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Master Investment Principles and Let’s Reverse: “The three richest men in Nigeria have more wealth than 83 million Nigerians”

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Tekedia Institute’s Learner-Managed Investment Fund and Portfolio Management program is designed to provide learners with hands-on experience in performing investment research, investing capital, and managing a portfolio during studies in Tekedia Institute.

he program is divided into core four phases – Investment Fundamental and Tools, Laboratories and Research, Investment Execution, and Lessons Learned. The first edition will begin on March 6, 2023 for 12 weeks (covers the first three phases), and about 6 months later, the learners will reconvene, for another 3 weeks (covers the last phase). Go here and register.

We invite you to join us and together we can reverse this bombshell data by Oxfam: The three richest men in Nigeria have more wealth than 83 million Nigerians. Yes, shared prosperity through elevation of all, by investing and providing opportunities to build new industries and market systems, even as you invest in things that can enable ordinary people to climb the wealth ladder.

Because the 1% cannot be expected to self-disarm, our option is to master their games, and take it to them. And that means, going after those opportunities as WE THE PEOPLE before they even know about them. Come and let us develop the wealth playbook of the new century at Tekedia Institute.

Oxfam in Nigeria on Monday announced that three of the richest men in the country are wealthier than 83 million Nigerians. […]

“The richest men in Nigeria have more wealth than 83 million Nigerians. The richest one per cent grabbed nearly two-thirds of all new wealth worth $42 trillion created since 2020, almost twice as much money as the bottom 99 per cent of the world’s population, reveals a new Oxfam report today. During the past decade, the rich one per cent had captured around half of all new wealth,” Mr Ahonsi was quoted by Vanguard as saying.

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Meanwhile, Oxfam on Monday said that the world’s top one per cent grabbed nearly two-thirds of the $42 trillion in new wealth created since 2020.

In its new report released to coincide with the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, the organization said the share was almost twice as much money as the amount obtained by the bottom 99 percent of the world’s population.

According to the report, titled “Survival of the Richest”, billionaire fortunes are increasing by $2.7 billion a day, while at least 1.7 billion workers now live in countries where inflation is outpacing wages.

The report noted that half of the world’s billionaires live in countries with no inheritance tax for direct descendants, putting them on track to pass on $5 trillion to their heirs, a figure that is more than the gross domestic product (GDP) of Africa.

Nigeria’s Central Bank Governor Appeals Court Judgment Ordering Him to Appear Over Contempt

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The governor of Nigeria’s central bank, Godwin Emefiele, has appealed the judgment of an Abuja Federal High Court, ordering him to appear before the court on Wednesday, Jan 18, 2023, over his refusal to comply with a $53 million debt judgment involving the Paris Club refunds.

Justice Inyang Ekwo, in an application for garnishee made on October 20, 2022, ordered Emefiele to appear before the high court on the said date, following confirmation that the CBN governor is yet to honor an earlier judgment made by the court.

A Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Joe Agi, had filed an application against Linas International Ltd, the Minister of Finance and the CBN in a suit marked FHC/ABJ/CS/1193/2017. The suit is seeking an order from the court to the Inspector General of Police to arrest the CBN governor and bring him to court.

According to Daily Sun, Emefiele in his notice of appeal, which is predicated on three grounds and dated October 27, 2020, contended that the trial judge erred in law and occasioned a miscarriage of justice when it made an order compelling his attendance in court.

In his appeal, Emefiele argued that the appeals, marked CA/A/476/2018 between CBN V Joe Agi, SAN, & 2 others and CA/A/23/2020 between CBN V Joe Agi, SAN & 2, are appeals against the judgment the lower court is seeking to enforce.

In his argument, Emefiele’s counsel, Damien Dodo, said the proceedings to compel his client’s appearance after the appeals have been entered, place the trial court in a position where it is exercising concurrent jurisdiction with the Court of Appeal over the same subject matter.

He added that the trial judge erred in law which occasioned a miscarriage of justice when it compelled and ordered the central bank governor to personally appear in court without determining one way or the other, his application challenging the jurisdiction of the court.

Dodo reminded the appellate court that he had, on January 27, 2020, filed an application challenging the jurisdiction of the court as well as the service of forms 13 and 15 on him for non-compliance with the mandatory provisions of section 56, part IV, of the Sheriff and Civil Process Act.

He added that on February 22, 2022, the appellants jointly filed an application seeking to set aside the issuance and service of forms 13 and 15 on him, on the basis that the same ought not to have been issued during the pendency of the two mentioned appeals and the pending motions on notice for a stay of execution dated March 26, 2018, and July 11, 2019, respectively.

In further argument, Emefiele contended through his lawyer that the lower court erred in law occasioning a miscarriage of justice when it made an order compelling his appearance in court on January 18, 2023, when he is not a party to the suit before it.

Based on these arguments, Dodo prayed the appellate court to allow his appeal and set aside the orders made by the Federal High Court. The case has now been adjourned to March 20, 2023.

Ropay, Nigeria’s leading HR Startup, Unveils More Features for Employers

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Ropay, a Tekedia Capital portfolio startup, fixes frictions which every growing company has: people, payment and payroll. Yes, automate salaries, automate statutory compliance requirements, pay pensions and taxes directly, access reverse payroll features, track attendance, manage leave/vacation, etc in Nigeria. This business is growing rapidly because it is helping companies to outsource everything that has to do with people, payroll and payment in a smart way. Whether you have 2 staff or hundreds, Ropay is here to support you.

Go here and create a Ropay account; I will take care of the first two weeks of whatever the startup charges, provided you do so by Jan 25, 2023 . I truly want you to focus on your core business while Ropay takes care of the payroll+ matters. The startup has processed billions of naira worth of transactions (GTV) as CEO Adedokun Agunbiade and team continue to  innovate with new features to serve clients.

The pricing plan is super affordable.

Tyms Africa Expands Its ROSCA and Micro-credit Business to Uganda

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Let me commend Ibrahim Adepoju and Chineye Ochem ACA, CFE, MBA for a successful launch of Tyms Africa (formerly AjoMoney) in Uganda; Tekedia Capital invested in Tyms. The founders  digitized Africa’s centuries-old rotating savings and credit associations (ROSCAs), making it possible for people to access zero or low interest credit when they collectively save and invest money. That mission began in Nigeria and has now hit East Africa.

Let me thank the Uganda Team for quickly getting to a product-market fit, looking at the numbers I have seen. Congrats Team for understanding this market for this flawless execution to have happened.

In Uganda, the USSD is 28421# . Tyms is opening its pre-seed soon; if interested, connect with Chineye, Ibrahim or reach Tekedia Capital team here . To learn more about Tyms, go here .

As Microsoft Lays Off 10,000 Workers, the Battle with Machines is Evolving

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It is really not the type of rain you would expect in tech: many layoffs across all domains of technology space, from consumer to the enterprise world. Yes, ‘Microsoft plans to lay off 10,000 employees as part of broader cost-cutting measures, the company said in a securities filing on Wednesday, making it the latest tech company to reduce staff because of growing economic uncertainty. Speaking before the layoff announcement at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said that the company was not immune to a weaker global economy. “No one can defy gravity and gravity here is inflation-adjusted economic growth,” he told WEF founder Klaus Schwab in a livestreamed discussion.’

The problem though is that this process is just the beginning: for decades, work dislocations have largely focused on blue collar workers as technology systems automated most of the things they used to do. But as AI machines advance, most while collar jobs will go. In short, even a reliable computer science degree in the world of technology may not do that magic to keep us employed, because nothing is outside the bounds of disruption.

We have become more efficient at work places. A simple Calendly page provided by our Nigerian brother from Atlanta has possibly disintermediated what most secretaries and personal assistants do. Drop that page and magically, you do not need any human being to run your calendars. Scale that automation to other domains, you will get the clarity that the workplace is changing.

Worried the robots are taking over? You may not be too far off, after artificial intelligence language model ChatGPT was accidentally recommended for a job interview. The bot, which can solve IT dilemmas, write articles and has even been used by students to get an easy essay pass, recently made it to the interview round with communications consultancy firm Schwa — after writing an anonymous 300-word application. The company owner, who was aware the bot was applying but didn’t know which application was the AI one, said that while the final draft made it to his desk, it took some coaching to get there.

Of course, we cannot decouple from the war in Russia. As this war continues, we are re-learning that Russia is indeed a very powerful country in the world. Without the war, the UK might not have changed its prime ministers, Germany its defense minister, and many other exogenous and endogenous events within Europe and beyond, would not have happened. Unfortunately, the war is still ongoing, creating problems for everyone, with Ukraine paying with blood and others with wallets and pulses. I hope they find a solution because it is the root cause of most things, from inflation to poverty in some lands.

Microsoft has announced that it will lay off around 10,000 of its employees, less than 5% of its total workforce. The software giant (parent company to LinkedIn) will begin the redundancies Wednesday, as it faces customers who want to do “more with less” amid an uncertain global economy. Microsoft, which joins the likes of Amazon, Meta and Alphabet in announcing recent layoffs, will take on a $1.2 billion charge related to restructuring costs. The company says it will continue to hire and invest in strategic areas and called out its focus on artificial intelligence. (LinkedIn News)

Good People, this is not to panic. As Google, Microsoft, Facebook, etc fire and layoff people, they’re also recruiting many. In other words, we have to adapt by learning new things. Opportunities come, opportunities go – and new ones emerge.

In Nigeria, after the civil war, the most fascinating engineering degree was civil engineering. That moved to chemical/petroleum as the boom of oil skyrotted demand. Today, we can agree that electrical/electronics holds the ace. That is how the world economy functions. But we do not need to get new degrees, we just have to relearn to remain relevant. 

Why? With these thousands of experienced brilliant people flooding the labour market, competition will rise and that means we have to be steps ahead. The data is clear: opportunities will abound in the future but new skills will be needed to unlock them.

LinkedIn has insights on current fastest growing jobs in the US: “Head of revenue operations tops this year’s U.S. LinkedIn Jobs on the Rise list — a data-backed ranking of the 25 fastest-growing job titles over the past five years. While the employment landscape continues to evolve — from skills-based hiring to hybrid work demand — this list provides insight into where long-term opportunity lies as professionals navigate uncertainty. There are roles pointing to a greater focus on the employee experience (such as chief people officer and employee experience manager), data security and compliance (data governance manager) and corporate sustainability (sustainability analyst).”

Comment on Feed

Comment 1: “But new skills will be needed to unlock them”- Valid!

I was on a call with a leading VC Boss over the weekend and he disclosed that his interest in investing in a niche was truncated because all the name tendered to him lacked the skillet to manage the asset into profitability! On Jobs: As long as there are human, there will always be jobs, competency is a major barrier!
Bluntly, nobody let’s go of value.

Comment 2: As technology, innovations and the endless drive for industrial efficiency continue narrow down the labour force of large firms, I expect the calls for some type of Universal Basic Income to grow louder in the coming years.

In the very near future, everything that can be automated will be automated… Leaving the ever growing population to scramble for whatever will be left irrespective of their skill level or competency.

Comment 3: As partially contrary to the widespread argument that AI will not replace jobs if one learns how to apply the technology, it will certainly reduce head count as ” we have become more efficient at workplaces “. And the current global unrest is no doubt a contributing factor in accelerating this process.

Going forward Professor, Our new motto is ” Upskill Or Step Aside. “