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Home Blog Page 5750

The Nigeria’s Phone IMEI Number Registration Policy

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From the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC): “With the aim to curtail the counterfeit mobile phone market, discourage mobile phone theft, enhance National Security, protect consumer interest, increase revenue generation for the government, reduce the rate of kidnapping, mitigate the use of stolen phones for crime, and facilitate blocking or tracing of stolen mobile phones and other smart devices, one of the means to achieve this is through the deployment of Device Management System.”

Yes, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has instructed phone users  to submit their International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) to the Commission within three months.

According to Bell,  the “International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) number is a unique identification or serial number that all mobile phones and smartphones have. It is normally 15 digits long. The IMEI number can be found on the silver sticker on the back of your phone, under the battery pack, or on the box your phone came in”.

This is a very strange policy which mirrors when young people make mobile apps to find ambulances in cities with no ambulatory vehicles or those amazing apps which can help you find sources of water even though the app will not carry the water. I am not sure our challenge is not knowing where bad guys are, the issue remains capabilities. 

So, if you have 200 million IMEI for  phones and one is stolen, do we have the capacity to recover it? Like the Police rescue app, the root cause is not that the police does not know it needs to rescue, the challenge is that a policeman may be engaged by more than one citizen at a time. The app will not magically double that police officer. Possibly, the solution might have been hiring more police officers.

Have you registered your iPhone? It is the law and law breakers can have their phones “confiscated”, and auctioned! Running Nigeria is indeed tough – and experimentation continues.

Tekedia Capital Q2 2021 Demo Day Is June 12, 2021 [Attend]

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Tekedia Capital Syndicate Q2 2021 Demo Day is coming up as follows: June 12, 2021 at 4-6pm WAT. In the Member area, you will see the startups and the videos we have made on them, along with the Demo Day Zoom link. The Syndicate Q2 2021 investment window is the last week of June and first week of July; plan accordingly. We welcome new members (details below) to invest in some of the amazing global startups through Tekedia Capital. We started this mission to democratize wealth creation in the continent. Simply, email our team and schedule a time; we actually want to speak with you before you join.


Tekedia Capital offers a specialty investment vehicle (or investment syndicate) which makes it possible for citizens, groups and organizations to co-invest in innovative startups and young companies in Africa and around the world. Capital from these investing entities are pooled together and then invested in a specific company or companies.

We invest in mainly technology-anchored companies and are sector-agnostic which means those companies could be operating in any industry, including finance, real estate, education, health, logistics, etc. The opportunity is open for individuals in Africa, Africans in diasporas, global citizens in any place in the world, investment groups and organizations around the world.

For details on how to join Tekedia Capital Syndicate, click here.

Annual Fee of $1,000 or local currency equivalent: Tekedia Capital charges $1,000 annual fee which includes an investor in Tekedia Capital deals for 12 months. This fee is used to run administrative activities, research & development, due diligence on startups, and perform routine paperworks in the business. If after a year, the investor could decide not to renew the annual fee. This could be because the investor has invested in enough startups or for any other reason. Largely, if the investor does not renew, Tekedia Capital will stop sharing deal flows with that investor. Even with that, the investor will remain connected with Tekedia Capital for any previous investment made.

Email capital@fasmicro.com

Technology-anchored startups operating in Africa, we continue to welcome pitch decks or business plans; send to capital@fasmicro.com. Through our members, we have superb access to capital to support your mission.

*Meanwhile, in the next few days, we will migrate this page to a dedicated Tekedia Capital website.

The Course on Satellite Broadband Opportunity in Nigeria – Register Before Deadline

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It was a well received Tekedia Live session. You can watch the recorded session on “Satellite Broadband, SpaceX Starlink and Opportunities Ahead in Nigeria & Africa” webinar below. But you know what? Tekedia delivers this quality thrice weekly, on different topics, from branding to strategy, business growth, supply chain, etc during our Tekedia Mini-MBA editions. A full course on Satellite Broadband, SpaceX Starlink and Business opportunities is part of our next edition.

SpaceX Starlink is real: you saw it, they have even appointed some authorized distributors for West Africa!

Join the next edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA which begins on June 7 to end Sept 1. It is an online, self-paced program which does not get into your busy work day. Cost remains $140 (or N50,000 naira). Discounts available for bulk registrations. Learn from the best 140 global faculty members.

Please register immediately to beat the early bird deadline of tomorrow.

Nigerian Professionals in Search of Realistic and Sustainable ROI for Agritech Businesses and Investors

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Like other experts in the agriculture industry and Agritech sector, our analyst has analysed various returns on investment being promised by Agritech businesses in Nigeria. Our analyses have shown that the businesses are defaulting due to a number of internal and external factors.

However, as long as investors would continue to have interests in the sector, conversation on how best to deliver value by the businesses will continue in online and offline spheres. Seyi Ojeleye, a prominent LinkedIn user, recently questioned realistic and sustainability of the various ROI of the Agritech companies in the country on his page. “I’m seeing a lot of Farm Investments lately promising as high as 50% ROI in 5 months,” he started. “Do you think 50% ROI is achievable in 5-6 months in farming? or Are we dealing with another scam here?” he queried.

He followed his questions with a question-focused survey, which sparked reactions of professionals on the medium. From investment analysts to experts in agriculture in relation to sustainability practice, the realisation and sustainability of the ROIs depend on a number of factors, some of these factors have been previously analysed by our analyst.

Agritech Businesses Are Playing Scam Game

“Of course, one does not need an angel of God to tell us that it is either a scam or the return is not guaranteed,” Okechukwu Agubata says. Queenadday, who describes herself as a realtor and an investment advisor, believes promising huge ROI when it is obvious that it can be attained within the stipulated period should be seen as “another MMM in disguise”.  “It appears to be another scam. I’m a farmer in most of the fields they are sharing investment opportunities in and I know it is not always about scale. Even with proper management things go wrong and I can tell you for sure that many of those selling these opportunities don’t even have structure talk less of track record,” Oluwajare Fola Bolu-Mole says.

Exhibit 1: What is a reasonable ROI in farming business for a 6-month duration?

Seyi Ojeleye’s Survey, 2021; Infoprations Analysis, 2021

From the responses to the survey initiated by Seyi Ojeleye, it emerged that 10% to 20% and 20% to 30% are more realistic than promising more than 30%. This result is not quite different from what our analyst proposed. “Analysis of the select 20 companies’ ROI shows that on average the brands promise 30.05% within the average of 8 months and 2 weeks farm cycle. Our analysis indicates that these companies had less than 50% capacity to pay the average ROI [30.05%] when the current and constant basic prices of the GDP were considered.”

What is Not Realistic and Sustainable?

To Adetutu Adeniregun, an investment consultant at Oxford International Group, “a 50% ROI in 6months is not so sustainable,” when one considers existing macroeconomic indices which are impacting businesses. “If it is guaranteed, then the owners will surely borrow from elsewhere at 15% – 20% per annum and generate the 50% returns for themselves within 5 months,” Okechukwu Agubata adds.

Complementing Agubata’s view, the proponent of the survey, Ojeleye notes that the managers of the businesses must have been involved in a number of deals, masking their wealth. “…I know a lot of farmers and I’m surprised that they make that much ROI. It is either they’re bad business managers or they’re really good at masking their wealth.” He reiterates that such ROI is meant for the oil business, a position which makes Olukanmi Timothy concluded that “Nigeria would have abandoned oil if this is remotely possible.”

However, some believe that it is not bad as long as the managers of the businesses are good at managing risks or focusing on crops or areas of the industry which could deliver substantial value to them. “Poultry (broiler) can throw up a minimum of 20% ROI in 5 weeks (average bird weight of 2.5kg). Crude palm oil trade will offer you a minimum of 15% in 3-5 weeks, Nwuke says.

What is Realistic and Sustainable?

Aligning with the second ROI option of the survey, Ojeleye notes that “they are all aware it’s not sustainable, including those paying 50% per annum because that will mean they make 100% per annum for them to share you that. The realistic ROI in my opinion is 30% per annum, and that is not even accounting for wastages. Why’s anyone bothering on real estate if farms are that lucrative? You are lucky to do 30% real estate appreciation in a year, except you are the developer.”

While Ojeleye suggested 30% per year, some made case for more than 12 months and 36% with ROI ranging from 35% to 100%. However, Ojeleye says for a business in the sector to churn out 50% ROI to an investor, “it must have at least 100% profit as an entity which means the farmer will have a share of the profit – say 30%, the platform – 10-15%, the investor – 50% and insurance – 7-10%. According to him, “This is standard practice.” “How realistic is this in 6 months? he queried.

What Prospective Investors Should Do Before Investing?

To avert being duped by some of the companies that promised unrealistic ROI, the position of the respondents is that prospective investors need to carry out a thorough background check, business case rating and investment risk analysis before investing. “While business case rating is a must for companies going on IPO, it is of less significance to a company seeking 50 million investment. The cost of these reports too may seem unreachable to the average person with just 50k – 200k to invest.  You see the dilemma,” Ojeleye says.

Tiamiyu Ismail, the Research and Development Head of FarmKonnect Institute for Data and Agribusiness Studies, believes that having more articles and books on how to invest in the sector will help a lot. “This is one of the gaps, FIDAS, an arm of FarmKonnect Agriculture PLC, is bridging with the publication of The Rules of Investing in Nigerian Agritech Businesses, which will be released soon.”

Any Update On Dangote’s New York Diversification Playbook

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Money managers and capital market operators, do you have any new (public) information on this. Recall that Aliko Dangote plans to geographically diversify his family wealth. He famously said  last year, “In Africa, you know we have issues of devaluation, so we want to really ‘preserve’ some of the family’s wealth.” But with Covid-19, is this playbook still on track?

Please if you have anything from Dangote companies’ financial statements that can provide insights on this, please help. I am working on a course for Tekedia Institute Mini-MBA on wealth preservation in Africa, with our experts, and want to understand what the big guys are doing.

Yes, poor Dangote!. He is failing the big money race, dropping from 23rd to 100th in five years. (Gracious heavens, can you give me the opportunity to even compete in such exams? Coming 1,000th in a class of 100 people would be glorious!). Yes, our money man, Azeez explains what is happening in the wealth of King Dangote, examining the Nigerian capital market, and why Dangote would open that New York office because he said it all: “In Africa, you know we have issues of devaluation, so we want to really ‘preserve’ some of the family’s wealth.”