03202019 BUSINESS

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business@tribunemedia.net

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 2019

$4.40 Promoter of $5m crypto exchange backs regulation By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net A BAHAMIAN entrepreneur seeking to raise $5m to finance a crypto currency asset exchange has backed the deputy prime minister’s call for regulation of this space. Ricardo McHardy, principal of Blue Cay Capital, told Tribune Business he agreed with KP Turnquest’s call for The Bahamas to impose proper supervision in a bid to prevent “disastrous situations” occurring in this sector. Mr McHardy, whose background is in e-commerce and digital marketing, unveiled plans to launch the capital raising for a Bahamas-based crypto asset exchange - focused on the Latin American and Caribbean market - “before the start of the new fiscal year” on July 1. He said he aims to raise the financing from crowdfunding, and pledged that only sophisticated investors “who know what they’re doing” will be targeted with all participants “white listed”. “This is my thing to raise money and see if we can get something going in The Bahamas and grow the company from there,” Mr McHardy explained. “It [the exchange] will function on the blockchain, doing spot trading, futures trading, contracts trading. “We want to aim to provide as much liquidity as possible, especially regarding crypto assets. They’re so volatile that if you make a profit you want to get it out. We’re targeting Latin America and the Caribbean, and crypto users that want to operate a second account. It will be foreign exchange and whatever they want to trade - futures, oil, gold.” Mr McHardy said he was “not striking while the iron’s hot, but it’s out there and I see an opportunity to do it”. While the crypto space is currently unregulated, he added that “we’d be prepared when the time comes” for it. “We’re not concerned about the crypto winter,” Mr McHardy continued, referring to the so-called “bear market” faced currently by much of the sector. “If you ask me it’s mainly do to with ‘big money activity’ from some of the the major Wall Street banks; the creation of futures to short Bitcoin, in particular, creating market panic which brought about mass digital financial asset selling. “It’s all about sentiment. When financial market speculators and investors alike are confident, they will buy and hold, but when the media goes into a frenzy for some agenda, people get worried and want to liquidate their position. It’s no different than the current US bond market yield curve starting to retract and eventually invert...”

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Freeport revival ‘as real as it’s been for 20 years’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

F

REEPORT realtors yesterday revealed “a 360 degree turn” in buyer activity in recent weeks due to the prospect of an economic revival that is “as real as it’s been for 20 years”. James Sarles, principal at Coldwell Banker James Sarles Realty, told Tribune Business his realtors are “going back and forth wheeling and dealing” due to renewed interest in the city’s residential and commercial offerings as a result of imminent foreign direct investment (FDI) projects. He said Carnival’s planned $100m cruise port, its largest-ever investment in such a destination, coupled with Royal Caribbean’s involvement in a bid to purchase Freeport’s largest

of foreign investors, Canadian and American, looking for opportunities here also,” Ms Laing-Jones said. “We have persons looking for beachfront property, looking to see what openings are here. It’s both residential and commercial. With the expected influx associated with what Carnival is bringing here, we’re going to be short of rental properties. “Carnival made their announcement that evening, and I was out the next morning with a Nassauvian looking at properties in Barbary Beach. We have double and triple offers on lots here at Barbary Beach, and those prices over the

THE Chamber of Commerce’s top executive yesterday said it was “critical” to get National Health Insurance (NHI) right first time, adding: “We’re going where no man’s gone before.” Jeffrey Beckles, backing the Minnis Cabinet’s decision to send NHI’s financial model back for further study, told Tribune Business that such “fine tuning” was vital given that the “credibility” of all parties involved - the government, NHI Authority, the private sector - “is on the line with this project”. The NHI Authority, which will oversee the proposed universal health coverage (UHC) financing

JEFFREY BECKLES mechanism, failed to win Cabinet approval for its model at the first attempt. It is now working with the Ministry of Finance to validate the assumptions and numbers underpinning the scheme’s pricing and costing - something Mr

Tribune Business Reporter

nmckenzie@tribunemedia.net

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• Chamber chief backs financial model review • ‘Fine tuning’ critical to ‘get it right first time’ • Warns all sides’ ‘credibility on the line’ Beckles believes will “give us the best chance to be successful”. “It becomes extremely important that it’s fine tuned, particularly since the timeframe for implementation is much shorter than it was a year ago,” the chamber chief executive said. “That’s a good thing. “It is critically important we get it right for the simple reason that we’re going where no man has gone before. What’s best for us is if we have a sound, tested model, it should give us the best chance of being successful. “If the model is wrong

By NATARIO MCKENZIE

and we don’t get it right it becomes problematic, not only to roll-out but execute. I think they’re [the government] doing the right thing. As in the old Chinese proverb, it says measure twice, cut once. If we’re able to do that it’s a giant step in the right direction.” Mr Beckles spoke out after Dr Duane Sands, minister of health, revealed to Tribune Business last week that the NHI Authority will have to “give it another go” in after failing to win Cabinet approval for the scheme at the first try.

bridge are going to sky rocket,” she continued. “People are looking for open space where they can build a mall, shopping centre and office spaces.” While the spike in inquiries has still to translate into actual sales, Ms Laing-Jones said business and investor confidence in Freeport had reached its highest level in two decades. “Oh my God, it’s like a 360 degree turn,” she told Tribune Business. “It’s crazy. People are calling from everywhere. I have old clients coming back, and when I send them the announcement [of the

NHI: ‘We’re going where no man has gone before’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

Ragged Island renewables as high as 95% RAGGED Island’s renewable energy penetration will be as high as 95 percent through a solar plant that will be be owned by Bahamas Power & Light (BPL), it was revealed yesterday. Christopher Burgess, director of projects for the Islands Energy Programme at the Rocky Mountain Institute – Carbon War Room (RMI-CWR), said other Family Islands offer attractive opportunities for independent power producers (IPP). He told the Bahamas Chamber of Commerce & Employers Confederation’s (BCCEC) Energy Security Forum: “The Ragged Island project is the second phase of procurement. That would be a solar and storage installation, somewhere around 300 kilowatts (kW), with firm battery storage that would take that island to about 95 percent solar and storage. “They were paying about 75 cents to generate so it was an easy economic decision to take Ragged Island to that high penetration of renewables. That will be owned by BPL. We don’t think a one-off system that small, and that far down the archipelago, would be attractive to an IPP. Large systems - Eleuthera, Abaco and Bimini - would be more attractive to an IPP or in a structure for procurement in the future to reflect that commercial case.” Mr Burgess continued: “The Family Islands are where we see a lot of solar and storage growth just because the SSRG (small scale renewable generation) programme is here.” He added that until grid stability is obtained there will not be many opportunities for independent power producers on New Providence.

• Realtors: ‘360 degree turn’ in activity • Projects create ‘new hope and belief’ • ‘Not boom time yet’; sales now awaited resort property, the Grand Lucayan, had “created new hope and confidence” that was driving the sudden uptick in real estate inquiries. Donna Laing-Jones, a broker at Keys Bahamas Realty, told this newspaper that “people are calling from everywhere” to express interest in Freeport real estate. She said her simple message was that “if you have an interest in a property you’d better secure it now”. “What we have seen recently is not surprising, but a lot of our buyers are coming out of Nassau looking for opportunities in Freeport, and we have a lot

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GB energy theft ‘may become much larger’ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

A FREEPORT-based advocacy group plans to meet with the Grand Bahama Power Company’s (GBPC) regulator next week over the “really terrible” way the utility has handled claims of electricity theft. Pastor Eddie Victor, president of the Coalition of Concerned Citizens (CCC), told Tribune Business it had “requested a meeting” with the Grand Bahama Port Authority (GBPA) to address concerns over the continued disconnection of the Cooper family’s seven fast food franchise outlets which - up to press

• Govt minister gives ominous warning • Advocacy group seeks GBPA meeting • Blasts utility’s approach as ‘really terrible’

KWASI THOMPSON

PASTOR EDDIE VICTOR

time last night - still had not been restored to the grid. Ominously, Senator

Kwasi Thompson, minister of state for Grand Bahama, last night warned that GB

Power’s electricity theft allegations “may become a much larger situation” - indicating there are multiple homes and businesses that may face similar claims. “The government is obviously very concerned for the businesses that have been impacted by the situation, their employees, customers, the Grand Bahama Power Company and the wider community,” he said in a statement. “We are at a very early stage of what may become a much larger situation.

However, the government has encouraged all parties, particularly those businesses impacted and the power company, to seek a fair resolution, and has encouraged the power company to continue the dialogue started today with the impacted businesses and the wider community. “The government will do what it can to assist and is hopeful that a resolution is in sight.” Questioning why GB Power had moved straight to disconnection and filing a police complaint, instead of first raising the matter with the operators of three three Burger King, three KFC, and one Pollo

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