IMAX executive: Bahamas is ‘most restrictive market’

By NATARIO McKENZIE

Tribune Business Reporter

nmckenzie@tribunemedia.net

A Fusion Superplex executive yesterday branded The Bahamas as “the most restrictive banking market I’ve ever seen”, forcing investors to “think outside the box” for project financing.

Dominic Richards, the Atavus Group’s chief operating officer, told the Rotary Club of West Nassau: “I have businesses in Texas, Chicago and New Jersey, and I can say to you this is the most restrictive banking market I have ever seen in my entire life.

“It doesn’t make any sense. I can go to Texas and raise, as a foreigner, $8m-$10m in the YMCA in a month, but I come to my own country and I can’t get support.”

He added: “When it comes to capital raising and doing projects I would say that it’s less about whether you can find the money and more about how you bring it into the country without restrictive and predatory policies that don’t necessary facilitate the proper spreading of wealth across the county.”

Mr Richards, though, sought to debunk suggestions that capital is not readily available to Bahamian entrepreneurs. “You have to be able to think outside the box. There are so many ways to raise capital,” he said.

“There’s a lie going around that money is not available. I sat in the house of five billionaires in Lyford Cay before we did this project, and we got offers for between $20m to $40m. I turned most of them down because they required ownership or board decision-making, or the right to pull funding if they woke up one morning and sneezed.”

“We were able to get funding without anyone having the ability to make any operational decisions, have voting rights on the board or ability to determine the content we show. That’s very important when you do business. For the average business, the first two years is really rough, but since we launched there were only three movie theatres in China that beat us consistently.”

Mr Richards also defended the long-term viability of the IMAX-centred Fusion Superplex entertainment venue, saying: “You can’t convince people who don’t understand the business model to actually understand the depth to which we actually prepared the plan.”

Comments

geostorm says...

Congrats Mr. Richards and team on your vision. I encourage many more young people, especially men to take advantage of the opportunities that are available to them!

Posted 8 March 2019, 2:53 p.m. Suggest removal

John says...

The government allowing gangsters from halfway around the world to dictate to them. But the Bahamas has no police to ensure that the EU clowns are following the same policies they are trying to enforce. The offshore banking industry has increased 20 fold since they snatched it from countries like the Bahamas. Just like the US has the Bahamas listed as a drug trafficking country but the amount of drugs flowing into the US has tripled since the 1980’s. And now there’s fentanyl that comes from China and is added to cocaine and heroine to make it more potent but very deadly. Average 7,000 deaths a year..And so yes a Bahamian can go to Miami and open an account with a passport and drivers license in 30 minutes. Here you need three forms of I’d plus your grandma birth certificate. Bahamians again discriminated and disenfranchised. Policies being dictated by gangsters who never even visited the Bahamas.

Posted 8 March 2019, 3:06 p.m. Suggest removal

TalRussell says...

Yes, yes and yes comrade Multiplexers shareholders may go all gun shy after a Netflix movie receives "10" Oscar nominations, yes, no?

Posted 8 March 2019, 5:32 p.m. Suggest removal

FreeportFreddy says...

No

Posted 9 March 2019, 7:32 a.m. Suggest removal

Well_mudda_take_sic says...

Tal: Why do you believe this is another money laundering enterprise financed by the numbers bosses? I've also heard the same rumours all over town, but is there any solid evidence behind the rumour mill? I agree the poured concrete and building blocks alone for this mammoth structure must have cost mega millions. Perhaps the Red Chinese helped finance this very costly project.

Posted 9 March 2019, 11:51 a.m. Suggest removal

screwedbahamian says...

The Government just gave the Webshop Boys $25 Million of the Bahamian tax payers money, so there is local capital available for Bahamians to find local Mafia Investors.,

Posted 9 March 2019, 10:46 a.m. Suggest removal

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