Excerpt from Jamaica Observer column by Jean Lowrie-Chin
Marlene Street-Forrest |
Congratulations to the dynamic Marlene Street-Forrest,
General Manager of the Jamaica Stock Exchange, and her hardworking team: their
extraordinary efforts have earned them Bloomberg’s rating as the Number One
performing stock exchange in the world in 2015!
Marlene Street-Forrest has noted international interest in Jamaica’s
firms: Heineken NV’s purchase of Red
Stripe/Desnoes & Geddes saw those shares soaring by 500 percent and a Mexican
company acquired majority shares in the Burrowes family’s Dolphin Cove.
Legendary Myrtle Bank Hotel (Getty Images) |
The Jamaica Stock Exchange started operations in 1969,
founded by Willard Samms, Raglan Golding, Edward Gayle and Anthony Lloyd. The palms around their building at 40 Harbour
Street bring back memories of driving with my Dad along the palm-lined driveway
of the Myrtle Bank Hotel which was at that very location.
How the business
district of downtown Kingston has developed since then – it holds great
promise, as does the tourism, agriculture, real estate and manufacturing
sectors of Jamaica. The world is discovering the potential of our beloved
country, the largest English-speaking Caribbean island, set squarely in the
centre of the Americas.
The late Basil Buck |
Years ago, I decided to become a ‘penny stockholder’
in the companies served by our agency – this gave a deeper understanding of the
businesses, as I listened to the concerns of shareholders large and small at
the annual general meetings. My late
friend Basil Buck, owner of Buck Securities, organised for these share
purchases and made a few suggestions which turned out to be excellent.
Then, when we handled the publicity for the Junior
Market listings of the Lasco companies about five years ago, we suggested
reserving shares for teachers, nurses and police officers, for whom our shop
had developed affirmation programmes. The
awareness sessions went well, bringing in hundreds of new participants in
Jamaica’s Stock Market.
The Bloomberg website notes that the JSE has launched
the Caribbean’s first online trading platform.
This has inspired Denis St. Bernard, a London-based business consultant
to start “a diaspora-focused investment company that would pool contributions.”
St. Bernard noted that the opportunities are with known Jamaican brands such as
GraceKennedy.
Sushil Jain |
Investment guru Sushil Jain has been an enthusiastic
supporter of Blue Chip Jamaican companies listed on the JSE. “Why wouldn’t you want to have people like Don
Wehby and Patrick Hylton working for you?” he asks. Let us make financial
literacy a priority so that ordinary Jamaicans can tap into every opportunity
for wealth creation.
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