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Home Blog Page 7431

Nigerian bonds are proving hugely popular with investors, The Economist reports

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The Economist reports that Nigeria is benefiting from pent-up demand for African sovereign debt.despite some external factors which have affected the country.

Nigeria;s economy shrank by 1.5% in 2016, its first annual contraction in 25 years. The president, Muhammadu Buhari (pictured, left), recently spent six weeks seeking medical treatment in London. And the country continues to be roiled by Boko Haram jihadists in the north-east and by unrelated militants’ attacks on oil facilities in the Niger delta. Yet investors don’t seem to mind: last month Nigeria issued a 15-year, $1bn eurobond—a bond in a currency other than that of the country issuing it—that was eight times oversubscribed. A second issuance is expected, possibly this month. It will probably be met with similar enthusiasm. What makes investing in Nigeria so attractive?

Nigeria is benefiting from pent-up demand for African sovereign debt. Emerging markets started last year on a very bad footing: depressed currencies, looming interest-rate increases and uncertainty over British and American votes put investors off risky trades. African sovereign bonds suffered more than most. Yields—which move inversely to prices—peaked in February. They dropped gradually throughout the year, but too slowly for many nations to borrow at affordable rates: only three sub-Saharan governments—South Africa, Mozambique and Ghana—sold dollar-denominated debt in 2016. Yet with interest rates in the developed world still low, asset managers remain hungry for returns. Credit funds focused on emerging markets received nearly $10bn in the first two months of this year, almost double the amount pulled out of them in the same period last year, according to EPFR Global, a research firm.

More specific factors have also put Nigeria on investors’ radars. In early February, the country’s finance, budget and central-bank chiefs toured the world’s financial capitals to provide an update on their agenda for reform. A more detailed plan was published earlier this month. After two years of denial, the government admitted that the economy needs deep adjustments. Investors are cheered by efforts to reduce opportunities for sleaze, such as the introduction of biometric records in the civil service and the merger of multiple treasury accounts into a single kitty, which Nigera started attempting to implement in late 2015. They also liked measures to end wasteful fuel subsidies, improve tax collection and increase VAT. Such pledges make it more likely that the World Bank and the African Development Bank will agree to lend Nigeria a combined $3.5bn to support its 2017 budget.

It is not a one-way bet. External factors cloud Nigeria’s prospects: further rises in American interest rates, following last week’s increase, would strengthen the dollar and make debt repayment more expensive. Fortunately, Nigeria remains one of Africa’s least indebted nations. Should Yemi Osinbajo, the technocratic vice-president (pictured, right) who ran the show while Mr Buhari was unwell, retain authority to drive policy changes, investors will probably keep on giving Nigeria the benefit of the doubt.

(Source)

AMCON Nigeria sells the nationalised Keystone Bank to Sigma Golf, Riverbank Investment

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The Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) has sold Keystone Bank Limited to Sigma Golf Nigeria Limited and Riverbank Investment Resources Limited. It hinted that the new owners were a consortium of local investors.

The corporation noted that the new beneficiaries emerged preferred bidder after the acquisition of the bank’s shares. The new development came after regulatory approvals from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

AMCON, however, added that the completion of the transaction was now subject to the fulfillment of the conditions in the Sales and Purchase Agreement (SPA) executed between the bad debt company and the consortium.

The corporation said the process leading to the acquisition started with interest shown by 18 parties cutting across local and international investors. “The emergence of the Sigma Golf-Riverbank consortium resulted from a rigorous and competitive bidding process, which was coordinated for AMCON by Citibank Nigeria Limited, its affiliates and FBN Capital (Joint Financial Advisers) as well as Banwo & Ighodalo and Crosswrock Law (Joint Legal Advisers).”

After the inquest carried out by the Mallam Lamido Sanusi-led CBN in 2008, three of the 24 national banks that scaled the 2005 banking consolidation – Afribank Plc, Spring Bank Plc and Bank PHB failed a stress test.

These were, subsequently, nationalised by a special purpose vehicle that emerged in AMCON, imposing a new administration and rebranding them as Mainstreet Bank Limited, Enterprise Bank Limited and Keystone Bank Limited.

Keystone Bank was incorporated by the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) on August 3, 2011, after the takeover, while AMCON eventually capitalised it before appointing a board and an executive management team to lead the financial institution.

Five Nigerian Startups in Y Combinator Winter 2017 Demo Day – KUDI.AI, Aella Credit, BuyPower, TIZETI (wifi.com.ng) , Kangpe

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Y Combinator is an American seed accelerator, started in March 2005. Fast Company has called YC “the world’s most powerful start-up incubator”. Fortune has called Y Combinator “a spawning ground for emerging tech giants. Y Combinator created a new model for funding early stage startups. Twice a year we invest in a large number of startups.

This March Winter 2017 Demo Day, the following Nigerian companies are pitching this week. WIFI.com.ng has just been profiled by Y Combinator.

KUDI.AI

Kudi.ai is a financial service provider focused on providing access to electronic banking and financial services by leveraging conversational interfaces, natural language processing and artificial intelligence to provider faster access, frictionless experience, and ultimately eliminate the need to download different financial or banking applications.

Aella Credit

Provides instant credit solutions that eliminates the hassle of standard loan applications and enables employee to borrow at competitive and fair rates through their employers. Individuals can download the application through Android devices. Benefits of the platform are offered to employees, companies, and investors.

BuyPower

Is a utility payment platform in Nigeria. Their website offers pre-paid electricity recharging service available for customers

Tizeti (wifi.com.ng)

Provides broadband internet using wi-fi to residential and small businesses. TIZETI (wifi.com.ng) has been deploying high speed internet access to estates, offices, multi-tenant building using next generation wi-Fi technology. They deploy internet to residential and business customers which allow customers get the full benefit of the internet with no data or time caps. They also offer VOIP and Video on Demand services.

Kangpe

Provides a platforms where doctors are able to give the best medical advice for symptoms, disease diagnosis, and treatment when you describe your health condition in a detailed manner.

Cisco, IBM and Apple are investing in China; when will Africa get R&D centers over sales offices?

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Cisco, IBM, Apple and other U.S. companies are investing heavily in China. They see China as a very strategic market which they must not just sell things but also invest massive resources to tap local innovation.

For Apple, China remains its second-most important market outside the United States. The company continues to make big investments in the country despite political pressure to bring more of its manufacturing activities back to the United States. Apple CEO Tim Cook spoke in the World Development Forum in China last week.

Last, Apple said it would build two more research and development centers there in Shanghai and Suzhou. That makes four so far, at a cost of about $500 million.

IBM’s CEO Ginni Rometty was in Beijing Sunday, where she signed her company’s new partnership with a division of a huge local conglomerate, Wanda Group. This is IBM’s second big foray into China’s cloud services market, which is tightly controlled from a regulatory standpoint. Few details were disclosed about the new alliance, but IBM will share revenue with its new ally.

Apple and IBM are far from alone in their need to strengthen their friendships in China, ahead of possible changes to the U.S.-Chinese trade relationship. Cisco pledged $10 billion to the market back in 2015, so it also has plenty at stake.

Contrast that with Africa where these companies largely make any serious innovation investments. While IBM has a research unit in a university in Kenya, Cisco and Apple are largely nowhere in the R&D nexus in Africa.

Africa Policy

But you cannot blame these firms. African governments are always sales-driven as we see technology capabilities within the lens of buying and owing tech products. The creative aspect of it is not that common. So when we meet companies like IBM, Cisco and Apple, we are focusing on how many sales offices they will open. We rarely have policies that deliver incentives for them to invest.

It is also important that the challenges faced by local companies are the same these foreign companies will face. So if the local companies do not see value in risking capital on new investments, you should not blame the foreign ones for opening only sales offices in Africa.

It is easier to succeed in Africa selling imported things than making innovative products owing to trade policies.

In Future

Africa needs to have a redesign because what is happening now will not provide jobs for its citizens. If IBM, Cisco and other U.S. companies continue to invest in China,  the result will be continuous Chinese dominance in global trade. Africa will miss the opportunity to provide employment for its citizens and that will be catastrophic for its long-term security.

Four things you should do before taking any prescription medications

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A prescription medication is any medication that strictly requires a doctor’s prescription before a pharmacist can dispense it to you. Normally, a doctor will ask you several questions before prescribing a medication for, let’s say, hypertension or diabetes. Some of these questions include the drugs you are currently taking, whether you have reacted to any drugs before and which ones, including the one he or she is about to prescribe for you.

In addition to all your doctor tells you before prescribing any medication, Kangpe, a leading Nigerian healthTech startup, notes that you should endeavour to do the following before that medication enters your mouth:

1. Check the expiry date of the drug

It may sound irrelevant, but a lot of people don’t bother to check the expiry date of drugs before paying for them at the pharmacy. Taking an expired drug is harmful in any way you can imagine: such a drug has lost its potency to treat the condition you’re taking it for, meaning a waste of money, and it may even now cause a serious health problem for you.

Therefore, ensure you inspect the packs of the drugs you’re buying at any pharmacy before paying for them. If you can’t find the expiry date on the pack request for another one. For drugs that may be dispensed into a pill bottle or a sachet, ask the pharmacist about their expiry dates on the dispensing container. It is your fundamental human right to know the expiry date of any medication you’re buying. If you encounter resistance, just walk away and look for another pharmacy.

2. Check the possible side effects of the medication

Again, many people take this for granted. Whenever you purchase any prescription medication, ensure you go through the leaflet inside the pack. Don’t throw it away immediately. Look out for where all the possible side effects of the drugs are written and take note of them. While your doctor will definitely tell you the very common side effects of any medications he or she prescribes for you, there are less common ones that time may not permit him or her to inform you about. But they are written on that leaflet.

Going through the leaflet for these less common and often very dangerous side effects will enable you know and attribute any one of them to the drug at once if you experience any, thereby stopping the medication right away. And it will prevent you from wrongly blaming another thing for such a side effect while still taking the medication which could be very dangerous.

3. Read about the drug interactions

This precious information is also printed on the leaflet of any prescription medication you purchase. Drug interactions means other drugs and even foods and drinks that interact with the medications you’re taking in ways that make them either less effective or very harmful to your body. Hence, such drugs, foods and drinks should be avoided while on the particular medications prescribed for you.

If everything’s alright, it’s time to start budgeting for your treatment so that you can maintain consistency without financial strain. Patients suffering from gastrointestinal issues are often looking for Motegrity Coupon and Cost reduction options to stock up on their prescriptions without breaking the bank. These savings can make long-term care more manageable and reduce stress around affordability. With careful planning, patients can focus more on their health and less on financial concerns.

4. Read about the contraindications of the drugs.

On that same leaflet, you will find information on the contraindications of the medication. Contraindications of a drug are health conditions and situations in which such a drug should not be taken or a doctor should be consulted for guidance on taking them. For instance, someone with a liver or kidney disease is not supposed to take any medication whose common side effect is injury to any of these organs. When there are no alternatives as is the case for some first-line drugs for treating tuberculosis, such a person will take the drugs in dosages recommended by a doctor and will constantly be monitored for signs of injury to these organs.

Pregnancy, asthma, diarrhoea and so on are conditions (contraindications) that warrant certain drugs to be avoided or be taken under the strict guidance of a doctor. Your doctor will always ask you if you have any of these conditions that are contraindications before giving you a prescription. However, he or she may not ask you for all the possible conditions, and reading that leaflet can be a lifesaver.

Always endeavour to buy your prescription medications from a good pharmacy staffed with a registered pharmacy (they will always ask you for a doctor’s prescription before selling such medications to you)

 

This is courtesy of  Kangpe Healthcare Services, a leading Nigerian healthTech startup.