Mayberry Investments Limited successfully hosted its latest Virtual Investor Briefing, providing a critical platform for Wigton Energy Limited to present its Q3 2025 results.
Led by Mayberry’s AVP of Investment Banking, Rachel Kirlew, the session underscored Mayberry’s pivotal role in bridging high-growth entities with the Jamaican investment community.
The briefing detailed Wigton’s 11% year-on-year revenue growth, reaching $1.5 billion for the nine months ending December 2025. Even with quarterly setbacks from Hurricane Melissa, Mayberry’s review highlighted Wigton’s resilient balance sheet—bolstered by a 12% improvement in liabilities.
"Our mission at Mayberry is to provide investors with transparent, expert-led insights into the companies defining Jamaica's future," stated Rachel Kirlew. "Wigton’s ability to maintain a strong liquidity position and continue dividend payments, even amidst climate challenges, validates the strategic advisory and market positioning we have championed for the company."
As the broker that originally took Wigton public, Mayberry remains a key strategic partner, facilitating dialogue that spotlights Wigton’s shift toward a diversified solar and wind portfolio. Gary Barrow, CEO of Wigton Energy, used the forum to explain how the company achieved higher overall production in 2025 than in 2024, despite consecutive hurricanes.
Mayberry’s Damian Whylie, General Manager of Asset Management, noted that Wigton’s current ratio of 3.7 times demonstrates fiscal discipline highly attractive to institutional investors. "The synergy between Wigton’s operational team and Mayberry’s financial structuring is what allows for this level of resilience," Barrow remarked. "By working through Mayberry’s established advisory framework, we have structural reinforcements in place—both on the ground with our turbines and on our balance sheet."
Through the briefing, Mayberry reaffirmed its confidence in Wigton as a cornerstone of the regional renewable energy sector. Executives reviewed Wigton’s premium market valuation, with investors correctly pricing in the company’s massive 70-megawatt solar expansion.
With Mayberry as Wigton’s largest shareholder, the firm is uniquely positioned to guide investors through the company's "reinvestment cycle." Mayberry’s outlook suggests that as the 70-megawatt project comes online, it will double Wigton’s capacity and provide the "geographic redundancy" needed to protect against localised weather events.
"Wigton is not just a wind farm anymore; it is a diversified energy powerhouse," said Melissa Jones, Mayberry’s VP of Relationship Management. "At Mayberry, we look beyond quarterly fluctuations. We see a company with 20-year Power Purchase Agreements and a roadmap to triple revenues through government RFPs. Our role is to ensure our clients are positioned to benefit from this long-term value creation."
The briefing also confirmed Wigton’s robust $3.1 billion cash position—managed within Mayberry’s advisory framework—providing the equity to fund these multi-billion dollar projects without compromising shareholder dividends.
