Jamaica Gleaner

Guardian Life to pump $6b into real estate

- Avia Collinder Business Reporter avia.collinder@gleanerjm.com

GUARDIAN LIFE Limited (GLL) will launch its first real estate developmen­t project in mid-June, a $6-billion initiative intended to speed up investment returns for the life insurance company, according to president Eric Hosin.

The residentia­l developmen­t will be done in two phases over three years on property owned by Guardian Life at Musgrave Avenue in Kingston.

The company is building 238 residences targeted at the middle-income market.

Hosin declined to share the projected return on investment, but said the housing project promised higher returns than those currently being garnered from insurance.

Last year, New Kingstonba­sed Guardian Life which ranks number two in the insurance market with $66 billion in assets, registered declining net profit. The company made $3.8 billion compared to $4.6 billion the year before. Its net results from insurance activities fall from $3.65 billion to $2.6 billion at year ending December 2016.

Guardian closed out 2016 with a cash hoard of $3.4 billion, down from $5.4 billion the year before.

As observed by Hosin in a letter describing the planned real estate project, “the Jamaican investment landscape has changed significan­tly over the last five years, making it more difficult for businesses like Guardian Life to make reasonable returns from traditiona­l sources”.

That prompted the company to seek out more lucrative fields for investment.

“We have identified the real estate market, specifical­ly developmen­t of residentia­l property, as an avenue for improving investment returns in the medium term,” Hosin stated.

Guardian’s biggest competitor, Sagicor Group Jamaica, operates a real estate investment fund which has $44 billion in assets and a well-establishe­d property services arm that executes real estate projects for the group.

Guardian will initially develop a six-storey structure comprising 66 housing units on a 1.32 acre lot at 9 Musgrave Avenue.

Phase two will encompass another 172 residences spanning two buildings that will rise to seven and nine storeys on 3-acre property. That developmen­t at 2-4 Musgrave Avenue will include a jogging trail, among other amenities befitting what the company describes as the ‘contempora­ry Caribbean lifestyle’.

GLL itself will launch its real estate initiative company-owned property, which it proposes to develop in two phases over the next three years.

Hosin declined to disclose the selling price of units — saying that all the informatio­n will be given at the ground-breaking ceremony for the project on June 14 — but noted that the target demographi­c for both developmen­ts as “young profession­als, small families, expatriate, upperincom­e investors along with pension and property funds”.

The Guardian Life head said the three-year project is expected to create 230 jobs for skilled and semi-skilled workers over the constructi­on period.

Guardian closed out 2016 with a cash hoard of $3.4 billion, down from $5.4 billion the year before.

 ??  ?? THE GLEANER, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 2017 President of Guardian Life Limited, Eric Hosin.
THE GLEANER, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 2017 President of Guardian Life Limited, Eric Hosin.

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