



PAM Market Pulse
Real estate news and current events
About PAM N.V.
Meet PAM N.V.
Our Origin
The foundation of PAM N.V. (Pengel Ayannah Maxi N.V.) was laid early on. A deep fascination with urban dynamics, data and architectural structures formed the starting point for founder Jeffrey Royston Pengel. This passion developed during his studies in Real Estate in Eindhoven into a professional vision, fueled by the analysis of real estate projects in 63 countries worldwide.
For many years, Jeffrey Pengel deliberately operated behind the scenes of the Surinamese real estate sector. As the strategic force behind large-scale subdivision and real estate projects, and as the founder of SC-REAS N.V., institutional shareholders and international investors entrusted him with the full execution of their projects. This long-standing position in the background has resulted in exceptional, in-depth market knowledge.
With the establishment of PAM N.V., he now deliberately steps into the foreground to make this accumulated expertise and data-driven insights directly accessible to the market.
PAM Strategic Insights
Real estate insights and market analysis
9 juni 2026Market Segmentation of Building Plots in Paramaribo
The building plot market in Paramaribo is in a phase of clear polarization in 2026. While the lower segments show extreme nominal price increases, an ever-growing gap is emerging in the higher segment between asking prices and actually realized transaction values.
27 mei 2026The Land Lease Permit in Surinamese Real Estate Transactions: Valuation Risks, Remaining Term and Calculation Methodologies
Market participants and appraisers in Suriname too often approach the land lease permit as a simple administrative formality. The persistent assumption that the value of a land lease runs parallel to that of full ownership – at most corrected by a fixed, arbitrary discount – is untenable in the current market.
25 mei 2026Market Insights Report #1 — The Land Conversion Freeze
Paramaribo, May 2026 The sudden suspension of the land conversion policy in early 2026 has plunged the Surinamese real estate market into a severe institutional vacuum. This report demonstrates that the decision is causing far-reaching damage: citizens who have paid between SRD 50,000 and SRD 150,000 or more are still in legal limbo without a title deed.




