Co-Owners Keisha Bailey and Jermaine Bailey Host Private Wealth Workshop on the 2026 Financial Outlook

As 2026 approaches, many Jamaicans with growing incomes, businesses, and investments are facing a new reality: money decisions are no longer local, simple, or isolated. Whether it’s overseas investments, foreign real estate, U.S. or Canadian income, or regional business structures, wealth today moves across borders — and so do the risks.

That’s the backdrop for a private briefing hosted by Bailey Wealth Group in partnership with KCLH Full Business Solutions. The session is designed for professionals and entrepreneurs who are no longer just “earning money,” but actively managing complexity.

The core message is simple but important: in 2026, wealth outcomes will depend less on individual investment choices and more on how well everything is coordinated — investments, tax planning, business structures, and documentation. For Jamaicans with cross-border exposure, misalignment between these areas can quietly erode wealth through higher taxes, compliance issues, or inefficient structures.

The discussion focuses on what’s changing in the 2026 market environment, including key risks that could affect portfolios and capital decisions. It also addresses cross-border tax realities facing Jamaican families and business owners connected to North America — an area where small oversights often become expensive problems.

Another major theme is structure. As wealth grows, how assets are held matters just as much as what assets are owned. Businesses, properties, and investments spread across multiple countries require intentional structuring to protect capital, manage tax exposure, and avoid gaps that only surface when it’s too late.

Finally, the briefing emphasizes discipline: clear mandates, proper documentation, and ongoing oversight. For high-earning Jamaicans, long-term wealth isn’t built by reacting to headlines or chasing returns, but by putting systems in place that hold up across market cycles, policy changes, and generations.

For Jamaicans navigating 2026, the real risk isn’t market volatility alone — it’s uncoordinated money decisions in an increasingly global financial world.