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US Federal Trade Commission Sues Nvidia over ARM’s Acquisition

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Nvidia’s acquisition of Arm has been challenged in court by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), adding further strain on the already controversial deal.

The FTC on Thursday sued to block the $40 billion acquisition from SoftBank on antitrust grounds.

The deal has lingered for months due to prolonged antitrust interest of regulators that has put all parties involved under intense check. FTC’s lawsuit is the latest move to halt the acquisition, and it highly puts its completion under uncertainty.

“The proposed vertical deal would give one of the largest chip companies control over the computing technology and designs that rival firms rely on to develop their own competing chips,” the FTC said in an announcement.

Last year, when Nvidia moved to acquire Arm from SoftBank, rival tech companies including Qualcomm, Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Microsoft filed a complaint with the FTC, the European Commission, the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), and China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR). They expressed worry that the acquisition will monopolize the chip market, giving Nvidia control over a critical supplier that licenses essential chip technology to the likes of Apple, Intel, Samsung, Amazon and China’s Huawei.

“The complaint alleges that the proposed merger would give Nvidia the ability and incentive to use its control of this technology to undermine its competitors, reducing competition and ultimately resulting in reduced product quality, reduced innovation, higher prices, and less choice,” the FTC said in its statement.

“Arm is a core supplier of architecture technology to most semiconductor companies. Its Arm instruction set is at the core of nearly all mobile processors powering smartphones, including those made by Apple and Android devices that use Qualcomm chips.”

By February, the FTC’s investigation had moved to second phase and the regulator had asked SoftBank, Nvidia and Arm to provide it with more information. It’s going to be a long scrutiny involving a lot of documents and time, even though Nvidia had argued that the purchase price alone means it has no incentive to mess with neutrality.

New FTC head, more trouble for tech companies

Trailblazer-Lina Khan, the 31-year old lawyer appointed by President Joe Biden, took charge of the FTC earlier this year and took an aim at the Nvidia-Arm’s deal as one of the many antitrust cases to prioritize. Since appointment, her signal is pointing to a broader antitrust enforcement that will curtail the excesses of tech companies, which is believed to have thrived under the lackluster approach of the regulator in the past.

Khan spent her time as an academic and a congressional staffer prior to her nomination studying large technology companies and the unique ways these firms can amass power in digital markets. The companies on her radar include Amazon, Facebook and Google. The FTC had earlier, filed lawsuits against some of these companies.

The market regulator said on Thursday that Arm’s licensees, which include Nvidia’s competitors, share competitive information with the technology firm. The FTC’s lawsuit focuses on chips for driver assistance, networking products, and Arm microchips for cloud computing servers. The FTC voted unanimously to issue the complaint, it said.

As the investigation escalates, Nvidia continues to defend the acquisition saying it will only promote competition in the industry instead of crippling it.

“As we move into this next step in the FTC process, we will continue to work to demonstrate that this transaction will benefit the industry and promote competition,” an Nvidia representative said in a statement.

“NVIDIA will invest in Arm’s R&D, accelerate its roadmaps, and expand its offerings in ways that boost competition, create more opportunities for all Arm licensees and expand the Arm ecosystem. NVIDIA is committed to preserving Arm’s open licensing model and ensuring that its IP is available to all interested licensees, current and future,” it added.

Per CNBC, the trial before the FTC’s own administrative law judge is set to begin on Aug. 9, 2022. The FTC has the option of bringing cases either through this in-house process or in federal court. Under the administrative process, the ALJ will make an initial determination based on the trial, which can be appealed to the full commission for a vote. That decision can still ultimately be appealed in federal court.

With the legal battle set to be long, the Arm’s deal that Nvidia previously said it expected to close in 2022, will linger much longer into the future – if at all it will ever be closed.

It’s Graduation Day At Tekedia Mini-MBA Edition 6

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Tekedia Mini-MBA certificate sample

Dear Member,

Let me begin by congratulating you for completing this academic excursion with Tekedia Institute. I am very confident that your business capabilities have been deepened, and that you are ready to go into the markets, and advance the wealth in nations.

We thank you for joining us for the 6th edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA. At 7pm WAT today, we will bring this edition to a closure (Zoom link in the Board).  On behalf of our Faculty, staff and the entire community, thank you for choosing Tekedia Institute for your learning journey.

From today, you are part of the Tekedia alumni community. Yes, today does not end the knowledge excursion; this is just the beginning of this co-learning and co-advancement relationship. Add this academic achievement in your LinkedIn profile (learn how to do here ).

Today (Dec 4), 7pm-8.30pm WAT | It’s Graduation Day  –  Tekedia

Regards,

  • Ndubuisi Ekekwe, PhD
  • Lead Faculty, Tekedia Institute

Note: Certificates will be ready from Monday

$1.37 Billion VC funds: Nigeria is winning the New Money even though we’ve lost the Old Money

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Nigeria is winning the New Money even though we have lost the Old Money. Yes, from the old century foreign direct investment to investment in stock exchanges to private equity money, Nigeria is not ranked in the top 10 in Africa. But when you move into the money of the future (venture capital funds), Nigeria has no competitor in Africa.  Three years ago, all of Africa raised $1.16 billion; this year, Nigeria alone raised $1.37 billion.

I expect Nigeria to hit $2 billion VC funds in 2022 as most VCs begin to invest via Nigeria into Africa. South Africa has lost that position and Nigeria is well at the center now.

So the report published by the Egyptian agency does not tell the whole story. Of course, this is not to say that Nigeria must not do better in the old money.

Revisiting Nigeria’s Abandoned Filling Stations and Decommissioning Strategy

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Globally, downstream is one of the lucrative sectors of the oil and gas industry. Nigeria as one of the countries where crude oil remains a major contributor to the Gross Domestic Product have had several filling stations over the years. Recent growth in the establishment and projection equally shows possible exponential set up of the stations in some emerging towns and cities.

Though, there are no official statistics that establish the number of filling stations per town, city and village across the country, our over 6-month investigation shows that a town is more likely to have at least 5 filling stations within while roads linking to the centre of the town is more likely to have at least 10 stations. Our earlier analysis had noted that prospective owners are usually expected to understand location within the context of factors of production and the implications of the closeness to critical public and private facilities.

Having a filling station requires several requirements. From ministries to agencies and departments one needs to make certain documents available and pay necessary charges to the state and federal governments. Our check indicates that establishing a filling station, apart from buying a land, requires about N55 million. For many prospective owners, this amount is not huge considering the long-term return on investment based on the fact that Nigeria still a petrol-driven car society. In order words, the invested capital would be captured in multiple folds.

However, our analysis has shown that not all the stations within towns and cities, and along the major highways in the country are making significant returns. Many of the stations have been abandoned because of sales dwindling and other critical factors such as incessant robbery incidents. According to our data, the stations along the main highways mostly experienced robbery attacks.

While carrying out our investigation, more than 100 filling station managers in the South West region were interviewed. Our analyst and his team also carried out several observational studies, which reveal that many stations on the highways have been abandoned because of these factors and others in the last 5 years. From Ibadan to Osogbo, abandoned stations along the Ibadan-Ife axis have been overgrown with grass of different species. The stations have been cave for people who committed varied crimes. The story is not different when one travels to South East and South-South regions through Ondo State.

Ideally, according to experts who spoke with our analyst, filling stations such like other facilities or assets in the oil and gas industry need to be commissioned for use and when the assets are no longer useful to the stakeholders they are abandoned. When abandonment arises, there is a need to invoke decommissioning strategy.

Therefore, stakeholders in the industry need to look at the abandoned stations holistically, examining the severity of the impacts of the crimes being committed on individuals and society in general. It is also necessary that the stakeholders examine the climatic impacts of the stations on the environment.

Our analyst notes that it would not be a bad idea if the abandoned stations, most importantly those within the cities and towns, could be sold to people and organisations that can turn the locations around for the benefits of the host communities. According to the outcomes of our observational studies, majority of the abandoned stations within the cities and towns could be turned into innovation hubs or offices for startups.

Trademark: Ways of making money off your creativity.

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Nigerian Entertainers and social media influencers are in no doubt very creative, as they don’t just entertain they also put their creativities to test in numerous occasions. Most of them have popularized and influenced some trending and house hold words and slogans like Mr. Macaroni’s Fantabulous, You are doing well, Oiin etc and Josh2funny’s All my guys are ballers, Don’t leave me, in all circumstances, consequences boys etc, Jigan Babaoja’s Sho mo age mi ni and Davidsyn the comedian who just popularized the slogan “Normally’ which is currently trending across different social media platforms. 

Everyone who spends some time in the social media space will definitely be aware of when the slogan “Sho mo age mi ni” which is a Yoruba phrase meaning “do you know my age?” which was influenced by Nigerian comedian and actor, Jigan Babaoja was trending. It was so popular then and still popular now that everyone was saying it and even Nigerian banks and blue chip companies were using it in their newsletters as a catchy trending phrase.

Mr. Jigan Babaoja decided to confront one of the banks that was using the slogan he purportedly popularized to pay him or to refrain from using his slogan without his permission as that will amount to infringement on his intellectual property rights. The banks and other organizations using that slogan were able to get away with it because the slogan was not “trademarked” hence, Jigan cannot claim abt legal rights on that phrase though it was him who everyone knows popularized the phrase and influenced the usage in the social media. 

Nigerian Entertainers and creatives should know that you can not lay claim to a word or slogan when you have not trademarked it as your intellectual property even if everyone knows that you are the originator, the law is that you must register it or trademark it which is a means of you giving notice to the whole word that the word or slogan is now yours exclusively and anyone who wants to make use of it must obtain express permission from you and pay for you for it, if not it will amount to them infringing on your (intellectual property) rights.

This is the reason why Nigeria creatives and influencers must learn the art of making money off their crafts by always trademarking words and slogans they originated out of their creativities, acquire parent rights and copyrights of the products they invented and influenced. The benefits are numerous but one of it is having exclusive legal rights to your brain child or your intellectual property property and making huge money off your creativity.