DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 5879

The Warren Buffett’s Ample Diversification For $35.8 billion Fourth Quarter

1

This is the work of a legend: Warren Buffett’s company wrote down $11 billion on its 2016 purchase of Precision Castparts which has been severely wounded due to the paralysis in the aerospace sector [Boeing aircrafts decommissioning due to defects, reduced orders associated with Covid lockdowns] . Yet, the company’s net profit  rose 23% in the fourth quarter, to $35.8 billion. Many people have preached the market-sermons that the pandemic-fueled lockdowns benefited technology companies. Yet, from the Berkshire Hathaway’s data, it is evident that the American magic can work in any sector or domain. There is something evident here: ample diversification of a portfolio.

Warren Buffett’s trains struggled with the covid-19 paralysis but in my estimation, its insurance business made tons of money, since lockdowns practically meant there were limited accidents since people were not on the roads. Yet, despite having those cars parked at homes, people paid premiums which are required by most state laws. So, the premiums were paid but accidents did not happen, meaning that claims were not leaving the treasury of Buffett’s empire. Those reduced claims are part of the huge profits recorded by the firm.

Head, you win. Tail, you win. That is the cornerstone of a balanced portfolio with the $120 billion Apple investment supporting!

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett’s record buyback spree of his own conglomerate’s stock is continuing in 2021, and he’s acknowledging a “big mistake” in his annual letter to investors. Buffett says Berkshire Hathaway bought back about $9 billion of its own shares in the fourth quarter, bringing the total 2020 buyback to almost $25 billion. He also acknowledged an “ugly $11 billion write-down” stemming from the purchase of an aerospace parts company in 2016. Buffett warned that the fixed-income market faces a “bleak future,” but he reassured investors to “never bet against America.”

Of course, Warren Buffett is also well loaded on technology via Apple. “Berkshire’s $120 billion investment in Apple Inc. stock has become so valuable that Buffett places it in the same category as the sprawling railroad business he spent a decade building. He began building a stake in the iPhone maker in 2016, and spent just $31.1 billion acquiring it all. The surge in value since then places it among the company’s top three assets, alongside his insurers and BNSF, the U.S. railroad purchase completed in 2010, according to the annual letter.”

Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe To Speak in Fidelity Bank Plc Series

0

Good People, join me and Team Fidelity Bank PLC as we discuss Diaspora Investment, Central Bank of Nigeria FX Policy and more. I have invested in about 33 companies in four continents – and the data is clear: Nigerian investments have outperformed.

Let’s have a conversation because when you look at those factors of production, CAPITAL is very critical to unlock the ability to create products and services to fix market frictions. Nigeria needs capital to bring those solutions to institutionalize hope and abundance across communities. And the financial high priest of our economy, CBN, has made calls; the last FX policy, I think, is right on the money! Yes, great calls, great economy, and a greater Nigeria.

Saturday, March 06, 2pm WAT – register free and join us.

The Market-Baptism of Bitcoin As Coinbase Goes Public

1

Coinbase, the United States digital brokerage firm for cryptocurrency has filed to go public. It is happening at the right time with the momentum of the cryptocurrency world. The company noted that its exchange for cryptos like Bitcoin, Ethereum, and more, has 43 investors and commands about $455 billion in trades. It will list in NASDAQ via direct listing and that means the typical investment bankers would not be doing any orchestration. I have noted that technologies will make such investment banking services less needed since information asymmetry, which used to make them the high priests of the market, has been reduced.

A case in point: why pay investment bankers so much to take a company public when web companies can be independently assessed on how they are doing? In the past, investment bankers were evidently key to serve as buffers. But today, from Alexa, from apps downloads, and other secondary data, investors can make sense of the health of a business without the old high priests like GS guiding them. That explains why most of these firms disintermediate Wall Street banks, and go straight to the trading platforms on IPO days.

That the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved for Coinbase to join the big board does imply that crypto has been market-baptized. You cannot say that it is illegal when NASDAQ allows it to trade under the blessing of the SEC. So, Bitcoin and others are here to stay, irrespective of how any nation feels. People, Nigeria’s central bank cannot wait for approval from the IMF, in ten years, before it sees what U.S. Federal Reserve and future-looking apex banks see: regulate, not prohibit, cryptocurrency. The crypto-economy is here because the $billions are already counted,  not in coins, but in real dollars, as Coinbase begins trading soon.

From the filing, I noticed this for the company; No Physical Address for Headquarters. Yes, the company is a remote-first company and has no physical address to list. Yes, it did not list any headquarters address in its filing. This world is changing very fast; commercial real estate investors, now is the time to bring hybrid-designs which can be converted from commercial to residential buildings with ease. 

People, very soon, physical addresses will disappear in business cards for those who still carry those!

With Coinbase going public in US, many investors have already made $billions before the crypto economy begins.

Coinbase made $322 million profit in a revenue of $1.2 billion in 2020. You can read the summary of the filing here.

The recent Bitcoin bull run helped Coinbase pull in a profit of $322 million on revenues of over $1.2 billion in 2020, putting the cryptocurrency giant in a strong position as it prepares to sell its shares to the public in its upcoming direct listing on the Nasdaq.

The figures, disclosed in an S-1 regulatory filing, give the first detailed look at the financial performance of Coinbase, which launched in 2012 as a user-friendly way for consumers to buy Bitcoin, but which has since added a professional trading platform and a variety of banking-like services for the burgeoning cryptocurrency industry. Coinbase says it has seen $456 billion in lifetime trading volume on its platform.

The company first disclosed its intent to go public in December.

Coinbase’s 2020 profit of $322 million compares to a loss of $30 million in 2019, and its 2020 revenue jumped 140% from the $533 million it earned in 2019.

The jump is not surprising given that Coinbase earns the bulk of its revenue on trading commissions, and that interest in cryptocurrencies surged late last year as the price of Bitcoin rose from around $10,000 in September to over $30,000 by the end of the year. Bitcoin is currently trading around $50,000.

Glossary for the Cryptocurrency Economy

The company explains the risk in this business, from the S-1 filing: “There is no assurance that any supported crypto asset will maintain its value or that there will be meaningful levels of trading activities. In the event that the price of crypto assets or the demand for trading crypto assets decline, our business, operating results, and financial condition would be adversely affected. A majority of our net revenue is from transactions in Bitcoin and ethereum. If demand for these crypto assets declines and is not replaced by new demand for crypto assets, our business, operating results, and financial condition could be adversely affected,”

Create A Fandom Out of Customers [Video]

0

Turn those consumers to customers, and customers to FANs. If you do that, you become a category-king. The moment of fandom arrives when you make the customers become believers. Fans want aspirational journeys, only possible when you create products and services that meet not just needs, not just expectations, but perceptions. Read more here.

Stopping False Information Augmentation Requires That Nigerian Journalists Explain Not Watching News

0

The general principle of reporting happenings as news requires that a reporter is assigned to a section of the society being covered by the news media outlet or the reporter sourced for newsworthy information through observation or in-depth investigation.

Any approach has tendency of giving truth and false messages to the audience. The false messages dissemination can occur when the creators [reporter and editor] including the publisher(s) failed to embrace the ideal journalistic principles and professional ethics guiding news sourcing and publication.

This piece examines how false information augmentation could be stopped in Nigeria with the adoption of knowledge-based journalism practice. This is imperative as conflict and violence laden news and commentaries continue to surface on the pages and home pages of the offline and online newspapers.

“If news is to be a means of getting people to think and talk sensibly about public affairs, it needs to contain the contextual information that enables citizens to make sense of events,” Thomas Patterson, a renowned professor of government and the press says. He notes that “Journalists too often: give equal weight to accurate representations and faulty facts and flawed opinions, focus on conflict and strategy over substance, and favour personalities, dramatic events, and infotainment over big picture analysis and context.

Knowledge-Based Reporting Remains Key Answer to Misinformation and Disinformation

According to Patterson, answer to misinformation and disinformation [our analyst emphasis] is “knowledge-based journalism.” This concept is not new in the Nigerian journalism education. Institutions offering journalism and mass communication studies teach students specialised reporting. However, in more than 20 years of the current republic, the teaching seems not to bring tangible results, reducing false reporting by the journalists aided by their establishments.

This trend is unlikely to change unless journalists, as argued by Patterson, embrace knowledge-based journalism practice. This practice expects journalists to be knowledge brokers and enhancers by applying specialised expertise. Nigerian journalists need to understand the subjects they are covering and how the stories can affect societal decisions [a position Patterson subscribes to].

Describing and reporting what happened through interviews and direct observation are not enough. “They also need to know what’s true and what’s false, and to incorporate such knowledge into what they convey to the public,” Patterson says.

Some hours ago, The Punch published a story titled “I learnt crashed NAF aircraft was 49 years old, not in good condition–Late Flight Sgt’s father.” In the story, the newspaper quoted the father of one of the dead in the ill-fated military aircraft that crashed: “…we can view it from another angle, that the aircraft was 49 years old and was not in a good condition. Some people are even thinking it was a set-up, but what is hidden to man is open to God.”

This quote was used as a headline. With this, the newspaper succeeded in telling the public that the age and poor condition of the plane were the immediate causes of the crash while the remote cause should be traced to the concerned authorities in the Nigerian Army who allowed such plane to fly. The newspaper, according to our analyst, watched the news. It failed to query the newsmaker where he got the information. In this regard, the newspaper gives incomplete information to the public which could contribute to negative perception of the authorities in the Army.

“How DSS, Police, Others Attempted to Arrest Sunday Igboho On Lagos-Ibadan Expressway – Aide” is another story that lacks knowledge-based approach.  The inclusion of his Aide and Chief Femi Fani-Kayode alone show that the reporter lacks adequate knowledge of the past chain of events that connect with the current event. Public expectation and right to the truth of the event are not resting on having the voice of his aide and Chief Fani-Kayode alone. The reporter and editor are expected to include the voice of the security agencies since earlier reports indicated his possible arrest, called by some sociocultural organisations and an ethnic group in the country.