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Bitcoin, Gold Soar Amidst Global Economic Woes

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Bitcoin recorded a leap above $10,000 for the first time since June 3 when bitcoin halving spurred a surge. It has however maintained stable decline until mid-July when the crypto coin started to witness an increase once again, rising to about 11%.

According to data from Coindesk, the digital currency traded at $10,196.27 at around 12:31 p.m. Singapore time, gaining 2.55% more than the previous day.

Head of business development at Luno, a cryptocurrency exchange, Vijay Ayyar told CNBC that there was a debate by big players on whether to sell off their bitcoin to the market newbies to push the price lower and make the coin more attractive for bigger investors looking for digital assets.

“This doesn’t seem to have happened. What we have unfolding is potentially re-accumulation by big players, joined by smaller traders in an attempt to push BTC higher past 10k and more past 10.5k, which is the big resistance level, where BTC last put in a high.

“We still haven’t broken the 10.5k level, if that happens; BTC is probably running to 15k. All signs point to that at this point,” he said.

Bitcoin is expected to add more gain as governments announce economic stimulus packages to tame the tides of coronavirus pandemic. Moreover, the development of potential vaccines for the virus is offering further hope that bitcoin could attract more investors who are keenly watching the development.

Ayyar added that like other commodities, bitcoin could benefit from the stimulus packages as well as the vaccine development.

“My view is that with the major governments declaring unprecedented stimulus packages… we will see continued bullish momentum across markets. So that includes equities and gold as well. And BTC and crypto will follow in this regard. Added to the fact that a vaccine seems within reach as well now, no reason to be bearish near term,” he said.

Meanwhile, gold has kept defying the pandemic and the US-China tension to record gains in different markets. In Monday morning hours trading of Asian market, spot gold traded at about $1,931,11 per ounce after its earlier $1,943,9275 trade per ounce. This market record surpassed the previous September 2011 high price. Gold futures also went up 2% to $1,938.70.

UBS chief investment officer, Mark Haefele told clients on Monday that the driving force of the surge is the negative correlation to real interest rates and the dollar.

“While we think gold will continue to be supported by rising geopolitical tensions, in our view the primary drivers of the gold are its negative correlation to real interest rates and the dollar. We think these three factors, in combination with limited supply growth as miners continue to restrain capital spending, will drive gold price higher,” he said.

CNBC reported that the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note last sat at 0.5856%. The US dollar was at 93.906, while the Japanese yen traded at 105.60 against the greenback after strengthening sharply late last week from levels above 106.40 per dollar.

Vivek Dhar of the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, who is a mining and energy commodities analyst at the firm said even though there have been other driving factors to the yields, the fall in US 10-year real yields has been the “most important driver,” including weakened US dollar and safe-haven demand being lifted.

“The negative relationship between long term US real yields and gold futures has held up fairly well over the longer term. That is because when long term US yields increase, gold is less attractive relative to US interest bearing securities since gold has no income earning ability. The fall in US 10 year real yields is primarily being driven by an increase in US 10 year inflation expectations,” he said.

The geo-political conflict between the US and China is expected to contribute to further growth, but investors are warily waiting for a clear sign as they continue to look for a safe haven to hide their wealth from the economic storm.

The FUTA Hack And Why the University Should Reveal the Hacker

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Premium Times reports how computer systems in Federal University of Technology Akura (FUTA) were used to hack its website. The newspaper has always been under attacks owing to its investigative mission. While bad employees or students can misuse institutions’ resources for illegal activities, the case here is evidently different as FUTA does not see it the way it should be seen.

The university has confirmed that the attack took place, and that they know the responsible person. Reading the piece, there is one clear conclusion I can make: FUTA should reveal the hacker. That would help investigators complete their work. If the person was doing experiments or just learning hacking, debatable since the attack was sustained over days, Nigerians need to know. But if he was hired, possibly by agents of corruption to take down a bulldog-newspaper which bites really hard, we desire to also know. By protecting this individual, FUTA Management is not on the side of the taxpayers which fund FUTA.

The hacker is not a progressive activist and hacking a newspaper which is approved by law to practice journalism in Nigeria is illegal, even if he was just learning hacking. Typically, he ought to have obtained written permissions before any penetration testing or hacking activity. That is not the case here, and the very reason why SSS and Police should get involved and get this guy to answer for his actions.

Today, it is a newspaper. Tomorrow, it could be a bank. Just like that, another Yahoo Yahoo or 419er is unleashed. A university cannot protect such a person.

On the night of February 28, a hacker operating from the Federal University of Technology, Akure (FUTA), connected a computer to the university’s network and began a cyberattack on the website of PREMIUM TIMES. With a mobile phone as his backup, the attacker continued the operation for the next five days.

At about 8:00 p.m., he started with a reconnaissance scan of the newspaper’s website using a web fuzzer popular with low-grade hackers.

The following morning, at about 6:15 a.m., the attacker returned with another open-source vulnerability scanner – WPScan, free tool bloggers use to test for security vulnerabilities on their sites.

About 90 minutes later, he ran his final probe – a custom script.

The following morning, Sunday, the attacker continued his attacks – a series of distributed denial of service, DDOS, attacks that lasted until that evening. On this day, it appeared his goal was simply to shut down the newspaper’s operations by overwhelming its servers.

He began the day – at about 9:28 a.m – with an attack that exploited the very old Character Generator Protocol found in many obsolete internet-enabled devices like printers.

He ended the day with another DDOS attack exploiting the publicly-accessible Network Time Protocol (NTP) servers. NTP is one of the oldest protocols used by internet-enabled devices to synchronize their clocks.

On that day, he launched a total of seven DDOS attacks

Examining Nigeria’s Response to Covid-19 Pandemic

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There have been several pandemics in human history affecting people on a worldwide scale. The Bubonic plague has been the deadliest of them all. It ravaged around the 14th century and claimed more than 80 million lives worldwide. Today, we struggle with COVID-19 which has so far accounted for more than half a million deaths worldwide with no signs of abating some time soon.

In hindsight, on December 31, The Wuhan Municipal Health Commission in China reported a cluster of cases of what was first thought of as pneumonia. Series of findings eventually identified the cases as a novel virus. 142 days later after more than 118,000 cases and 4,291 deaths, on March 11, it was declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO). The virus can spread by direct contact with infected persons or by contact with contaminated objects and surfaces. Within weeks, the spread was exponential and the large-scale control measures were to issue preventive guidelines, top of the list; maintaining physical distance, personal hygiene, and use of nose masks. 

The issue required elaborate and emergency responses only possible to be overseen by governments. National responses to the pandemic have therefore varied from countries. It typically includes containment measures such as lockdowns, quarantines and curfews. Italy, one of the COVID-19 hotspots in the world went on a national lockdown on March 9 after 7,985 cases and 463 deaths. By the first week of April, about 4 billion people were in some form of lockdown. Just like it did in every other country, the virus set tidal waves of economic and social disruption across the board.

The level of preparedness and response to the virus in Nigeria while cannot be remarked as deficient, nonetheless, measures were mostly reactive and a great deal could have been instituted sooner. At inception, The Federal Government assured Nigerians on 28 January of its readiness to combat the virus, and on 27 February, the index case was confirmed in Lagos State – an individual who had returned from Milan, Italy. By March 9, after another case had been confirmed, The President established a 12-member Presidential Task Force (PTF) for the control of COVID 19 chaired by the Secretary to the Federal Government, Mr. Boss Mustapha. This was the president’s first definitive step, 11 days after the index case was confirmed. It was nearly on time. The membership of the task force is however notably inclusive; it includes Ministers of Health, Interior, Aviation, Humanitarian and Social Services as well as the Director-General of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and a WHO representative. It was a progressive – top government officials and public health professionals being directly responsible for containing the spread and impact of the virus. Worthy to note that at this time, only two cases of COVID 19 have been confirmed so it didn’t have the earmarks of a step taken in desperation.

Now, there were growing calls from critics and experts for the President to issue a directive for the country to go on lockdown to prevent further spread. What followed instead was a series of rapid and significant measures; the National Sports Festival slated from 22 March to 1 April was postponed indefinitely and on 18 March, the National Youth Service Corp orientation exercise was suspended. The moves highlighted the readiness of the Nigerian Government to scale down non-essential gatherings. Cases were less than 10 by now but had gone up to 131 by 30 March when the NYSC was supposed to conclude its orientation.

Closing the camps early appeared to decrease the risk of contracting the virus by the corps members, asking them to vacate the camps early was the right call. There were also repeated calls for the government to issue a travel ban. It was due. Most countries had already begun to issue travel embargos. On 18 March after some returnees tested positive to the virus the previous day, Nigeria placed a travel ban on 13 countries with a high number of cases. The international airports in Abuja and Lagos were also closed on 23 March.

During the early days, apparent misinformation meant people classified the virus as a disease of the upper class after some high profile citizens, mostly politicians, tested positive. For some, it was recompense for their numerous misdeeds. Observably, the only set of people who got tested at this time were political elitists and returnees from overseas. The need to ramp up testing did not come to fore until community transmission was first reported on March 19. Most tests conducted beforehand were patients who exhibited symptoms or who presented themselves for tests. Cases could have further scaled down if contact tracing had been sufficient from the onset. The NCDC, however, reiterated its commitment to adequate contact tracing while soliciting the public’s cooperation having encountered some challenges. 

Nigeria crossed the hundred mark on March 29 totalling 111 confirmed cases. The President followed up by announcing lockdowns in the FCT, Lagos and Ogun States. As most Nigerians live hand-to-mouth, the effects of the lockdown soon came to bear. The economy suffered even more coupled with the fall in oil prices. Going on lockdown was a worldwide trend. However, there hasn’t been any concrete proof that it has been effective in reducing the spread of the virus. 

Other measures like maintaining physical distance, maintaining personal hygiene have been noted to be of rather good effects. Moreover, the developed countries could afford a lockdown, Nigeria cannot, where more than 40% of the population endure extreme poverty and even more are daily wage earners. Many have also pointed out that the lockdown wasn’t effective mostly as it was never stringent. There were reports of people bribing their ways through checkpoints, it, therefore, couldn’t do much to reduce spread. 

Fears also began to stoke up when mysterious deaths were reported in Kano State. The Federal government task force sent a team to the state and investigations revealed that between 50 – 60% of the deaths may have been triggered by or due to COVID-19, in the face of pre-existing ailments according to the health ministers. The situation was salvaged by the establishment of more testing centres in the state. Kano now has 5 testing centres, the same as Lagos.

Despite the lockdown, confirmed cases of the new virus tripled. By the end of April, 1,728 cases had been confirmed and although new infections were being detected, the President announced other measures to control spread and began to ease lockdown on May 4 after about five weeks. It was evident that the lockdown continued to hurt the Nigerian economy. There has been a persistent rise in inflation. There have been job losses as most private organizations laid-off workers, others implemented salary cuts also, people’s purchasing power drastically reduced. The effects were far-reaching.

There was also an increased lockdown crime-wave mainly in Lagos and Ogun States. Something had to be done. It was more practical and logical for the economy to reopen while the government relentlessly continued to reduce spread as much as viable.

Now, Nigeria has to increase its testing capacity. Laboratories in Nigeria currently number 58. It currently does around 3,500 tests per day, we need to do more. All samples tested from the outset haven’t crossed 300,000. The total share of positive cases from tested samples has been around 15%, much better than most South American countries. More needs to be done however as it helps health workers characterize the prevalence, spread and contagiousness of the disease. The countries that have been steadily climbing their way past coronavirus all reveal one thing; widespread testing. Alongside robust testing, tracing and supported isolation infrastructure must also follow as well as further enlightening people on control measures like physical distancing and mask-wearing. 

So far, the ban on interstate movement has been lifted and major sectors of the economy have been reopened since Nigeria began a gradual easing of the lockdown on May 4 with a steady lifting of restrictions. It won’t get any easier, we need to find better ways to overcome these challenges. We have been making progress but nearly enough. We must eschew laxity. The key is to continue to do more.

The American Policy Lab Built On Data, Nigeria’s Guesswork Paralysis

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Something fascinating happened in the United States over the last few months. As one of the means to curtail the paralysis triggered by Covid-19, the U.S. government introduced fairly generous unemployment benefits, after millions of Americans lost their jobs as companies and local economies went on lockdowns. Those benefits ended up overshooting most U.S. states’ minimum wage levels. But as states began to re-open, some companies struggled to find people to hire. What has happened is this: some people were making more money from unemployment benefits than they could make from working. As expected, people stayed home to cash the cheques instead of going to work to make less!

Now, there are many data points, and using those data points, it seems the U.S. would not extend the generous unemployment benefits. They are exploring other options of capping benefits to 70% of the person’s last job. This is how policy, powered by data, works.

Meadows said the proposal will involve offering enhanced unemployment benefits that would replace a laid-off worker’s wages up to 70%, although he acknowledged challenges some states will face in administering such a complicated benefit. He said he has worked with Mnuchin and Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia to ensure “antiquated computers” in some state benefit offices don’t stop people from receiving their benefits.

If you examine what is happening here, you see why data should drive policy. Without data, President Trump might have signed out his re-election prospects. Yes, extend the unemployment benefits as many had suggested to January 2021 and have many citizens stay home, to cash the cheques, and possibly tank the economy. But with data, especially from the small businesses which are struggling to hire workers, the government will scale its benefits to stimulate incentives for people to take those jobs they have passed.

Politics or no politics, it favours Trump and his party to see many people back to work. Paying them to stay at work has really no economic or political benefit. Of course, leaders have to be considerate, understanding that some may not just find jobs. That is where the 70% cap makes sense: you will be fine but you would not be fully whole; so, go and look for work.

Now, contrast with Abuja. How many have received from the audio N50 billion small business Covid-19 intervention fund? How many have received from the follow-up fund? Perhaps, the Central Bank of Nigeria could publish the names of all the beneficiaries and tell us what the funds have accomplished.

We need to stop guesswork-policy, and begin to drive policy with data. From YouWin to NPower to the new incarnations, what are we learning, and how are we adjusting implementation protocols? Unless we use data to drive our decision making, we might be causing harm rather than doing good to our economy. Yes, Nigeria needs to invest to create a data-driven government and use data to drive policy.

Finance, Investing, and Fundraising Class Notes & Videos Now In The Board

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Naira USD

Week 6 of Tekedia Mini-MBA is already in the Board. We are focusing on Finance, Investing, and Fundraising this week. Without any doubt, this will go as one of the most comprehensive Africa-focused courses in these domains. Afrinvest West Africa’s Deputy Managing Director Victor Ndukauba takes us on Investing and Fundraising. Azeez Lawal, CFO of TrustBanc Group handles the capital market operations. And Japheth Jev, CFO of Triumph  takes care of Personal Finance and Wealth Management.

From Jev’s courses, you will learn the following with rich Africa-focused insights, covering the tools, products, companies offering the services, and more.

  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Understanding your Financial Health
  • 3 Setting Financial goals
  • 4 How to prepare and stick to your budget
  • 5 Developing your savings strategy
  • 6 Investing Your Money
  • 7 Planning for retirement

Tekedia Mini-MBA, join us.

https://www.tekedia.com/mini-mba-3/