Wednesday 2 November 2016

PRAISE ANGELS CRECHE, NURSERY, PRIMARY SCHOOL

Newly Listed Business

Name: PRAISE ANGELS CRECHE, NURSERY, PRIMARY SCHOOL
Address: 5th avenue, 512 road, F close, house 21, Festac
Telephone: 0802-352-3790, 0802-304-2729
[Description]: Creche, nursery, primary school with experienced nannies/teachers, and modern facilities like flatscreen tvs, educational toys etc.


Tuesday 7 June 2016

Forex policy uncertainty pushes naira to 357/dollar

The naira dropped against the United States dollar at the parallel market from 355 on Friday to 357 on Monday, foreign exchange traders said. Analysts and traders linked the drop to the mounting fears among traders and investors over the flexible exchange rate policy proposed by the Central Bank of Nigeria.
CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele
They said the continued delay by the CBN in releasing the blueprint for the planned flexible exchange rate policy was fuelling hoarding and speculation in the forex market. The CBN’s Monetary Policy Committee had two weeks ago announced plan to adopt a flexible exchange rate. The Governor, CBN, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, said the blueprint for the proposed policy would be released soon. The delay has, however, caused the stock market to record huge losses after recording landmark gains following the announcement of the plan to adopt the policy.
“The market’s perception of the lack of clarity over the regulator’s plan on the exchange rate policy is fuelling hoarding and all manner of activities; this is why the naira dropped against the dollar at the parallel market today,” the National President, Association of Bureau De Change Operators, Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe, said. Analysts had last week said the local currency would trade around 350 per dollar this week as uncertainty over the implementation of the CBN’s planned new flexible exchange rate policy persisted.
The local currency retreated to 350 to the dollar on the parallel market on Thursday from 360 the previous week. The naira had weakened shortly after the CBN’s Monetary Policy Committee announced plans for new exchange rate policy two weeks ago, but strengthened when the details of the new policy were delayed, Reuters reported.

Skye Bank sacks 175 workers

The recent trend of retrenchment of workers in the financial services sector on Monday extended to Skye Bank Plc, which sent 175 of its employees into the labour market. The bank confirmed the development in a statement through which it explained that the affected workers failed the year 2015 appraisal exercise.
The staff disengagement exercise is coming a year after the bank’s successful integration with the erstwhile Mainstreet Bank, which it acquired in October 2014; the integration exercise described by analysts as a landmark in Nigeria’s banking industry has significantly improved Skye Bank’s ICT capacity and helped strengthen the bank’s service delivery. “The bank extended its appreciation to the affected staff for serving the bank, describing them as members of the family who will always be accorded deserving respect in their future dealings with the bank.”
According to the statement, Skye Bank is adjudged by the Central Bank of Nigeria as one of the systemically important banks with over N1.3tn balance sheet, and has over 400 branches.
The PUNCH had exclusively reported last week that Diamond Bank Plc retrenched over 200 members of its workforce, while Ecobank Nigeria sacked over 1,040 of its employees, in response to the difficulties in the economy.
FBN Holdings, the parent company of First Bank of Nigeria Limited, had recently said it would cut down the number of its employees by 1,000.

Monday 15 February 2016

Subsidy removal: FG saves N18.3bn in six weeks

The Federal Government’s savings as a result of the removal of subsidy on both petrol and kerosene are growing daily,




Between January 1 and February 12 this year, an interval of about six weeks, the Federal Government made over N18.3bn as savings from the removal of subsidy on Premium Motor Spirit and House Hold Kerosene.
The government officially stopped subsidy on PMS, popularly known as petrol, on January 1, 2016, while on January 23 this year, it also ended the subsidy regime on kerosene, according to the pricing templates for both commodities obtained from the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency. The PPPRA is the agency of the Federal Government that fixes and regulates the prices of the white products, PMS and HHK, as well as other refined petroleum products across the country. The PPPRA occasionally updates the templates for both commodities to reflect fluctuations in the global prices of crude oil.It unveiled its revised PMS template on January 1, 2016 while that of HHK was posted on January 23, a development that showed that the Federal Government now makes extra cash daily from every litre of petrol and kerosene sold across the country.
An analysis of the various updated templates so far released by the agency after they were revised showed that the Federal Government had raked in over N18.3bn in six weeks. For instance, in the recent template for PMS, which was posted on the PPPRA website on February 12, the government made a cash recovery of N15.23 on every litre of petrol sold in the country. On petrol alone, about six templates had been released by the regulatory agency, beginning with the one posted on January 1 this year, which confirmed the stoppage of petrol subsidy and showed an over recovery of N1.4 per litre of PMS.

Tuesday 9 February 2016

CBN backs real sector with N1.3tn

The Central Bank of Nigeria says it has supported the real sector of the economy to the tune of over N1.3tn as part of its efforts to tackle the challenges facing the economy.

Read the full story here

CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele
The support, according to the CBN, includes the N300bn Real Sector Support Facility; N220bn Micro-Small and Medium Enterprises Development Fund; N75bn Nigeria Incentive-Based Risk Sharing System for Agricultural Lending; and the N213bn Nigeria Electricity Market Stabilisation Fund. Others are the N50bn Nigeria Export Import Bank Fund; and the N500bn Export Refinancing and Restructuring Facility.
The Governor, CBN, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, stated this while declaring open a seminar for financial journalists in Ibadan on Monday. Emefiele, who was represented by the Deputy Governor, Corporate Services, CBN, Mr. Adebayo Adelabu, said that beyond the primary mandate of the central bank which is to ensure monetary, price and financial system stability, it had gone a step further to support different sectors of the economy for developmental purposes.
He said, “The far-reaching objectives of the CBN in the implementation of schemes and programmes for real sector development focuse on the inherent potential in the sector vis-à-vis our conviction that the sector has sufficient employment capabilities, high growth potential, contributes significantly in accretion to foreign reserves, expands the industrial base and apparently diversifies the growth potential of the national economy.
Read the full story here

Monday 1 February 2016

New electricity tariffs take effect today amid opposition

The Association of National Electricity Distributors on Sunday has described the new tariffs, which will become effective on Monday (today), as a necessary move that will attract investments into the power sector.

The Association of National Electricity Distributors on Sunday has described the new tariffs, which will become effective on Monday (today), as a necessary move that will attract investments into the power sector. This is, however, coming amid opposition from labour unions, with the Nigeria Labour Congress, Trade Union Congress of Nigeria and some civil society organisations vowing to picket electricity distribution companies across the country as a way of resisting the hike in electricity tariffs.
The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, however, said the new electricity tariff regime was the first major policy of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration. The labour groups said the tariff increase could not be justified as there had not been any significant improvement in the services of the power firms. The Executive Director, Research and Advocacy, ANED, Mr. Sunday Oduntan, said in aninterview with our correspondent that the country could not see improved power supply under the current tariff regime.
He said, “If you want an improved service, we have to have a cost-reflective tariff. The required huge investment cannot happen without us having an appropriate pricing. That is the issue. We have been under-selling for a long time, and you can’t be selling a product that is supposed to be N100 at N60 and people are expecting improvement; that business will collapse. “So, it is not about us increasing tariffs, it is about reviewing the tariffs upward to meet the operational cost of the business so that we will not continue to be in darkness perpetually.”
Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babtunde Fashola


























Four Nigerian banks among world’s top 500

First Bank of Nigeria Limited, Guaranty Trust Bank Plc, Zenith Bank Plc and United Bank for Africa have been named among the world’s top 500 banks. A new study conducted by the United Kingdom-based The Banker Magazine gave this verdict.

Read the full story here...



The 2016 The Banker and Brand Finance Top 500 Banking Brands report showed that First Bank retained its number one banking brand ranking in Nigeria for the fifth consecutive year.
First Bank moved up the scale by 16 places, rising from 336th position in 2015 to 320th this year. The ranking was published in the February edition of The Banker magazine of the Financial Times Group in conjunction with London-based Brand Finance.
While GTB moved to 389 in the world from 417 in 2015, Zenith Bank dropped from 388 in 2015 to 392 in 2016. UBA returned to the ranking in 447, while Access Bank Plc dropped from the 2016 ranking. Access Bank was ranked 496 in 2015.
A statement by the Country Representative of The Banker magazine in Nigeria, Mr. Kunle Ogedengbe, noted that First Bank’s brand value increased to $322m in 2016 from $300m in 2015 while that of GTB also increased to $243m from $213m. A brand value is the licensing rate that a third-party would need to pay to use the bank’s brand. The 2016 brand value of Zenith Bank increased to $238m from $235 in 2015 while UBA that made a return to the ranking since 2012 has a brand value of $198m. UBA’s brand value in 2012 was $121m.
Read the full story here...

Dollar scarcity delays petrol importation – Marketers

The country may experience another round of petrol scarcity soon if the naira continues to depreciate in value, particularly against the United States dollar, oil marketers have said.

Read the full story here...

The marketers noted that sourcing for dollars to import the product was becoming increasingly difficult, with most them turning to the parallel market for foreign exchange. The oil marketers told our correspondent that they buy a dollar for as high as N280 at the parallel market, because it was not easy to get the greenback at the Central Bank of Nigeria’s official exchange rate of N197.
A major oil marketer, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the issue, said, “Everybody is sourcing for forex; when you are lucky, you get it. But when luck is not on your side, you have to wait. Since the petrol import allocations usually lapse after three months, people often have the latitude to source for forex within the period. For example, the last allocations were given in December and so people had the latitude to source for the foreign exchange for about two months.
“The essence of giving the allocations ahead is also for you to plan. For instance, if you want to bring in three cargos, you can’t bring in all at once. Maybe you bring one in the first month, the second in the next month and the third cargo in the last month.
Read the full story here...

HSBC to freeze salaries, hiring in 2016 in battle to cut costs

Europe's largest lender, HSBC, is imposing a hiring and pay freeze across the bank globally in 2016, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Read the full story here...


A Swiss International aircraft flies past the HSBC headquarters building in the Canary Wharf financial district in east London February 15, 2015.  REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
HSBC headquarters building

















An email was sent to staff on Friday detailing the latest cost-saving measures, according to the sources who spoke on condition of anonymity. Like numerous other global banks, HSBC (HSBA.L) is in the midst of a cost-cutting drive to boost profitability and returns to shareholders, and is pushing through with plans for annual cost savings of up to $5 billion by 2017.

Europe's biggest bank said in June that it planned to slash nearly one in five jobs and shrink its investment bank by a third in response to sluggish economic growth and tighter global regulation of bank balance sheet risk.

Friday 29 January 2016

Mixed reactions as Buhari rejects naira devaluation



President Muhammadu Buhari has again rejected calls for the devaluation of the naira, saying he has yet to be convinced that the country and its people will derive any tangible benefit from such a move.

A statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, on Thursday quoted the President as speaking at a meeting he had with Nigerians living in Kenya late on Wednesday. Buhari, who is currently on a three-day state visit to Kenya, was said to have maintained that while export-driven economies could benefit from the devaluation of their currencies, such a move would only result in further inflation and hardship for the poor and middle class in Nigeria’s import-dependent economy.
The President said he had no intention of bringing further hardship on the country’s poor, who he noted had suffered enough already. He likened further devaluation of the naira to having the currency “killed.” Buhari added that proponents of devaluation must work harder to convince him that ordinary Nigerians would gain anything from it. The President also rejected suggestions that the Central Bank of Nigeria should resume the sale of foreign exchange to Bureaux De Change, saying that the BDC business had become a scam and a drain on the economy.
“We had just 74 of the bureaux in 2005; now, they have grown to about 2,800,” he noted. Buhari alleged that some bank and government officials used surrogates to run the BDCs and prosper at public expense by obtaining foreign exchange from the government at official rates and selling it at much higher rates.


New electricity tariffs take effect on Monday – NERC

The new tariffs approved for electricity consumers across the country will become effective on Monday and will enable the power distribution, generation and transmission companies to acquire needed infrastructure, the acting Chairman of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission, Dr. Anthony Akah, has said.

Read the full story here...

Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babtunde Fashola


Akah, who said this when he led top executives of the regulatory agency on a courtesy call on the National Orientation Agency in Abuja on Thursday, also said there was no going back on the new tariffs.
The NERC boss said the lack of cost-reflective tariffs had hindered the electricity companies from acquiring the necessary infrastructure, adding that with the new tariffs, they would not have any excuse for not delivering on agreements they entered into with the government. 
He said the Nigerian power sector reform must provide an appropriate pricing template, which had been lacking, leading to deficiency in revenues from power. This, he added, necessitated the new Multi-Year Tariff Order to enable the generating, transmission and distribution companies to provide the needed infrastructure for higher generation and supply of electricity to meet the needs of consumers.

Fears of massive job loss grip oil industry

The persistent weakness in the price of crude oil in the international market has raised the prospect of massive job losses in the Nigerian oil and gas industry.
Image result for oil industry
Oil prices have fallen in the last few days to their lowest levels since 2003, trading around $27 per barrel last week, before rallying to about $32. The Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers had on Friday warned Chevron and Shell against sacking oil workers in Nigeria.
The NUPENG, in a statement signed by its National President, Dr. Igwe Achese, said it was worried and concerned about the purported threat to sack about 18,500 workers globally in Chevron and Shell. “It is a sacking too many, as oil workers in Chevron Nigeria and Shell will be affected,” the union said. The Chairman, Nigerdock Nigeria Plc and the Jagal Group, Mr. Anwar Jamarkani, at the load-out and sail-away ceremony of a gas project at the weekend, lamented the lack of new projects in the industry, saying some projects had been deferred by producers.
“We are witnesses to what is going on in some of the largest companies in Korea, who are leaders in international fabrication – HHI, Samsung and Daewoo. All of them have lost money and are about to lose their shares. Yet, they have work orders for 10 years forward. I don’t have orders for six months. “I have 1,000 people out there and I have to stand before them and tell them where their future is.”

Wednesday 27 January 2016

6 Myths About Launching a Successful Online Business

It seems as if everyone wants to start an online business these days. Unfortunately, too many aspiring entrepreneurs expect the process to be easy, hands off, and streamlined. If you hear anyone say that starting an online business is any of these, it’s time to tune out and move on. These people are perpetuating common myths about the industry.

Read the full article here

Six Myths That Aren’t Worth Your Time
One of the problems about myths is that they tend to spread like wildfire. In the Internet era, an ill-timed statement has the potential to proliferate thousands of times in less than a day, and then it’s accepted as fact.
That being the case, you need to cross-reference everything you hear and only accept information from sources you can trust. Let’s briefly review some of the flaws behind the popular myths about online business startups. Not everything is as it appears on the surface.

1. Passion Alone is Enough
You’ll often hear business gurus and coaches tell you to follow your passion to inevitable profit. What happens in between, though? If passion equals profit, wouldn’t everyone drive a Benz, fly a private jet, and live a life of luxury?
Since this obviously isn’t the case, you should be skeptical of the supposed correlation between passion and success. “Yes, it’s important to create a business around something that interests you,” writes Ramit Sethi, successful entrepreneur and New York Times-bestselling author. “But what separates a successful online business from everyone else is business systems.” 
Nobody wants to talk about business systems. When compared to sexy words like “revenue,” “profits,” and “success,” the phrase “business systems” is decidedly bland. As a result, self-proclaimed gurus prefer to skip over it. If you want the cold, hard truth, here it is: Passion alone is just not enough to be successful. Yes, it’s a vital component, but it must be matched with the appropriate business systems and strategic goals.

2. You Don’t Need Any Capital to Get Started
Another myth that’s tempting to believe is the one that says you don’t need any capital to launch a business. This isn’t true either. Although you don’t have to have a six- or seven-figure savings account to launch an online business,you do need some capital to establish a solid foundation for growth.
There are plenty of free services on the Internet, but they tend to be free for a reason. In most cases, they are designed to push you toward a paying service that has better features. In other words, free services generally aren’t adequate for growing a real business. At the very least, you’ll have to pay for the following when you start an online business:
  • Domain name
  • Website hosting
  • Logo design
  • Website template or designer
  • E-commerce platform
  • Product inventory
  • Marketing and advertising expenses
  • Licenses, fees, and taxes
  • … and probably more
This isn’t meant to discourage you from attempting an online company; but it should give you a dose of reality. You’ve got to have some capital to launch a decent startup. An online business might require less up-front capital than a brick-and-mortar operation, but you can’t do anything without amassing some money. 

3. You Must Have Funding Lined Up Before Pursuing an Idea
One myth that sadly holds a lot of people back is that you must have investors on board before you pursue an idea. But this doesn’t make much sense. Unless you’re a seasoned entrepreneur who can boast a track record of bringing ideas to market with a high rate of success, why would any investor give financial support to an unproven concept?
Don’t worry about lining up funding when you’re starting out. If you can prove your idea works, then you can approach investors. Remember this: The business comes first and the funding comes second.

4. Social Media Alone is Enough
The vast reach and pervasiveness of social media has tempted many online entrepreneurs to assume that launching a successful business is as easy as developing a grassroots social media marketing campaign. If only it were that easy. 
Admittedly, social media is a powerful tool for low-budget marketing and advertising, but very few businesses are able to use it effectively enough to foster an idea from the ground up. In order to gain traction through social media, you’ll more likely have to invest months of time and pour piles of money into paid ads.
And in order to accomplish this, you’ll also probably need a full-time social media manager. The moral of the story is that social media is useful, but it cannot be your sole growth strategy. 

5. You Can Keep Your Full-Time Job
In the beginning stages of your startup, you may be able to manage your old full-time job and your startup simultaneously. You’ll be running on adrenaline at this point, and the workload will be manageable.
However, there comes a time when you will have to quit your full-time job and plunge headfirst into your new venture. Anyone who tells you it’s fine to juggle your full-time job and your startup for ongoing months or years doesn’t know what he’s talking about. If you’re serious about growing, you have to give your full attention to the business.
This isn’t to say you should quit your job as soon as an idea for a startup pops into your head. Take some time to ensure you’re making the right decision. It’s smart tospend at least three months on your new idea, and secure verbal commitments from a handful of customers and clients during that period. At the same time, work on building between six and 12 months of living expense funds to offset the likely lack of income during the early stages.

6. Online Business Owners are Casual Globetrotters
Another common myth you’ll hear is that online business owners get to enjoy the freedom of traveling the world while they’re working. Although being an online business owner certainly gives you more flexibility than you’d have with a traditional nine-to-five cubicle job, it’s not nearly as flexible as you’d think. 
There will be times when you can travel, but setting up your office in hotel rooms across the globe isn’t something you’ll want to do for an extended period of time. You need to have a home base where you can concentrate and establish continuity. Too much traveling will leave little time to scale your business.
That being said, you don’t have to work 24/7/365. The beauty of owning your own business is that you can take time off without having to turn in a form or notify your boss. By establishing the right systems, you can enjoy career flexibility.

The Key to Launching a Successful Online Business
The key to launching a successful online business is to be open-minded. Don’t ever listen to anyone who tells you that you can or cannot start an online business because of any particular factor. Businesses are composed of hundreds of individual moving parts. One element won’t prevent you from attaining success, or propel you toward the proverbial Promised Land.
If you want to be successful and launch an online business with a promising future, it goes without saying that you have to be willing to work hard and take risks. You’ll probably fail on many occasions, but keep pushing forward, and hoping for that special moment when you firmly grasp success.
Along the way, you’ll need to block out the noise and avoid focusing on the aforementioned myths that so often defeat aspiring entrepreneurs.

Buhari to attend Kenya-Nigeria Business Forum, AU meeting

President Muhammadu Buhari will Wednesday depart Abuja on a three-day state visit where he would attend a Kenya-Nigeria Business Forum, a statement by his spokesman, Femi Adesina said.

Read the full news article here



Image result for buhariPresident Muhammadu Buhari will Wednesday depart Abuja on a three-day state visit where he would attend a Kenya-Nigeria Business Forum, a statement by his spokesman, Femi Adesina said. The President has for some weeks now embarked on an investment drive to different countries where he has also signed agreements that would ensure Nigeria’s looted funds are repatriated. The President… Read more here


FG gives conditions for out-of-court settlement with MTN

The Federal Government on Tuesday gave conditions for an out-of-court settlement with MTN Nigeria in respect of the N780bn fine imposed on the company by the Nigerian Communications Commission for having 5.2 million unregistered subscribers on its network.

Click here for the full news article

At the resumed hearing of the suit it filed to challenge the fine, MTN’s lawyer, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), had pleaded with the presiding judge, Justice Mohammed Idris, to give the parties 60 days to explore the option of settlement out of court.

Minister of Communications, Mr. Adebayo Shittu
Answering questions from journalists at the unveiling of the Communications Sector Roadmap for 2016 to 2019 in Abuja, the Minister of Communications, Mr. Adebayo Shittu, ruled out the possibility of such a settlement until MTN had withdrawn the court case it instituted against the Federal Government and the NCC.
Confirming that MTN had made some moves for settlement after approaching the court for adjudication, Shittu said such moves were not acceptable until the case had been withdrawn from the court.
Another condition for an out-of-court settlement with the multinational telecoms operator, according to the minister, is the approval of a possible new deal by President Muhammadu Buhari.
The minister said, “The case is in court. It was MTN who took the government to court because they wanted to, perhaps, buy time or whatever. I don’t want to cast any aspersion. I am aware also that after going to court, they have made certain moves but you know that in matters like this, sensitive issues are involved.
“As far as we are concerned, there can be no out-of-court settlement except the case is withdrawn from the court so that the government will not be put under pressure. If the case is out of court and if they make further moves, Mr. President may graciously make a decision. But now, I am not aware of any out-of-court settlement talks.”
The minister also confirmed that the Federal Government had opened talks for the purchase of two new communications satellites to serve as backups for the Nigerian communications satellite also known as NigComSat-1R that was put in the orbit in 2011.
Shittu also directed all Ministries, Departments and Agencies of the Federal Government to repatriate all government data being hosted abroad to local data centres.
The minister, who gave the directive at the First Annual Data Summit hosted by the Office for Nigerian Content Development in ICTs in Abuja, said the Federal Government was committed to implementing the local content guidelines issued by the National Information Technology Development Agency in 2013.
He said it was necessary to host all government data locally for security purposes and for job creation, adding that the contribution of the communications sector to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product had risen to 11 per cent by September 2015.

Apple sees first sales dip in more than a decade

Apple sees first sales dip in more than a decade as super-growth era falters




A woman tries apple's iPhone 6 at an Apple store in Beijing, November 2, 2015. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-HoonApple Inc (AAPL.O) forecast its first revenue drop in 13 years and reported the slowest-ever growth in iPhone shipments as the critical Chinese market showed signs of weakening, suggesting the technology company's period of exponential growth may be ending.
The company's shares, which have fallen 5 percent this year, bounced around in after-hours trading and were down 0.7 percent as a call with analysts was underway.
"It's disappointing to see them miss on an already downward adjusted sales number and the fact is that with their iPhone growth slowing what was needed was a product to be excited about," said J.J. Kinahan, chief strategist at TD Ameritrade. "Pressure on the shares will continue without a well-defined plan to grow sales or a new product."
The most valuable publicly traded U.S. tech company said on Tuesday it sold 74.8 million iPhones in its fiscal first quarter, ended Dec. 26, the first full quarter of sales of the iPhone 6S and 6S Plus. The 0.4 percent growth in shipments was the lowest since the product was launched in 2007.
IPhone sales were expected to fall for the current quarter over a year ago, Chief Executive Tim Cook said on a conference call with analysts.

While revenue in Greater China rose 14 percent in the last quarter, Apple is beginning to see a shift in the economy, particularly in Hong Kong, Apple Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri told Reuters in an interview.

Naira depreciates to N303/$ as dollar scarcity intensifies

LAGOS — The Naira depreciates against the dollar in the parallel market, in response to intense scarcity of dollar in the market.




Counterfeit nairaVanguard survey of parallel market exchange rate in major cities shows that the Naira depreciated to N303 per dollar in Lagos from N299 last week, while in Abuja and Kano the Naira depreciated to N304 per dollar from N299 last week.
Bureaux de Change operators attributed the sharp depreciation to increasing scarcity of dollars in the market.
“There is no dollar, that is why the rate is going up,” said Mr. Harisson Owoh, Chief Executive Officer, H.J Trust BDC.
An Abuja-based BDC operator, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Vanguard: “People are looking for dollars, while nobody is willing to sell. There is also the expectation that the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Central Bank of Nigeria will devalue the Naira but we know they will not.”
President, Association of Bureaux de Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON), Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe, also confirmed to Vanguard that there is scarcity of dollars in the market, noting:“There is scarcity of dollars. Where will the dollars come from?”
He also confirmed to Vanguard that the proposed meeting between the Executive Council of the Association and the CBN did not hold last week. He said the meeting has been rescheduled to this week.

Tuesday 26 January 2016

Fuel subsidy removal’ll save govt N985bn – Osinbajo

Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has said the Federal Government, which relies on crude oil for about two-thirds of its revenue, is seeing a silver lining to the plunge in crude prices because it will no longer have to subsidise fuel.




“Lower oil prices also mean there is some advantage,” Osinbajo said in a panel discussion at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Thursday. The decline “means that we are not paying any subsidies, which frees up something in the order of about $5bn (about N985bn),” Bloomberg quoted the vice president as saying.
Brent oil in London has dropped more than 60 per cent to below $28 a barrel since November 2014, as shale production from the United States increased and the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries refrained from cutting output in the face of a global oversupply in an effort to defend market share.
Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil producer, will still face challenges in financing its budget deficit and aims to increase Value Added Tax and customs duty collection to help plug the gap, Osinbajo said. “We think with adequate governance around budget management and around expenditure management, we can do quite a bit. If we are able to do those things, we might be able to come away with under $30 a barrel oil,” he explained.

Executive exodus at troubled Twitter

Image result for twitter
Four key Twitter executives are to leave the company as the social network continues its attempt to turn around its fortunes.
Twitter chief executive Jack DorseyTwitter's head of product Kevin Weil and head of media Katie Jacobs Stanton are to leave the company in the coming weeks, as is Alex Roetter, Twitter's head of engineering. Skip Schipper, who was responsible for human resources matters, is also departing.
The news was confirmed in a tweet by chief executive Jack Dorsey on Sunday, who said the foursome could now have some "well-deserved time off". Mr Dorsey - who co-founded Twitter - said when he returned to the company last month that he would make sweeping changes.
The first was to lay-off 8% of the company's workforce and it now seems changes are being made among top executives. Also leaving is Jason Toff, head of Vine, Twitter's mini-video service. He tweeted that he was to join Google to work on virtual reality.