Kuwait Times

J.Lo and A-Rod help Bronx kids live the American real estate dream

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To amass a fortune in real estate, despite New York’s crazy housing prices: that is the challenge thrown down by singer Jennifer Lopez and her boyfriend Alex Rodriguez to kids from the Bronx, the city’s poorest borough. Around 50 young students from the Bronx, most of them black or Latino, have been selected for “Project Destined,” a scheme designed to teach them the ins and outs of financing and real estate and sponsored by J.Lo and A-Rod-as the retired baseball superstar Rodriguez is known.

The youths underwent intense instructio­n from lawyers, bankers, mortgage companies and realtors, but the course will not be just theoretica­l. The student team that comes up with the best business plan will have the chance to buy a building worth $1.5 million in the Bronx and develop it. In this real estate mecca, its skyline in constant flux and whose most famous alumnus Donald Trump is now in the White House, good contacts can open unimaginab­le doors. That was the philosophy of the project’s two founders, Fred Greene and Cedric Bobo, both of them successful black businessme­n who wanted to pass on their knowledge and experience to kids from humble background­s.

“What we are doing here is giving kids a chance to work with us almost like apprentice­s,” said Bobo. “Kids come in, analyze properties, we then buy them and we share a portion of the profits.” “We want to put owners and stakeholde­rs in the communitie­s where they live, work and play. If we do that, we do a lot,” said Bobo, an experience­d investment banker for the Carlyle Group, one of the power houses of Wall Street. Before moving to the Bronx, where more than 35 percent of the population live in poverty, the program ran in Detroit, Memphis and Miami, helping young people from poorer background­s learn the ropes of business. Escaping the ghetto

At Yankee stadium in the Bronx, the students-split up into six teams-lay out their business strategies to a panel of experts that includes Jonathan Gray, head of the Blackstone Group, and Lopez, the mega-star singer who herself grew up in the Bronx but who is selling her Manhattan penthouse apartment for $27 million. The winning team will be the one with the most persuasive strategy that secures the greatest profit. The winners will then become minority shareholde­rs in the developmen­t and receive some of the earnings from the property, helping pay their university tuition as long as they stay enrolled in the project and take part in more courses online.

In a pre-training session, Rodriguez chats with participan­ts on an impressive balcony overlookin­g Times Square. “Real estate is a way out of the ‘hood,” he says. “For real estate is the one game where you can get rich .. it doesn’t matter if you don’t have any money and it doesn’t matter what market, you can go buy real estate all over the world with no money.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? Jennifer Lopez and Alex Rodriguez at an event for the television series World Of Dance in West Hollywood.
— Reuters Jennifer Lopez and Alex Rodriguez at an event for the television series World Of Dance in West Hollywood.

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