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  • Two charged in Easter Monday Bay Garden killing

    Two charged in Easter Monday Bay Garden killing

    A fatal public shooting that unfolded over the Easter holiday weekend in Barbados has led to formal criminal charges against two local men, authorities have confirmed. The incident, which took place on Easter Monday at the popular Oistins Bay Garden entertainment and dining hub, claimed the life of 34-year-old Raul Clarke, leaving local communities shocked just days after the holiday celebration.

    Law enforcement officials have identified the two accused as 18-year-old Jaheim Canute Collins, a resident of Inch Marlow, Silver Sands, and 29-year-old Shane Anthony Burke, who also previously went by the name Shane Anthony Greene and resides in Ashby Land along Lodge Road. In addition to the primary charge of murder, the pair face a string of other serious criminal offences linked to the shooting. These include multiple violations of national firearms legislation, charges of violent disorder, wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, and endangering the lives of other bystanders who were present at the busy bay venue during the attack.

    Barbados Police Service confirmed that all charges have been formally filed against the two men, and the accused are scheduled to make their first public court appearance on Wednesday at the Oistins Magistrates’ Court. Investigations into the motive and full circumstances of the shooting remain ongoing as authorities work to build their case for the preliminary hearing. Local residents have called for increased safety patrols at the popular tourist and local spot in the wake of the killing, which has been marked as one of the island’s violent incidents recorded so far this year.

  • Second Shipment of Construction Materials Arrives for Distribution to Vulnerable Families

    Second Shipment of Construction Materials Arrives for Distribution to Vulnerable Families

    Antigua and Barbuda has taken another key step forward in its government-backed housing support initiative, with a second batch of critical construction materials successfully arriving at its shores, according to government spokesperson Maurice Merchant. Merchant, the nation’s Director General of Communications, made the announcement during an official post-Cabinet media briefing held Thursday, addressing lingering public uncertainty over whether the post-general election supplementary shipment had reached the country.

    Public questions had been circulating for days about the status of the additional materials, which were promised ahead of the recent general election. In clear, direct response to those queries, Merchant confirmed that the shipment is now on-island and ready for deployment.

    Cabinet members were updated this week that a formal distribution timeline is currently being finalized by government officials, with the explicit goal of ensuring the building supplies reach the communities and individuals that need them most. “The honourable minister reported to Cabinet yesterday that he is putting the final touches on a delivery schedule that will get these materials directly to vulnerable and low-income households across both islands,” Merchant told reporters.

    This distribution effort is a core component of a national housing assistance program launched by the current Gaston Browne-led administration, designed to directly support households that lack the resources to access necessary construction and home repair materials on their own. Merchant also emphasized that senior government leadership is actively engaged in the on-the-ground execution of the initiative, singling out Rawdon Turner, Minister of Urban and Social Transformation, for his hands-on involvement.

    Merchant told the briefing that Turner has personally joined distribution teams to deliver materials to qualifying residents on weekends, demonstrating the administration’s commitment to moving the program forward at pace. “Even on Saturdays and Sundays, Minister Turner is out in communities personally overseeing the delivery of materials to families that need them, to keep this administration’s promise alive,” Merchant said.

    To date, government officials have not released details on the total volume of construction materials included in this second shipment, nor have they publicly identified which priority communities will receive supplies first once the distribution schedule is announced.

  • Government Developing Major Agricultural Dam in Bethesda, The Table Hill dam nearing completion

    Government Developing Major Agricultural Dam in Bethesda, The Table Hill dam nearing completion

    The government of Antigua and Barbuda has advanced a national agricultural infrastructure overhaul with the approval of a major new dam project in Bethesda, a development crafted to address longstanding water access gaps for local farmers and strengthen the country’s food sovereignty. The approval was formally announced at a post-Cabinet press briefing on Thursday by Maurice Merchant, the nation’s Director General of Communications, who confirmed that the body signed off on the broad agricultural and water infrastructure initiative after a detailed presentation from Agriculture Minister Anthony Smith.

    Per Merchant’s briefing, the Bethesda Dam has been selected as a flagship pilot project for the Ministry of Agriculture for strategic geographic reasons: the site sits at the heart of a 50+ acre agricultural zone with untapped high production potential, making it an ideal test case for scaling similar projects across the country in the future. In addition to the new Bethesda development, Merchant shared that construction of a second dam at Table Hill in the Gordon district is already in its final stages, and once operational, it will dramatically expand water access for farming operations in that surrounding area.

    Both projects are core components of the government’s broader national strategy to modernize the country’s aging agricultural backbone, enhance the sector’s ability to withstand climate volatility, and ease the persistent challenges farmers face during periods of drought and unpredictable rainfall patterns. Key projected outcomes of the initiative include expanded national water storage and irrigation capacity, higher overall agricultural productivity, and the conversion of currently unused arable land into active productive farming plots.

    Beyond infrastructure upgrades, the initiative is designed to cut Antigua and Barbuda’s reliance on imported food by ramping up domestic output of staple and high-demand crops. Merchant confirmed the projects will create the water infrastructure needed to expand cultivation of a range of profitable, high-consumption crops including pineapples, fresh vegetables, and fruit trees. The Bethesda Dam will also integrate closely with the Ministry of Agriculture’s growing tissue culture programme, offering dedicated space for crop demonstration trials, propagation of high-quality planting material, hands-on farmer training, and the adoption of climate-smart agricultural practices across the sector.

    According to government officials, the entire multi-project initiative is structured to deliver long-term, sustained support to Antigua and Barbuda’s farming community, while advancing the dual national priorities of improved food security and long-term agricultural sustainability.

  • Antigua and Barbuda to Begin Corneal Replacement Surgeries Locally

    Antigua and Barbuda to Begin Corneal Replacement Surgeries Locally

    The twin-island Caribbean nation of Antigua and Barbuda is moving forward with a landmark government-backed plan to introduce locally performed corneal replacement surgeries, a major step forward in expanding access to specialized advanced eye care for its population.

    Details of the new initiative were shared publicly this week during a post-Cabinet press briefing by Maurice Merchant, Director General of Communications. Merchant confirmed that the nation’s Cabinet has formally signed off on the program after a detailed proposal was presented by Health Minister Michael Joseph.

    Per Merchant’s briefing, the Ministry of Health is currently in the final stages of negotiating a binding memorandum of understanding with World I Mission, a United States-based non-profit medical organization. This partnership will lay the groundwork to launch the specialized surgeries within the next several months.

    In the first phase of the rollout, five corneal replacement procedures are scheduled to be performed by the partnership’s medical team. Beyond the initial surgeries, the collaboration is also structured to introduce and scale up a broader range of complex ophthalmic procedures and specialized eye care services across the country’s public health system.

    For Antigua and Barbuda’s residents living with severe corneal conditions, this program eliminates the need to travel abroad to access the life-changing treatment, which previously came with prohibitively high costs that put it out of reach for many patients. Officials emphasized that the effort aligns with the government’s broader goal of expanding access to modern, specialized healthcare services within the country’s borders, rather than requiring citizens to seek critical treatment overseas.

    Beyond directly treating patients, the initiative is also designed to strengthen the capacity of Antigua and Barbuda’s local ophthalmology sector, building long-term capacity to deliver high-quality eye care and improve health outcomes for people living with a range of serious eye conditions. The nation’s Cabinet has voiced unanimous full support for the program, as part of ongoing administration efforts to grow the range of specialized medical care available locally. As of the latest briefing, officials have not yet released a specific official launch date for the first surgeries, nor have they publicly named the initial cohort of patients who will receive the procedures.

  • Antigua and Barbuda Cabinet Announces Official Funeral for Sir Aziz Hadeed, Pays Tribute

    Antigua and Barbuda Cabinet Announces Official Funeral for Sir Aziz Hadeed, Pays Tribute

    The twin-island nation of Antigua and Barbuda is preparing to honor one of its most influential citizens with a full state official funeral, following the unexpected death of celebrated businessman, public servant and philanthropist Sir Aziz Hadeed. The country’s Cabinet has memorialized Sir Aziz as a towering national leader whose decades of contributions left an indelible mark on the trajectory of Antigua and Barbuda’s social and economic development.

    The official announcement of the funeral honor was delivered this Thursday by Maurice Merchant, Director General of Communications, during a press briefing held after the weekly Cabinet meeting. Alongside confirming the formal tribute, Merchant shared that the full Cabinet has extended its deepest condolences to Sir Aziz’s entire family, including his wife Lady Maasen Hadeed, brothers Radwan and Joseph, sister Leila, nephews Francis and Andrew, as well as extended relatives, friends, and communities across Antigua and Barbuda and the broader Caribbean region, all of whom are grieving the loss of a beloved public figure.

    In remarks to reporters, Merchant emphasized that Sir Aziz’s departure represents a profound, irreplaceable loss for the entire nation. Merchant characterized Sir Aziz as a transformative presence in Antigua and Barbuda’s business ecosystem, noting that his legacy was built not only on remarkable entrepreneurial success, but also on a lifelong, unshakable commitment to public service, charitable giving, and the advancement of the nation he called home.

    Beyond his work in the private sector, Sir Aziz built a distinguished career in public service, serving both as an independent senator and a Cabinet minister. He was most widely recognized as the head of the Hadeed Group of Companies, a regional business conglomerate that grew from its Antiguan roots to expand operations across seven markets, including Trinidad and Tobago, Barbados, Jamaica, Guyana, and the United States.

    Merchant shared that Cabinet highlighted the unique value Sir Aziz brought to national governance, bringing a rare combination of wisdom, uncompromising integrity, long-term strategic vision, and hands-on business expertise to every role he held. His contributions to national progress spanned multiple political administrations, earning him respect across party lines.

    One of Sir Aziz’s most impactful contributions to public life came in the education sector, where he served as chairman of the University of the West Indies Five Islands Campus Council. Merchant noted that his steady stewardship guided the young institution through its critical formative years, laying the groundwork for the campus’s sustained growth and expansion. Beyond his institutional leadership, Sir Aziz personally funded dozens of scholarships and made direct financial contributions to opening access to higher education, creating opportunities for hundreds of talented students who would have otherwise been unable to pursue tertiary study.

    Sir Aziz’s commitment to supporting the most vulnerable members of Antiguan society extended to the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, when the country faced unprecedented economic disruption. Cabinet’s statement highlighted his critical voluntary support during the crisis: Sir Aziz spearheaded and funded food distribution programs and utility bill assistance initiatives that provided life-saving support to thousands of struggling households when public support systems were strained.

    His giving also extended across multiple other sectors, including public healthcare, youth empowerment initiatives, sports development, and the promotion of local arts and culture. Merchant emphasized that much of Sir Aziz’s philanthropic work was done privately, with no desire for public fanfare or recognition.

    Earlier this year, Sir Aziz received one of the Commonwealth’s highest honors when he was conferred with the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George during a ceremony at Windsor Castle. Cabinet noted that the award was a formal international recognition of his decades of contributions to national development, philanthropy, and community service.

    “In recognition of his exceptional service and enduring contributions to Antigua and Barbuda, Cabinet has agreed to accord Sir Aziz Hadeed an official funeral,” Merchant confirmed.

    In closing, the government released a statement calling on all citizens of Antigua and Barbuda to unite in mourning and tribute, describing Sir Aziz as a remarkable patriot whose entire life embodied the values of generosity, humility, entrepreneurial drive, and selfless service to humanity.

  • BREAKING: Former Ministers Samantha Marshall and Joanne Massiah Appointed Ambassadors-at-Large

    BREAKING: Former Ministers Samantha Marshall and Joanne Massiah Appointed Ambassadors-at-Large

    In a breaking official announcement from the government of Antigua and Barbuda, two veteran former cabinet ministers, Samantha Marshall and Joanne Massiah, have been tapped to fill the prestigious roles of ambassadors-at-large for the nation.

    Both appointees bring decades of high-level governance experience to their new diplomatic positions: Marshall previously held key cabinet portfolios focused on domestic social development and economic planning, while Massiah built a public career centered on national legal affairs and community advocacy, and has long been recognized for her work advancing regional cooperation across the Caribbean.

    The role of ambassador-at-large grants the pair broad authority to represent Antigua and Barbuda in international diplomatic engagements, trade negotiations, and global advocacy initiatives, marking a strategic move by the current administration to leverage seasoned political expertise to strengthen the nation’s global standing. Official sources confirm the appointments took effect immediately following the formal public announcement, with the first set of diplomatic assignments for Marshall and Massiah set to be unveiled in the coming weeks.

    Local political analysts note that the selection of two experienced former officeholders reflects the government’s priority of advancing foreign policy and economic outreach goals at a time of shifting regional and global dynamics, with expectations that the pair will advance key national priorities including tourism promotion, foreign direct investment attraction, and climate advocacy for small island developing states.

  • Roadworks to Trigger Overnight Detour on All Saints Road Thursday Night

    Roadworks to Trigger Overnight Detour on All Saints Road Thursday Night

    Residents and commuters in Antigua and Barbuda are being notified of upcoming major overnight infrastructure upgrades along a key stretch of All Saints Road, set to take place in late May 2026. The Ministry of Works has confirmed that construction activity will be concentrated between the Belmont Clinic and Bellevue Service Station, requiring a full temporary detour for all through traffic from 7:00 pm on Thursday, May 28 through 7:00 am the following day.

    Direction-specific routing rules have been outlined to keep traffic moving safely during the work window. For motorists traveling out of the main urban center, vehicles will continue along All Saints Road near the Belmont Clinic and Bellevue Heights Service Station to navigate past the work zone. Commuters heading into town, by contrast, will be required to make a left turn at the Bellevue Heights Service Station before rejoining the main All Saints Road route.

    To prevent confusion and collisions, trained flag persons will be posted at key points along the detour to direct vehicle flow, and clear directional signage will be installed along the entire alternate route to guide drivers traveling in both directions. A portion of the detour will operate as a temporary one-way zone, with this layout clearly marked on official project maps distributed alongside the public notice.

    Notably, local residents who live in the immediate area surrounding the work site will retain full access to their properties throughout the construction period. All commercial businesses located along the closed stretch of road will also remain open for customers during the work, in a move designed to minimize disruption to local economic activity.

    The overnight upgrade is part of the broader government-led All Saints Road Project, an initiative aimed at improving the long-term safety and functionality of this critical transportation corridor. With heavy-duty construction equipment operating in close proximity to the detour route, officials are urging all motorists to comply strictly with posted signage and instructions from on-site staff to avoid accidents and ensure safe passage.

    Project stakeholders and regular road users are advised to adjust their travel plans in advance to account for expected minor delays during the work window. Anyone with questions about the detour or the broader project can reach the Project Implementation Management Unit directly by phone at 562-9173 for additional information.

  • DCOA president calls for elderly-friendly building designs and greater respect for seniors

    DCOA president calls for elderly-friendly building designs and greater respect for seniors

    At the 30th Annual General Meeting of the Dominica Council on Aging (DCOA), held recently at the Goodwill Parish Hall, organization president Nigel Lawrence has issued a urgent call for meaningful inclusion of senior citizens in all stages of construction and urban development across the Caribbean nation.

    Lawrence emphasized that consultation with elderly residents and aging advocacy groups must become a non-negotiable prerequisite for any new development project, regardless of whether it is led by the public government sector or private developers. He pointed to widespread accessibility gaps in new commercial and residential infrastructure across the country, noting that many newly built businesses still lack basic accommodations for older people, from wheelchair ramps and handrails for staircases to elevators in multi-story structures.

    “In this modern era, we cannot accept a three-story building constructed without any accessibility provisions for older adults,” Lawrence argued. He explained that advancing age brings common physical challenges, including reduced joint mobility from drying synovial fluid and chronic rheumatism, that make climbing dozens of stairs to reach upper floors an insurmountable barrier for many seniors. “These design oversights are completely unacceptable, and they exclude thousands of older Dominicans from participating fully in public and economic life,” he added.

    Beyond built infrastructure, Lawrence also called for targeted training for public bus drivers across Dominica to improve services for elderly passengers and residents. He highlighted that excessively loud music played on public vehicles poses measurable health risks to older people, whether they are riding the bus or living adjacent to frequent bus stops. Addressing both accessibility gaps and public service shortcomings, he stressed, is essential if Dominica hopes to achieve its goal of becoming a truly age-friendly nation.

    In accompanying remarks to meeting attendees, Cassandra Williams, Minister of State in the Ministry of Health and Wellness, echoed calls for greater prioritization of older Dominicans, extending the conversation to intergenerational connection. Williams noted that rapid social change has led to growing distance between younger and older generations, even among families living in the same communities. She argued that intentional effort is needed to create spaces that bring together the decades of accumulated wisdom held by seniors with the curiosity and energy of young people.

    Williams issued a direct call to action for young Dominicans to invest time in their older family members and community members. “Sit with your grandparents and great-grandparents, ask them about their lives, listen to their stories of love, resilience, and survival through hardships that many of us cannot imagine today,” she said. “We have so much to learn from the experiences of those who built our communities before us.”

  • BMF Rally2 Championship battle heats up

    BMF Rally2 Championship battle heats up

    As the most decisive weekend of the 2026 Barbados Rally2 championship approaches, the top of the overall standings remains razor-thin, with just a single point separating defending championship frontrunners Stuart Maloney and Josh Read. The iconic BCIC Rally Barbados 2026, scheduled to run across May 29 to 31, will serve as both the third and fourth rounds of the Barbados Motoring Federation (BMF) national championship, carrying a massive maximum haul of 66 available points that could completely reshape the season standings. \n\nMaloney, who claimed the 2022 Rally2 title, catapulted from third place to the top of the overall leaderboard after securing victory in the FIA R5 class at last Sunday’s First Citizens King of the Hill event. The win pushed his total season points to 32, putting him narrowly ahead of 2024 champion Josh Read, who sits just one point back on 31. Jamaican driver Kyle Gregg, who previously held a top-three position, has dropped all the way to fifth after a high-speed crash on the opening run of Sunday’s event that left his car heavily damaged. \n\nRead’s strongest result of the season came back in March at the year’s opening round, the BRC Shakedown Stages, where he and co-driver Mark Jordan fought a wheel-to-wheel battle against Gregg in their matching Ford Fiesta Rally2 machines, ultimately taking the win by just two seconds. While Read crossed the line in fourth place at Sunday’s King of the Hill, Gregg’s early incident ended his day before he could clock a competitive time. \n\nTied for fourth place in the overall standings, just four points adrift of Read, are two drivers separated by generations of experience: 22-year-old Adam Mallalieu, the youngest driver competing full-time in the 2026 championship, and Jeff Panton, a two-time Rally2 champion widely regarded as the most experienced competitor in the entire field. Mallalieu and his co-driver Peredur Davies turned in a stunning performance at King of the Hill, finishing just seven hundredths of a second behind winner Maloney. \n\nIn sixth place overall, David Husbands, competing in only his second full season of rally competition with notes from Trinidad & Tobago co-driver Joshua Plaza in his Volkswagen Polo GTI R5, has moved ahead of British driver Rob Swann. Swarn contested King of the Hill in a Ford Fiesta WRC, a car outside the Rally2 regulations, making him ineligible to score championship points for the event. \n\nRounding out the top 10 in the standings are Roger Hill and Graham Gittens, who debuted their new GR Yaris Rally2 at Sunday’s event; the Skoda crew of father-son pairing Mark and Justin Maloney; and American driver George Sherman paired with Trinidad & Tobago co-driver Scott Pinheiro. \n\nSunday’s event also marked a milestone for the 2026 championship, as three new Rally2 recruits earned their first championship points of the season, bringing the total number of points-scoring drivers this year to 14. Additional competitors who opened their points accounts include Jamaica’s Tarik Minott (Fiesta Rally2), Mark Thompson (Citroen C3\Rally2), Bryan Gill (Fabia Rally2 evo) and Wayne Archer (Fiesta R5). \n\nFor the upcoming BCIC RB26, the FIA R5 class will host a record-breaking field of 22 entries, boosted by the addition of seven overseas guest drivers who are not eligible to score championship points. Notable among these international guests are Aaron McLaughlin (Polo GTI R5) and Conor Wilson (Hyundai i20 R5), who finished first and second overall in last year’s Northern Ireland Tarmac Championship.

  • Butterfield to Buy CIBC Caribbean in Major Regional Deal For $1.8 Billion

    Butterfield to Buy CIBC Caribbean in Major Regional Deal For $1.8 Billion

    In a transformative move set to reshape the Caribbean and international financial services landscape, The Bank of N.T. Butterfield & Son Limited (Butterfield) has announced a definitive $1.8 billion agreement to acquire Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce’s 91.7% controlling stake in CIBC Caribbean Bank Limited. The merger will combine two leading full-service banking and wealth management platforms to create a combined institution with approximately $29 billion in total assets, poised to deliver expanded value to clients, employees and stakeholders across the region.

    CIBC Caribbean brings decades of legacy relationship banking experience and deep community ties across Caribbean markets, while Butterfield boasts a strong footprint in leading international financial centers. The complementary nature of the two institutions will create a far more diversified, scaled entity with enhanced capacity for sustainable, long-term growth. Unlike fragmented smaller regional players, the combined bank will be able to offer upgraded services across corporate, personal, and wealth management segments that neither could deliver independently.

    For clients, the merger unlocks tangible benefits immediately: improved cross-border payment processing, expanded consumer and merchant banking capabilities, and accelerated investment in modern digital and technology banking infrastructure. Butterfield has committed to retaining all existing operational footprints, including CIBC Caribbean’s regional headquarters in Bridgetown, Barbados, guaranteeing seamless service continuity for both customers and employees. The combined organization will also uphold both firms’ longstanding commitments to local philanthropy, financial literacy programs, and sustainability initiatives across all operating geographies, ensuring the merger delivers mutual benefits for the business and the communities it serves.

    Michael Collins, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Butterfield, emphasized that the deal builds on the bank’s proven track record of strategic growth and profitability enhancement since its 2016 New York Stock Exchange listing. “This transaction brings together two storied, complementary banks with deep local roots and decades of trusted customer relationships in their core jurisdictions,” Collins said. “The scale and diversification we gain from this deal positions Butterfield as the leading independent bank and wealth manager across Caribbean and international financial center markets. I am thrilled to welcome our new talented colleagues and valued new clients to the organization.”

    Mark St. Hill, Chief Executive Officer of CIBC Caribbean, echoed Collins’ optimism, noting the alignment of core values between the two institutions. “For our clients, teams, and local communities, this merger unites two organizations that share a commitment to relationship-driven banking, innovation, and local impact,” St. Hill said. “We are excited to build on our legacy as the Caribbean’s leading financial services provider with this new partnership.”

    CIBC President and CEO Harry Culham also praised the transaction, highlighting the strength of the regional business built by the CIBC Caribbean team. “The entire CIBC Caribbean team under Mark St. Hill’s leadership has built a formidable, client-first bank across the region,” Culham said. “We are eager to realize the strategic benefits of this transaction and deliver enhanced value to all our stakeholders.”

    Breaking down the transaction terms, the total aggregate purchase price for CIBC Caribbean amounts to $1.794 billion, or $1.14 per CIBC Caribbean share. The consideration will be structured as 61% cash ($1.091 billion) and 39% Butterfield common stock ($703 million), with the share portion valued based on Butterfield’s 10-day volume-weighted average price (VWAP) of $55.66 on the NYSE as of May 27, 2026. Under the agreement, which has received unanimous approval from Butterfield’s Board of Directors, Butterfield will first acquire CIBC Investments (Cayman) Limited, the holding company that holds CIBC’s 91.7% stake in CIBC Caribbean.

    Following the initial acquisition, Butterfield will launch a mandatory takeover bid for the remaining 8.3% of outstanding CIBC Caribbean shares held by minority shareholders, with the goal of securing full ownership of the regional bank, pending compliance with local regulatory requirements and applicable laws. Minority shareholders will receive the same economic terms as CIBC, and will have the option to elect 100% of their consideration in Butterfield shares if they wish to retain full exposure to the combined entity. If minority shareholders choose the same cash-share mix as CIBC, they will collectively hold approximately 2% of Butterfield’s outstanding shares following completion of the transaction. Houlihan Lokey, the financial advisor to the Special Committee of CIBC Caribbean’s Board of Directors, has issued a positive opinion confirming the fairness of the consideration offered to minority shareholders from a financial perspective.

    To support the transaction, Butterfield has already secured binding commitments for $700 million in Tier 2 capital-qualifying subordinated debt financing, which is expected to close prior to the main transaction. Following completion of the merger, regulatory capital levels for the combined entity are projected to remain significantly above all required regulatory thresholds, with a pro forma Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio exceeding 12% and total capital ratio above 19% at closing.

    The transaction is on track to close in the first half of 2027, subject to three key conditions: approval by Butterfield shareholders, regulatory clearance from all relevant jurisdictions, and satisfaction of standard closing conditions. Following closing, Butterfield’s ordinary shares will remain listed on both the New York Stock Exchange and the Bermuda Stock Exchange, and the bank plans to add secondary listings on the Barbados Stock Exchange, Bahamas International Securities Exchange, and Trinidad & Tobago Stock Exchange, pending compliance with local listing and regulatory requirements.

    After the transaction closes, CIBC will retain an approximately 22% stake in the combined Butterfield entity. Under the terms of a finalized shareholder agreement between the two firms, CIBC will initially have the right to appoint two directors to Butterfield’s Board of Directors. The agreement also includes standard lock-up provisions restricting early sales of CIBC’s stake, as well as customary standstill obligations and registration rights.

    The Bermuda Monetary Authority will remain the primary consolidated regulatory supervisor for Butterfield across all its global operations, and Butterfield has committed to working closely with all relevant local jurisdictional regulators to ensure service continuity, maintain market confidence, and preserve access to high-quality financial services across every operating market.

    Key financial projections for the deal highlight its expected value creation for Butterfield shareholders: the purchase price represents 106% of CIBC Caribbean’s tangible book value as of January 31, 2026. The transaction is projected to deliver a 12% accretion to GAAP earnings per share (EPS) in the first full year after closing (with fully phased-in synergies, excluding integration costs), and a 15% accretion to cash EPS in year one (excluding integration costs, rate marks, and transaction-related amortization). Tangible book value per share for Butterfield is expected to increase by 10%, with an internal rate of return exceeding 20%. Pre-tax annual cost savings are projected to reach a $49 million run rate by 2030 once all integration initiatives are fully implemented.