Crains New York Business has released its 2021 list of notable black leaders and executives and they include a handful of people working at leading banks. However, there are also - in our opinion - plenty of banking/finance names missing from Crain s assessment.
Here are some of the top banking names from Crain s list, plus several other black bankers at the top of their game in NYC.
Carla Harris, Morgan Stanley
Harris is on Crain s list. The vice chairman of wealth management and a senior client advisor at Morgan Stanley, she joined the firm in M&A in 1987. If you re looking for career advice, Harris may be willing to offer it. I am able to provide general career advice and guidance to a lot of people I have not gotten to know personally, but who seek counsel or ask for an opinion, she said in a piece for Morgan Stanley s website. Harris added that she expects people she helps to give something back: For both those whom I mentor and whom I sponsor, I expect them to do as e
By Alabama Newscenter Staff
Hope Enterprise Corp., with a $130 million commitment from Goldman Sachs, has partnered with seven cities and nine historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) across the South to launch the Deep South Economic Mobility Collaborative (DSEMC).
Birmingham, Montgomery and their respective HBCUs, Miles College and Alabama State University, are taking part in the collaborative, announced this week, which was formed to stabilize and strengthen businesses and communities devastated by the economic crisis. DSEMC invests in the power of small businesses and entrepreneurs in the Deep South, particularly those from underserved and under-resourced communities.
DSEMC taps the expertise and capabilities of Hope Enterprise Corp., Goldman Sachs, institutions of higher learning and cities to provide access to financing, business education classes and business support services, leveraging the private, public and nonprofit sectors. This comprehensive effort
Feb 10, 2021
NEW ORLEANS (AP) Small minority-owned businesses have often struggled to gain access to capital and other tools to grow, a challenge made more daunting by the economic upheaval of the coronavirus pandemic. But a new effort announced Tuesday aims to address those disparities in pockets of the nation long gripped by poverty.
Hope Enterprise Corporation, which runs a Jackson, Mississippi-based credit union that specializes in lending and other financial services to underserved communities, is partnering with seven cities and nine historically Black colleges and universities to launch the “Deep South Economic Mobility Collaborative.” Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses initiative is providing up to $130 million to the endeavor, which will be available to clients in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas and Tennessee.
New boost for minority businesses in underserved commun accesswdun.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from accesswdun.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.