The Caribbean is more than a destination—it’s a region defined by contrast and potential.

Stretching across turquoise waters, it’s home to over 700 islands, vibrant cultures, and a rich blend of languages, histories, and traditions.
From bustling urban ports to untouched beachfronts, the Caribbean offers world-class tourism appeal alongside growing infrastructure needs.
Its economies are diverse—ranging from tourism and hospitality to logistics, agriculture, and financial services—each with unique investment stories.
But behind the postcard views lies a pressing opportunity: to unlock development at scale, with institutional discipline and global capital.
This is the Caribbean—not just a place to visit, but a region ready to build.
CapitalTech’s Caribbean Investor Connector
A Proprietary Solution for Connecting Tokenized Real Estate Asset Issuers with Investors
The Problem & Opportunity
Tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) are poised to transform private market investing, yet issuers face significant challenges in efficiently connecting with qualified investors. Existing platforms are not optimized for blockchain-native assets, resulting in friction, delays, and missed capital formation opportunities.
Our Solution
CapitalTech’s Caribbean RWA Investor Connector is becoming a proprietary platform designed to redefine how tokenized RWA issuers connect with investors. By combining automation, compliance, and blockchain-native capabilities, it will accelerate capital formation while reducing friction—establishing CapitalTech and its Alliance Partners as the premier gateway between tokenized Caribbean assets and the global investor community.
Key Features
- Investor matching tailored for tokenized asset offerings
- Integrated compliance workflows to meet regulatory requirements (Reg D 506(c), Reg S)
- Blockchain-native functionality for transparency, traceability, and automated distributions
- Customizable tranches to attract different investor profiles
- Scalable architecture for global investor outreach
Why Partner with the CapitalTech Alliance?
With the Alliance, Caribbean companies can expand their reach into the fast-growing tokenized asset sector, enabling global investors to discover and invest in blockchain-enabled private market opportunities. Together, we can deliver a next-generation funding discovery and investor engagement experience.
Caribbean News
February 2026
Google has announced an investment of US$500 million in the construction of submarine cables and an international digital exchange port for the Dominican Republic. This will apparently be the company’s eighth digital exchange port in the world and the first in Latin America.
This is also said to be the first international submarine cable ring to the continental United States from the Dominican Republic.
The company will develop an open and neutral infrastructure with the capacity to host four new international submarine cables. A first phase will involve the installation of two new submarine cables between the Dominican Republic and the United States, which will be added to the existing one between the two countries. Construction will begin in March.
Dominican President Luis Abinader signed a decree late last week, declaring the construction of digital exchange ports and the installation, deployment, and operation of submarine cable systems a matter of high national priority.
Local press reports say the decree seeks to strengthen digital infrastructure, expand international connectivity, and position the Dominican Republic as a regional hub for artificial intelligence.
Indeed, the thinking is that a digital exchange port will place the Dominican Republic at the centre of information exchange between North America, Central America and South America.
The new infrastructure will make it possible to multiply by ten the number of fibre optic pairs that currently connect the two territories, in addition to offering diversified connectivity and reduced latency to the South Carolina and Virginia Google Cloud regions in the US.
According to the BNamericas news service, the country has five other submarine cables in operation that connect it with Caribbean territories and, from there, with the continent, although some are approaching the end of their useful life.
According to the government, internet traffic in the Dominican Republic has increased 500% in the last five years; more than 35% comes from the United States.
Artificial intelligence is undoubtedly a strong government focus. Last year the Dominican Republic signed an agreement with AI and accelerated computing company Nvidia, to establish a Centre of Excellence in Artificial Intelligence (CEIA).
Also last year, the regulator Indotel and the Centro de Inteligencia Pública (CIP) signed a cooperation agreement to create an AI academy in the country, to accelerate training in AI.