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As U.S. Overtakes Saudi Arabia As Top Oil Exporter, A Look Into Nigeria’s Post-Petroleum Era

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There is going to be a huge global economic dislocation in the OPEC nation in this coming decade. They have put a date – 2024 – to it. Yes, U.S. may overtake Saudi Arabia as the top oil exporter by 2024. When that happens, OPEC will become like a high school club, more debates but nothing more. Nigeria is a member of OPEC.

The United States may overtake Saudi Arabia as the world’s top oil exporter by 2024, according to the International Energy Agency, which sees global demand growing by 1.2 million barrels a day until then, with the U.S. providing 70% of new supplies. “This will shake up international oil and gas trade flows, with profound implications for the geopolitics of energy,” said IEA executive director Fatih Birol. (Fortune newsletter)

In this note, I examine the post-petroleum era in Nigeria.

The Nigeria’s Post-Petroleum Era

[REGISTER] Facyber Cybersecurity Programs – Policy, Management and Technology

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It seems cybersecurity & digital forensics is on the rise in Africa. Facyber (First Atlantic Cybersecurity Institute), a unit in Fasmicro Group, which does certificate, diploma and nanodegree programs, has trained more learners in Q1 2019 than we did in H2 2018.

We also award Nanodegree on Cybersecurity and Digital Forensics in partnership with Igbinedion University Okada (Nigeria).

Our Corporate HR program is growing fastest as we have unbundled cybersecurity into Policy, Management, Intelligence & Digital Forensics, and Technology making it accessible to different entities.

We welcome more learners. REGISTER today here

Certificates awarded after completion.

 

Facyber Cybersecurity and Digital Forensics Programs

Microsoft Opens Engineering Office for AI and Mixed Reality in Lagos; APPLY for Jobs

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It was a long time coming: why do they keep sending only salespeople to Africa? Yes, we have accused the multinational technology powerhouses of accelerating consumerism by simply amplifying our passions to spend without helping our capability bases. But that is now history: IBM opened in Nairobi a research unit, Google picked Accra for its AI, and now Microsoft is coming home. Yes, Microsoft is opening a Mixed Reality and AI engineering office in Lagos. That is amazing! (Alex Kipman is a Microsoft Technical Fellow and the co-creator of HoloLens.)

They are hiring – apply here to do AI and MR right in Lagos with Microsoft.

But did you notice something in the job descriptions? There is no academic requirement for the job! Yes, Microsoft does not care about your degree (get the idea, I have many though). It simply cares about what you can do. So, you may be surprised despite your BEng degree guys like Moses and John may win these jobs even though they did not enter a university one day. That is to give you an idea how these companies hire. Good luck.

Finally, I think Nigerian universities must start immediately to deepen their curricula with AI and MR as companies certainly expect these skills from our graduates.

Two Nigerian Brothers On A Quest To Democratize AI for Everyone

Nigeria’s Paylater Raises $5 Million as It Transitions into a Full-Service Digital Bank

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Nigeria’s Paylater raises $5 million as it begins transition into a full-fledged digital banking institution. And I do think Paylater has to change its name because a bank does not just pay customers.  So, the name of a digital bank cannot be Paylater! PiggyVest did just that, after expanding its vision, renaming from Piggybank.

Nigerian retail lending startup, Paylater is working on a plan to transition to a full service digital bank after securing a $5 million debt facility from Nairobi-based Lendable, technology-enabled funding provider to African consumer and small business lenders.

Paylater is looking to deploy new products while transitioning to a digital bank. Since launching in 2016, the Paylater mobile app was downloaded by over 1 million users and disbursed loans of over 13 billion naira ($36 million). But now, the company is looking to get into the unbanked population of Nigeria and provide banking services for them. The startup will be announcing a name change to fit its new business in the first week in April.

I wrote about Paylater here on its promises in the Nigerian financial sector.  Across many indicators, this market has many latent opportunities: “Nigeria has a total of about 32 million unique BVN numbers, notes Vanguard. This strongly supports our thesis of 30 million people as the addressable core market.” Simply, things can only get better.

That is why Paylater is exciting. Owned by One Finance & Investments Ltd,Paylater is going after that market where the highest pain points are found in the Nigerian banking sector. We can surely live without shopping through the modern digital payments. But we know that it is challenging when there is an urgent need for funds and no friend or family can help. That is what happens across Nigerian families today. Challenges go beyond how to move money fast across digital channels. Simply, we want credits. Paylater focuses on short-term loans, mainly for emergencies.

Yet, winning the market will go beyond smartphones and apps. Paylater team knows that: “As we are pushing on with our web and digital platforms, we also want to reach out to a segment in the economy that is always talked about but not really catered to,” says Chijoke Dozie, who co-founded OneFi with his brother Ngozi. Of the $301 billion that moves in the consumer domain in Nigeria yearly, 98% are still in cash, notes MasterCard. Simply, growth for emerging financial solutions can only come when there is a fusion of bytes and atoms.

The Brilliance Of Nigeria’s Paylater. ng