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Xiaomi Joins the Electric Vehicle Adventure with $10 Billion Investment

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Xiaomi has become the latest smartphone maker to delve into electric vehicles. The Chinese company announced Tuesday that it is investing $10 billion over the next decade in a electric vehicle subsidiary.

This comes months after US smartphone maker, Apple accelerated its push for electric cars.

Xiaomi said in a stock market filing that the new unit will be led by billionaire co-founder and CEO Lei Jun, with an initial investment worth 10 billion yuan, ($1.5 billion). Lei announced his intention to lead a new standalone division.

While Xiaomi did not reveal funding details of the plan, a source told Bloomberg that the company could invest up to 100 billion yuan in the project, depending on the progress, and the company will contribute about 60% of the envisioned sum and plans to raise rest of the funds.

“We have a deep pocket for this project. I’m fully aware of the risks of the car-making industry. I’m also aware the project will take at least three to five years with tens of billions of investment,” Lei said, adding that Xiaomi is not planning to invite outside investors to the party.

Electric vehicles are becoming a growing choice of divestment for tech companies recently.

In January, Apple intensified its search for a partner, courting carmakers including Hyundai. Apple has an automotive program known as Project Titan, which has been in the pipeline since 2014, with the iPhone maker targeting 2024 to produce passenger electric vehicles with a breakthrough battery technology.

Like Apple, Xiaomi is one of the world’s biggest smartphone producers and it also makes a range of gadgets including home security cameras, electric shavers and toothbrushes, light bulbs, watches and scooters.

The Beijing-based company is joining the electric vehicle frenzy where Tesla, Nio and Volkswagen are already flexing muscle. Tencent and Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd. are also said to be teaming up to build electric cars. EV sales in China may climb more than 50% this year alone as consumers embrace cleaner automobiles and costs tumble, research firm Canalys estimates.

The big players already dominating the EV market means Xiaomi will have to face tougher competition.

It took Elon Musk 17 years of struggle to turn the fate of Tesla into a sustained fortune-making company, which means, the gadgets and mobile device making company may take longer.

Its move however, underscores increasing interest in the industry as world leaders push to implement Paris Climate Accord.

“This industry is on the cusp of a $5 trillion market opportunity over the next decade,” Dani Ives, an analyst at Wedbush Securities wrote on the transformation of electric vehicle. “GM, Ford, and Volkswagen all jumping into the deep end of the pool on electric vehicles, it speaks to the massive pent up demand globally around electric vehicle technology on the horizon.”

The source said Xiaomi will outsource car assembly to contract manufacturers, a model it uses for its smartphones

Tech companies strategizing to grab a share of the new energy market are upping their partnership ante with carmakers. The strategy cuts the cost for them as it means capitalizing on the huge potential market for software application such as autonomous driving.

A source told Bloomberg that Lei led a review of the EV industry’s potential several months ago and a final decision to enter the arena was made in recent weeks. Xiaomi has already hired engineers to work on software to be embedded in its cars, the person added.

Xiaomi has risen to the top of China’s smartphone market, running internet services and making a range of cut-price home gadgets from rice cookers to robo-vacuums, as US’ sanctions brought its Chinese counterpart Huawei on its knees.

With idle fortune of 100 billion yuan cash at its disposal, the company aims a shot at a new adventure – electric vehicles. Lei said it will be “the last startup project in my career.”

Tomorrow’s Tekedia Live Is On “Building Modern Investment Portfolios in Africa”

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Let me wish all our members Good Friday and a great Happy Easter ahead. Yet, note that we have a scheduled Tekedia Mini-MBA Live tomorrow  on “Building Modern Investment Portfolios in Africa” which I will anchor. Just yesterday, our Faculty discussed Private Finance & Wealth Management (video Expect you in class as follows:

Date: Saturday, April 3

Time: 7pm WAT

Topic: Building Modern Investment Portfolios in Africa

Faculty: Ndubuisi Ekekwe

Zoom link in the Board

Register for the next edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA

TSMC Doles Out $100 Billion to Boost Semiconductor Investment

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In what seems like a sharp response to Intel’s move to regain its market position, major Taiwan computer chip maker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) plans to invest $100 billion in the next three years in expanding its manufacturing capacity and supporting research and development, the company said Thursday.

The world’s biggest contract producer of semiconductors, TSMC said it anticipates faster growth thanks to long-term trends like the introduction of next-generation telecommunications and high-performance computing. The coronavirus pandemic, meanwhile, is revving up demand for electronic devices as the world relies increasingly on digitalization.

“TSMC is working closely with our customers to address their needs in a sustainable manner,” the company told AP in an emailed statement. It did not give further details about planned investments.

Intel, South Korea’s Samsung Electronics and other chip makers also have been boosting investments to meet rising demand and joust for market share in advanced semiconductors.

Last week, Intel announced plan to invest $20 billion to build two factories in Arizona and to open up its factories to outside customers, as demand for chips grows.

The move will directly challenge the two other companies in the world that can make the most advanced chips, Taiwan’s Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC) and Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co Ltd.

It will also aim to tilt a technological balance of power back to the United States and Europe as government leaders on both continents have become concerned about the risks of a concentration of chipmaking in Taiwan given tensions with China.

TSMC makes processor chips for major brands like Apple Inc. and Qualcomm Inc. Surging demand pushed its revenue 18% higher in January-February from a year earlier, it reported earlier. The company is predicting continued growth in demand for semiconductor technology as the COVID-19 pandemic further accelerates online activities.

“We are entering a period of higher growth as the multiyear megatrends of 5G and high-performance computing are expected to fuel strong demand for our semiconductor technologies in the next several years,” the company said.

Most semiconductors used in smartphones, medical equipment, computers and other products are made in Taiwan, South Korea and China.

TSMC operates a semiconductor wafer fabrication facility in Camas, Washington, and design centers in San Jose, California, and Austin, Texas.

It has announced plans to invest $3.5 billion in a second U.S. manufacturing site, in North Phoenix, Arizona, as concern grows over heavy American reliance on sources in Asia for high-tech components.

TSMC’s move will likely put a dent on Intel’s efforts to bounce back. Intel has watched its influence and market share in the semiconductor industry dwindled under the shadows of TSMC, Samsung, Nvidia and other chipmakers.

Last week’s announcement was Intel’s biggest move to break off the shackles and reinvent itself in a market increasingly being dominated by its rivals, following the appointment of their new chief executive Pat Gelsinger.

However, the shortage of semiconductor chips has opened new opportunity for growth for every company in the industry. Automakers are increasingly shutting down production as scarcity of chips persists. With the surging demand, every chipmaker has the potential to increase its supply chain.

Nigeria’s Egoras Raises $1.3 Million in Private Round

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Egoras microfinance protocol, which is coming to the June edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA, has closed a private round of funding with gross proceeds of $1.3M. The funding was led by Exnetwork Capital and Blackdragon. Other major investors include Three M Capital, Lauchpool, Spikefast, QuiverX Capital and Infinity Gainz. Egoras’s private sale was oversubscribed, with interested applicants committing over $18M to the project.

Egoras is using the funds from the recent private round to continue to build the world’s first decentralized microfinance protocol on the Binance Smart Chain.

After successfully launching its product in September 2020, which allows small businesses in Africa to get micro-credits on the Egoras microfinance protocol, Egoras is set for its token generation event (TGE) coming up in April 2021.

Egoras is currently operating on the Ethereum blockchain, and any organisation can issue low microcredit from Egoras smart-contract. However, Egoras will migrate to the Binance Smart Chain at the TGE.

WHAT IS MICROCREDIT

Microcredit is a method of lending very small sums to individuals to start or expand a small business. Microcredit borrowers tend to be low-income individuals living in parts of the developing world. As Kyle Chassé, founder of PAID Network, puts it “microloans of a couple of hundred dollars can literally save or start a business in a poor country.”

ABOUT EGORAS MICROFINANCE PROTOCOL

Egoras microfinance protocol provides uncollateralized micro-credit to small entrepreneurs and enterprises who cannot take shelter from banks for banking and other services.

Egoras intends to solve the issue of high-interest rate on microcredit. It hopes to achieve this by eliminating the middleman like the banks and lenders. Egoras issues loans directedly to the borrowers through a decentralised governance process.

Some of Egoras’s partners include PAID Network and NULS.

 

For more information please visit:

Website: https://egoras.com/

GitHub: https://github.com/EgorasMarket

Medium: https://egoras.medium.com/

Telegram: https://t.me/egorasmarket

Twitter: https://twitter.com/egorasmarket

Documentation: https://docs.egoras.com/

 

Access Bank Accesses the Zenith as it Topples Zenith Bank Nigeria on Assets

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There is a new king in the Nigerian banking: Access Bank which rules on assets. The Lagos-based lender topples Zenith Bank which has held that position for days now. Of course you may argue that banking goes beyond assets these days with a new construct that your assets can fund a pipeline others can milk honey from. The real deal is creating and accelerating leverageable factors which can compound, at least from the investors’ perspectives.

An appreciation of N1.537 trillion or 21.6 per cent within one year has ramped up the asset value of Access Bank Plc to N8.680 trillion, making it Nigeria’s biggest lender in that rating category.

Jim Ovia-led Zenith Bank hogged the prime spot for 37 days since February 23, when the release of its audited financial statement for 2020 put its asset estimate at N8.481 trillion. But the publication on Thursday of Access Bank’s earnings report means it will now take the back seat behind the latter.

As AfCFTA arrives, the biggest battle would come down to this: quality and cost efficiency on intra-African banking. Technology companies which offer banking services will compete with banks which use technology, and we will be watching who will win this battle.

New species of companies like Flutterwave belong to the former while Access and Zenith banks belong to the latter with mutation to also have features of the former. So, the battle will be ferocious – and I expect customers to win.

Yes, customers will win because many new domains would be opened. Nigerian banks are expected to allow customers to use gold as collaterals in the near future, according to a federal minister. It is very possible that tagging the assets and recording them will open opportunities. While we hope for farmlands, forests, and other assets could be formalized, building a centralized system to enable interoperability would make this very impactful.

Banks will soon allow Nigerians, especially owners of Small and Medium Enterprises, to use their gold jewellery as collateral for loan facilities. This was disclosed by the Minister of Mines and Steel Development, Olamilekan Adegbite, on Sunday: We are discussing with some financial institutions to create products to accept the gold jewellery from Nigerians and give them credit that is within the worth of the commodity.”

[…]

The Minister explained that all interested Nigerians need to do is to approach the bank, drop the gold in its vault and collect a certificate to that effect.

According to him, the certificate can be used to obtain a loan from either the same bank where the jewellery was deposited or another financial institution. When the bank has been refunded, the individual gets his certificate/gold back