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Those Twitter Ghana Jobs With Special Language Requirements – Igbo, Hausa, Yoruba

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People, I glanced through some of the Twitter Africa jobs and most of them are designed around the Nigerian market. In short, the big boss for this is a Nigerian woman. They want you to understand one of Hausa, Igbo and Yoruba! Simply, I expect Twitter to open an office in Nigeria by 2024. The trajectory is evident, and there is no reason NOT.

Bloomberg tried to cover Nigeria from London but struggled – and then it began to operate from Ikeja Lagos [you will not notice as the building is nondescript]. I was among the first people it interviewed when it opened. Most consulting firms tried to cover Nigeria from South Africa until they opened shops in Lagos. If Lagos is a country, it would be the 5th or 6th largest economy in Africa.

Go and improve your Igbo, Hausa or Yoruba as Twitter needs those languages for some jobs. You will be positioned in Ghana but note that you may be required to have extended stay in Lagos, So, keep your Lagos apartment as Twitter will reimburse for rents, not hotel bills, in Lagos! You get the idea.

Ghana WINS Twitter

SEC circular on the trading of foreign securities by investment platforms in Nigeria

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SEC Nigeria

By Ibrahim Moshood, Associate, Centurion Law Group (https://CenturionLG.com)

The apex regulator of securities in Nigeria, the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has issued a circular, with respect to technology investment platforms providing the Nigerian public with access to foreign securities. The circular dated 8 April 2021, issues a strong warning to these investment platforms and Capital Market Operators (“CMOs”) in partnership with them to provide brokerage services. Both categories of players in the financial space were warned to desist from providing the Nigerian public, with access to foreign securities. This is pivoted on the grounds that these securities are neither registered with the SEC nor listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (“NSE”).

From 2018, technology start-ups have pioneered major disruptions of the financial space in Nigeria. These disruptions have been lauded by Nigerians, particularly at a time when there has been a persistent devaluation of the Naira.  Savvy and upwardly mobile Nigerians have then opted to use these technology platforms, to save in foreign currencies and also purchase foreign stocks that are being offered. Some of these technology investment platforms include Trove, RiseVest, Chaka and Bamboo etc. They typically partner with CMOs in Nigeria for their expertise and already-procured brokerage licence.

As a background, recall that in December 2019, the SEC had published a statement to notify the Nigerian public of its interim orders to restrain an investment platform called Chaka Technologies Limited (“Chaka”). This order came about as a result of the advertisement and sale of foreign securities of companies such as Google, Alibaba, Facebook, Tesla etc. in Nigeria by Chaka. The SEC had informed the Investment Securities Tribunal (“IST”) that Chaka had offered securities for sale “outside the regulatory purview of the Commission and without requisite registration as stipulated by the Investment and Securities Act (“ISA”).

Chaka responded to the allegations above by releasing a press statement, denying the wrongdoing entirely.  However, in March, Chaka announced that it had obtained a newly created licence from the SEC which allows it to offer the services above i.e. advertising and sale of foreign securities to the Nigerian public.

Notwithstanding the development above, the SEC had kept quiet for months on this issue until this recent circular, which Nigerians have reacted to as a deliberate attempt to stifle innovation by the regulators, create a multiple licensing regime, an inordinate drive for revenue and a shoddy attempt at stabilizing exchange rate of the Naira.

Currently, two major questions should be addressed by the SEC.

  1. Is the sale of foreign securities by these platforms prohibited in Nigeria?
  2. Is there a licence issued by the SEC or some other regulatory agency that would allow these investment platforms carry on the business of selling foreign securities in Nigeria?

Hopefully, the SEC will release a more informative circular or press statement clarifying what investment firms should do to continue offering these foreign securities. In the meantime, investors and investment firms alike are enjoined to consult professionals for more clarity.

Huawei to Invest $1bn on Car Tech, Signaling Attempt to Find Alternative to Telecom Business

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Most parts of the world have been pushing to cage Huwaei

As US sanctions push Huawei to the wall, the embattled Chinese telecom vendor is beginning to weigh other choices to stay in business.

Bloomberg reported that Huawei will invest $1 billion on researching self-driving and electric-car technologies, accelerating plans to compete with Tesla Inc. and Xiaomi Corp. in the world’s biggest vehicle arena.

The Chinese telecom giant was leading the global 5G roll out before the United States, based on security concerns, blacklisted the phonemaker on many fronts.

According to the report, the Chinese telecom giant will partner with three automakers initially to make self-driving cars that carry the Huawei name as a sub-brand, said Xu, one of three executives who take turns to fill the post. It will keep its circle of partners small and get its logo onto cars — not unlike how Intel Corp. calls attention to its microprocessors on PCs — that adopt its autonomous driving technology, he added. The mobile giant has so far agreed to team up with BAIC Group, Chongqing Changan Automobile Co. and Guangzhou Automobile Group Co.

“The smart car business unit receives one of the heaviest investments from Huawei. We will invest more than $1 billion in car component development this year,” Xu said. “China adds 30 million cars each year and the number is growing. Even if we don’t tap the market outside of China, if we can earn an average 10,000 yuan from each car sold in China, that’s already a very big business for Huawei.”

China is the biggest market for electric vehicles, and divestment to carmaking will protect Huawei from the effects of US sanctions.

The United States has succeeded in rallying its allies against allowing Huawei to lead or involve in deployment of their 5G infrastructure, leaving the Chinese telecom company nearly crippled.

The teleco’s hope to use openings allowed by the sanctions to keep its telecom business alive was dashed by further sanctions.

In August, the US Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) in the Department of Commerce announced that Huawei and its non-US affiliates on the Entity List have been restricted access to items produced domestically and abroad from US technology and software.

The BIS restrictions, which added another 38 Huawei affiliates to the Entity List, prevent Huawei’s attempts to circumvent U.S. export controls to obtain electronic components developed or produced using U.S. technology.

The pandemic-induced global chip shortage compounded Huawei’s woes, throwing its smartphone and gadget production into jeopardy.

To stay alive, the Chinese company is learning to ply its trade in other sectors. Huawei’s billionaire founder Ren Zhengfei is directing the firm toward new growth areas such as smart agriculture, health care and electric cars.

It hopes for a seat at the table with tech giants vying to define the rapidly evolving fields of connected vehicles, homes and workplaces, Bloomberg said.

These new areas of interest have the potential to win the US’ friendship. The pro-green Biden’s administration is welcoming plans geared toward green energy as it pushes to implement the Paris Climate Accord. Huawei stepping into the EV industry may well paint it in a good light before Biden’s administration that has shown few signs of taking a different approach from Trump.

However, Huawei’s new choice of business in an industry already dominated by Tesla, Nio, Xpeng Inc. and other EV makers in the China market, will face a mammoth of competition challenge.

Last month, Xiaomi, Huawei’s rival in smartphone and gadget making, unveiled plans to invest about $10 billion over the next decade on manufacturing electric cars. Search giant Baidu Inc. and Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd. are also said to be teaming up to build vehicles.

Research firm Canalys estimates that EV sales in China may climb more than 50% this year alone as consumers embrace cleaner automobiles and costs tumble, but it takes more than high demand and lower cost to win market shares.

The Huawei team believes they have what it takes to compete in the crowded Chinese EV market.

“I don’t know if they were bragging, but my team said they can have cars driving on their own without human intervention for 1,000 kilometers. That’s way better than Tesla,” Xu said Monday.

Process Improvement & Automation (Session Lab) Today At Tekedia Live

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This afternoon at Tekedia Live, we will have a session on Process Improvement & Automation (session lab) . We will be picking lessons in the downstream sector of the oil & gas sector (and the broad supply chain industry) as Tokunbo Olaitan Arannilewa, CEO of Eonsfleet , educates on the mechanics of improving efficiency through automation. Tekedia Mini-MBA current edition has entered the execution phase as we begin to conclude.

We typically begin with how to make innovation happen, and then look at frameworks that enable business growth; the last phase is execution where we focus on translation – making things happen in markets.

We are bringing companies to show our members how new ideas are being built daily, and how tech is changing the ordinance of market systems. On Thur, a law partner will come to explain Transaction Due Diligence.

Join us at 7pm WAT today (Tuesday). Zoom link in the Board school.tekedia.com

  • Tue, April 13 | 7 – 8pm WAT | Process Improvement & Automation (session lab) – Tokunbo O. Arannilewa, CEO Eonsfleet
  • Thur, April 15 | 7-8pm WAT |  Transaction Due Diligence/Business Intelligence – Chike Obimma,  Partner at Niccom LLP
  • Sat, April 17 | 7 – 8.30pm WAT | How To Discover Opportunities, General Topic –  Ndubuisi Ekekwe

Ndubuisi Ekekwe To Keynote 2021 HREA Work Festival, Landmark Center, Lagos

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Good People, join me on Thursday at Africa’s largest HR Expo – HREA Work Festival 2021 as I keynote the event. My speech is titled “The Physics of Talent and The Bytes of New Work”.  The time I have is 3pm WAT on Thursday at Landmark Center, Victoria Island, Lagos Nigeria. I will be speaking virtually. Register here.

Tekedia Institute will also deliver two workshops on April 14 during the event

  • Increasing Productivity through Technology Innovation & Automation – Tekedia Institute
  • Future fintech disruption – Tekedia Institute