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Home Blog Page 6037

Central Bank of Nigeria Asks Banks To Grant $5.2 Million Loans to Youth Agro-businesses

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The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), in line with its developmental mandate, continues to develop and introduce development finance programmes and schemes to expand access to finance to critical sectors and segments of the economy to achieve food self-sufficiency as well as diversification. Accordingly, the apex bank has authorized commercial banks to give up to N2 billion (about $5.2 million) as loans to youths interested in going into agriculture, under the Private Sector-Led Accelerated Agriculture Development Scheme (P-AADS).

For more on this initiative, click here.

The Nigeria’s National Centre for Artificial Intelligence and Robotics

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The Minister of Communications and Digital Economy, Dr Isa Pantami, has inaugurated a National Centre for Artificial Intelligence and Robotics. The plan is to anchor Nigeria’s Fourth Industrial Revolution participation through the center. As always, it comes down to Innovation = Invention + commercialization. We have been thinking, time for the market. Good luck, Nigeria.

Tesla is the World’s Best Software & Services Company in Automobile Sector

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Tesla is a really nice car to drive. But Tesla is even the finest software & services company in the automobile sector. The fact is this: Tesla does not need to be overly valued just on the number of cars it has sold, just as we are not counting how many iPhones Apple has sold recently. Apple has moved into the services era, well beyond a life tethered on hardware. 

I see Tesla as the only current “automobile” company in the world that has a clear playbook to make, possibly, more money on software and services than actually on sales of metals packaged as cars. First, the company is piling tons of money from regulatory credits: “In their most recent shareholder update, Fiat Chrysler Auto disclosed that as of March 31, 2020, its agreements represent total commitments of €1.1 billion”. Yes, that was how much Tesla made from FCA for selling credits which could have expired!

In some European nations, automakers must sell a certain amount of electric, hybrid electric or other zero emission vehicles (or ZEVs) to meet regulatory targets. Those not meeting must buy credits from someone to be in compliance. Tesla sells only ZEVs, and certainly doesn’t need to keep the credits that it earns; it resells them before they expire.

So, if you focus on volume x price as you value Tesla, you will get many things wrong. The regulatory credits, subscription on software updates and services are turning this “car” company into another software juggernaut. If you own Tesla, there is no year you would not be sending more money to Tesla!

By 2022, I expect Tesla to introduce a metric: ARPU, average revenue per user, just as people do in telecoms because Tesla owners need to be paying new recharge “service” fees to the firm. Look deeper, this is the future of automobile business, a closer model to software business. Tesla is pioneering it at scale.

Comment on LinkedIn Feeds

This is not only from 2022 onward… if you buy a used Tesla some software which the previous owner had in his Tesla and paid for it you need to buy again from Tesla if you want to use it. If you buy a used Tesla, pay only what the steel parts are worth. The rest you need to buy again from Tesla. If you buy a new Tesla and drove it once arround the block, its value shrinks to the scrap level…. except you find a dummy who does not know that as soon as Tesla know the ownership has changed he need to buy all the software again…..

Nigeria Needs To Reconsider Its Food Import Restrictions on Forex

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This plot shows the bankruptcy filings YTD (Year To Date) in the United States by number of cases (i.e. not on monetary value). Retail and hospitality sectors are having a really bad year. Energy is also not feeling fine.  Technology looks really good at just 2%.

 If we have a similar pie chart in Nigeria (how you wish the National Bureau of Statistics can publish it this year instead of Q4 2021), the plot will track the retail and hospitality sectors. However, you will see “agriculture” with a significant percentage, as the lockdown happened at the peak of the subsistence planting season. I do think the current high food prices in Nigeria can be attributed to the massive distortion caused by the lockdown. 

This is the reason I am calling the  government and the central bank to open the ports, and support importers with forex (strictly for food) to import food since, technically, we did not plant enough to generate the necessary supply to handle the huge demand in the nation. Without that import, prices of food items will continue to rise since demand has well outstripped by supply.

Without addressing the supply via short-window food imports, prices will continue to go high as farmers cannot magically produce and grow the crops overnight. A 60-day import window, starting immediately, will go a long way to normalize food prices before the peak of the Christmas season.

Bitcoin Soars Above $18, 000 As Investors Rally Around the Digital Gold

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Bitcoin is cruising on its best speed in almost three years to a high record that beats expectations. After months of disappointing performances, the digital gold is finally living up to the name.

For the first time since December 2017, the cryptocurrency has hit over $18,000, and it’s poised to experience further surge.

Citibank executive, Tom Fitzpatrick said bitcoin will trade at $318,000 by the end of 2021. Though as he admitted, the prediction seems improbable, but there is a new wave of investor interest to drive the surge.

Fizpatrick said the surge will be the weakest rally for the digital asset when compared to other assets such as gold. In his argument, bitcoin is all about the “unthinkable rallies followed by painful corrections,” which means, it will likely see huge price swings before finally settling at the predicted price.

The momentous rise has been attributed to key two reasons. Long time trader Peter Brandt explained: First, during previous bull cycles, BTC saw up to nine corrections. But in the ongoing rally, BTC has seen merely two 10% corrections. Second, bitcoin has consistently recovered from areas where corrections were expected, such as on Nov. 16 when it hit $14,774 on Binance.

Since the bitcoin halving in May, the digital coin has been relentlessly trying to prove its worth to investors looking for a safe haven from the pandemic’s economic storm.

Demand for its perceived quality as an inflation hedge and expectations of mainstream acceptance have become other factors aside corrections, driving its rally.

The coin continues to trend higher

Bitcoin has soared 160% this year, and has surged 17% in the last three days alone.

Investors expect the cryptocurrency to reach its all-time high, the $20,000 2017 peak in December.

“It is not out of the question for the crypto to hit its all-time high of $20,000 this side of Christmas,” said Simon Peters, analyst at investment platform eToro. “The crypto industry has consolidated, matured and is seeing real traction with institutional investors. Investors are using bitcoin as an inflationary hedge to combat the prospect of continued government stimulus.”

One of bitcoin’s new enthusiasts, the CEO of Twitter and Square who invested $50 million in the in the digital currency last month has made $34 million in paper profits as the coin surges unprecedentedly.

Dorsey used Square to purchase 4,709 bitcoins, for an average price of $10,618 in a single day, amounting to $50 million, a move he’s made to get Square exposed more to the crypto coin.

Other millionaire investors had lined up behind the popular coin as the US elections presented uncertainties, amidst the surge in COVID-19 cases and wait for possible vaccines.

The number of people touting bitcoin as the new gold is increasing. MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor, whose software company recently purchased $425 million worth in bitcoin told CoinDesk that macroeconomy is in chaos and bitcoin has taken the lead over gold as a safe haven commodity.

“Hoarding gold is an antiquated approach to storing value, bitcoin is a million times better,” he said.

Saylor said gold miners are working hard to destroy the commodity by hoarding it, hoping to create artificial scarcity that will push the price up, because that poses a bigger problem for the gold industry.

He said there is little basis to trust in fiat also; citing one analyst’s prediction that Federal Reserve action will keep equities moving upward regardless of the recent election’s outcome, Saylor said the “most aggressive monetary expansion” is probably ahead, and warned that he sees fiat currency crumbling.

“Investors will therefore likely continue treating blue-chip juggernauts from Apple to Amazon as new kind of safe haven. They’re desperately grasping at straws. All those assets are reliant on the fiat currency I see as crumbling away,” he said.

However, many investors are still skeptical about bitcoin, not all agree the recent surge is sustainable. Those who had bad experiences in the past are wary that a repeat of the post 2017 decline may happen.

Billionaire investor Ray Dalio listed 3 reasons why he isn’t moved by the surge, and will likely never throw a dime into bitcoin. The Bridgewater Associates founder said in tweets on Tuesday that bitcoin is too volatile for merchants, although he admitted he might be missing something.