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Writer's pictureMAREJ

$2.28 Million loan from Kennedy Funding Financial launches Housing Development in Jamaica


Kennedy Funding Financial, an Englewood Cliffs, NJ-based direct private lender announced that it has closed a $2,228,000 loan to Pegasus Development Company Ltd. Pegasus needed a bridge loan to turn 595.83 acres of undeveloped land in Jamaica into a massive residential housing and commercial development.

Closing a land loan in the Caribbean is no small task for any lender. So when Pegasus’ Canadian-based mortgage broker needed to find money for its client in Jamaica, they knew there was only one company who could deliver it.

“Kennedy Funding Financial,” said Angelo Butsianis, president of Equis Capital Finance. “They were the only lenders that I knew of that could close a loan in the Caribbean. I had a positive experience with Kennedy 16 years ago and I knew that they could make the deal happen.”

There are many challenges to getting a land deal done overseas: banks and lenders in a foreign nation might not be able to find the money for a large-scale loan, and the lack of knowledge of foreign government regulations and politics can frighten off U.S.-based traditional lenders. Fortunately, Kennedy Funding Financial’s vast experience in closing loans in Jamaica and the Caribbean helped Pegasus get its project off the ground.

The two-year private loan from Kennedy Funding Financial will give Pegasus the working capital and soft costs it needs to begin construction on approximately 4,500 three bedroom/three bath residential units, as well as some light commercial development. The project will consist of three phases to be completed over a period of several years.

The site is located northeast of May Pen, the capital of and largest town in Jamaica’s Clarendon Parish. May Pen is one of the most important trade centers and marketplaces in the entire Parish, with a large residential community that mostly works in the agriculture and mining industries. The town is located approximately 35 miles west of Kingston, the capital of Jamaica, and the two population centers are connected by a section of the nation’s major thoroughfare, Highway 2000.

The property is an attractive investment, because home prices have risen 41% in Jamaica from 2010-2015, with young professionals and first-time homebuyers in middle-income brackets typically purchasing two-to-three bedroom homes for up to US$200,000 and single-occupancy apartments for up to US$178,957. These trends are expected to continue, as mortgage rates in the country are currently low.

Borrowers in the Caribbean can have great difficulty securing loans. Their local banks and lenders often can’t produce the funds, and conventional U.S.-based banks and lenders may simply refuse to shoulder the risk. When borrowers reach out to Kennedy Funding Financial, they find that our extensive history working in Caribbean markets allows us to quickly and efficiently provide them with the means to turn their dreams into reality.

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