Orlando Sentinel

Netflix moving $100M to help bolster Black banks

Streaming company aims to address multi-faceted issue

- By Michael J. de la Merced

Netflix has announced that it will move up to $100 million, or 2% of its cash holdings, to financial institutio­ns that focus on Black communitie­s. It is intended to address a longstandi­ng problem that these communitie­s face: a lack of capital for the banks and other lenders that service them.

In June, the streaming company’s chief executive, Reed Hastings, pledged $120 million to support scholarshi­ps at historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es. The move this week by the company he runs aims to fight racial inequality not through charity, but via a routine commercial aspect of its business. As the company’s considerab­le cash pile grows, so might its deposits.

Netflix will start with $35 million, split two ways: $25 million in financing for a new fund, the Black Economic Developmen­t Initiative, that will itself invest in Black financial institutio­ns; and depositing $10 million with the Hope Credit Union.

These institutio­ns join the roughly 30 banks worldwide Netflix uses.

The big banks where Netflix and other multinatio­nal companies keep their money are not able to operate “at the grassroots level these Black-led institutio­ns can and do,” Netflix said in a statement. “So we wanted to redirect some of our cash specifical­ly toward these communitie­s, and hope to inspire other large companies to do the same.”

The idea was hatched in April during discussion­s about improving diversity within Netflix’s leadership ranks, according to company executives and others involved in the process. Aaron Mitchell, a member of Netflix’s recruiting team, took the lead in developing the idea of bolstering Black-owned and -run banks.

After encouragem­ent from Hastings and Spencer Neumann, Netflix’s chief financial officer, Mitchell — who joked in an interview that he had “no business” devising ways the company should manage its money — worked with Shannon Alwyn of the company’s treasury division to put the plan into action.

The project took on greater urgency after the May 25 killing of George Floyd while in custody of Minneapoli­s police officers, which set off weeks of nationwide protests against systemic racism and police brutality.

Mitchell said he drew on the book “The Color of Money: Black Banks and the Racial Wealth Gap” by Mehrsa Baradaran, a professor at the University of California, Irvine’s law school. Baradaran argues that Black-focused lenders are undercapit­alized, depriving these communitie­s of economic opportunit­ies. “You need capital to build more capital,” she said in an interview.

Hope Credit Union, based in Jackson, Mississipp­i, reported just over $300 million in assets at the end of last year. The money from Netflix will have “a tremendous impact” in Black communitie­s, Hope’s chief executive, Bill Bynum, said in an interview. “Pound for pound, no entity has a bigger impact” than a community lender, he said, pointing to a greater ability to lend to small businesses and aspiring homeowners.

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