience of banking big for the sake of keeping their monies “in the hood”??? The fee hikes at Wells Fargo and Bank of America have been CRAZY, so this may be a realistic solution for some.
 

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It's sad though that opening an account with a black bank is damn near community service as they can't offer the stuff the big banks do like ATM reimbursement, business loans in large amounts, they all have maintenance fees for the most part etc. But thats the reason we need to back them so they can actually compete. I`m going to open a checking with Citizens one of these days when I have time to go in and just toss 25-50 a check in the account, maybe do an IRA in the future too.
 

Apollo Creed

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Yo, this is scary and takes a lot of faith in their ability to deliver. :wow:

I wouldn't put much in it though, like I said my whole doing business with them is to give back and help, at the end of the day I`m never closing my BOA account because I have too much established credit and history with them.
 
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