10262023 BUSINESS

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business@tribunemedia.net

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2023

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blasts Realtors cite shortage but Wendy’s Atlantis as it wins listings rise ‘up to 1,492%’ PI approvals By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

t .-4 EBUB TIPXT AUVSOJOH UP CVZFS T NBSLFU MAJOR realtors yesterday contradicted data showing new home listings rose “up to 1,492 percent” in t %FNBOE TMPXT GSPN AGSBOUJD the 2023 third quarter by arguing that QBDF QPTU $07*% inventory shortages mean The Bahamas remains “a seller’s market”. t "WBJMBCMF QSPQFSUJFT BCPWF George Damianos, Damianos L AEPXO Sotheby’s International Realty’s president, estimated to Tribune Business that the number of properties available for sale at $800,000 and over was “down a minimum of 20 percent compared to what it would have been pre-COVID” due to the surge in demand experienced when pandemic-related lockdowns were eased. While he, Mike Lightbourn, Coldwell Banker Lightbourn Realty’s president, and John Christie, HG Christie’s president and managing broker, all agreed that buyer demand has moderated from those 2021 and 2022 “hey days”, the trio also asserted that the reduction in properties available for sale will help

maintain price levels and ensure this nation stays a seller’s market. This, though, is contradicted somewhat by Morley Realty’s 2023 third quarter market report, which found there was “a significant increase in the volume of new listings” for both existing homes and land across the five main island markets of New Providence, Grand Bahama, Exuma, Eleuthera and Abaco. The report, covering the three months to end-September 2023, agreed there were “continued signs of a market slowdown” given that “the abnormally strong market and related frantic pace” of market

activity in the two years immediately following the COVID pandemic were unsustainable. However, while closed real estate sales “appear to have returned to pre-pandemic levels”, new listings continue to increase - possibly as sellers try to catch the boom’s tail-end. The Morley Realty report said data for the six-month period covering the 2023 second and third quarters “shows signs of supporting the theory when supply exceeds demand - turning from a seller’s market into a buyer’s market”.

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Objection to Bahamas KC testifying for SBF By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net US prosecutors yesterday raised objections to a Bahamian KC testifying in defence of embattled FTX founder, Sam BankmanFried, over his meetings with local regulators as the crypto exchange imploded. The US attorney’s office for southern New York, which is prosecuting Mr Bankman-Fried, told the judge overseeing the former FTX chief’s trial that his lawyers had failed to comply with federal court procedures over plans to call Krystal Rolle KC as a witness.

SAM BANKMAN-FRIED Mr Bankman-Fried’s attorneys, according to court documents obtained by Tribune Business, said Mrs Rolle, who was among those defending the FTX founder in previous Bahamian court proceedings.

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Chamber seeks ILO liveable wage advice By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE BAHAMAS Chamber of Commerce and Employers Confederation (BCCEC) was yesterday said to have sought the International Labour Organisation’s (ILO) help to define what a livable wage is. Peter Goudie, the Chamber’s labour division head, told Tribune Business he had reached out to the global body to better understand the concept’s costs and how it can be implemented in The

PETER GOUDIE Bahamas after the Prime Minister yesterday reiterated the Government will look to further increase the minimum wage “at the appropriate time”.

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t 4MBNT SFTPSU GPS PSHBOJTJOH ANFSJUMFTT DBNQBJHO t 3FTPSUT TBZ HP BIFBE AQSFNBUVSF QMBO BQQFBM t #VU SFRVFTU GPS XFFL EFMBZ XBT AVOSFBTPOBCMF By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net WENDY’S yesterday blasted Atlantis for masterminding a “meritless, aggressive and self-serving campaign” that failed to prevent the fast-food brand gaining planning approval for its Paradise Island restaurant. Psomi Holdings, an affiliate of Aetos Holdings, the Wendy’s and Marco’s Pizza franchisee, said in a statement that it now “intends to get on with the business of what it does best” by investing $3m to convert

the former Scotiabank branch into a location for both brands after the Town Planning Committee granted the project site plan approval subject to several modest conditions. However, the Association that represents Atlantis and other major Paradise Island resorts and developers, yesterday warned that the battle is far from over. Pledging to appeal the Town Planning Committee’s decision “as soon as possible”, the Paradise Island Tourism Development Association (PITDA) slammed the approval as

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