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Treasury Bills In Nigeria - Investment (2027) - Nairaland

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Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nezzjnr: 9:05am On Nov 11, 2021
cheesy cheesy cheesy
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 9:07am On Nov 11, 2021
LordAdam16:


No b everybody head fit carry am.

That is the crux of the issue. In that same US, this year, several major investment houses bumped the starting pay for first-year analysts to $100,000+. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-08-02/goldman-sachs-bumps-junior-banker-pay-aligning-with-rivals

Amazon employs some 1.4 million people. But while some are being paid $15/hr working soul-crushing, back-breaking warehouse jobs where they have to pee in bottles; others are being paid 80/hr with generous benefits as software engineers for their AWS platform.

Not everyone has the cognitive ability to become a neurosurgeon, $500/hr attorney, investment banker, or developer. The Bell Curve is a pictorial representation of why that is the case. The vast majority of people will work average service and industrial jobs of middling economic value.

Unfortunately, inflation has outstripped wage growth. So the low-skilled, low-wage jobs that used to be manageable in the heydays of American exceptionalism just after WW2 are now grossly insufficient. Cue the left-wing politicians, social commentators, think-tanks and non-profits, and grifters preying on these displeased horde of worker bees by convincing them higher taxes on high earners will be the magic wand.

Because heaven forbids you tell a single mom no one will pay her $40/hr to wait tables as it makes no economic sense, regardless of how stressful the job is or how high her bills are stacked. The human thing to do when your skillset is incapable of acquiring the resources you need and want is to forcefully take and redistribute from those who in your opinion have more than enough. When you can't do it, you lend your support to the mob, politician, or political party that promises to do so on your behalf.

That is the entire 21st century Western labor debate and origin story of "Tax the Rich" slogan in a few paragraphs.

Meanwhile, uninformed suffering-and-smiling merchants in third-world sh*tholes think that validates their assertion that because they're miserable and can't even boast of uninterrupted power supply in a corrupt, nighmarish hellscape where life is ridiculously cheap and laws are mere suggestions, that means everyone is miserable elsewhere.

When all is said and done, over the next few centuries, the Western elite are going to have robots do most of the thankless, unskilled and low-skilled jobs; have a well-paid professional class keep things running smoothly; and place the average Joe and Jane on a blend of welfare packages comprising Universal Basic Income, Unemployment Benefits, Child Credit, free necessities (education, health care) et cetera.

Already, France has an annual federal budget of circa €650 billion but spend a whopping €500 billion on welfare across all levels of government. This is in a country of 68 million people where more than 50% of the population do not pay income tax.

-Lord
Dis one sounds soooo triggered. grin grin. The nerve of this fóól to form elitist when his race already puts him at the very bottom of that society.
And if you look well before u rushed in like a headless chicken, u will see dey were discussing about America. Everyone knows Europe is better.
But nah, you want everyone to believe that America is utopia and you are balling, Mr. Baller.
I am sure you go come here and lie you are being paid well and claim to be the most sUcCeSsfUl iMmIgRaNts in America when statistics show that is a HUGE lie. Una no even reach Indians quarter. We sha know as una dey package.
As it was earlier mentioned, na white people dey complain like dat. And if whites dey complain, dat means you the blacks are living worse on average. We see the statistics, you guys are always at the bottom of every metric. But at least you have security and light, and everything works with a liru sprinkle of racism. So E no too bad for Una. And you get pali.
Well after working 2-3 jobs just to live well, it is understandable why you are so pained. So vent oga. Anyway, na Poco.han.tas get your medicine.
-Fake Lord

2 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by NL1960: 9:32am On Nov 11, 2021
Tobex4realTobex234:


He worked 3 years at PWC as a Financial Analyst baba. Even PWC Nigeria you won't find dummies working there.

Once again, this is not a validation for people to go and put their money on Rise, because I've noticed that people here are waiting for who they will hold if something happens grin

You think so. If a state governor or somebody at the corridors of federal power makes employing a 'dummy' for PWC to get a lucrative deal, you think PWC will not employ the 'dummy'?.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 9:34am On Nov 11, 2021
I even think say na beta person comment o!
Dis scammer wey never even enter plane for him life come here dey abuse people legitimately working to earn jobs no matter how menial. I am not surprised, it’s common to those wey never cross border.
Your head fit carry am but na scam you use am do. Hopefully, you fit gather all dat money buy one way ticket out of this shithole.
-Lord scammer

2 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Macktaob(m): 11:21am On Nov 11, 2021
"Lazyyouth vs alleged uber driver" part 2 cheesy
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 12:23pm On Nov 11, 2021
Macktaob:
"Lazyyouth vs alleged confirmed uber driver" part 2 cheesy

undecided
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by FEGEITOK: 1:54pm On Nov 11, 2021
NL1960:


You think so. If a state governor or somebody at the corridors of federal power makes employing a 'dummy' for PWC to get a lucrative deal, you think PWC will not employ the 'dummy'?.

Banks do this a lot, if you know you know

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Macktaob(m): 2:50pm On Nov 11, 2021
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Tobex4realTobex234(m): 4:15pm On Nov 11, 2021
NL1960:


You think so. If a state governor or somebody at the corridors of federal power makes employing a 'dummy' for PWC to get a lucrative deal, you think PWC will not employ the 'dummy'?.

Na so. PWC na government agency Abi. Make una stop all these una mentality for government work, it doesn't work like that in private firms.

Have you gone to LinkedIn to see the caliber of people that work in these firms? KPMG, PWC and the likes will not even shortlist you for assessment if you dont have a 2'1.

Make una stop all these crap.

3 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by freeman67: 4:52pm On Nov 11, 2021
Tobex4realTobex234:


Na so. PWC na government agency Abi. Make una stop all these una mentality for government work, it doesn't work like that in private firms.

Have you gone to LinkedIn to see the caliber of people that work in these firms? KPMG, PWC and the likes will not even shortlist you for assessment if you dont have a 2'1.

Make una stop all these crap.

Nothing like crap there. If you don't understand ask for more explanation. Every business either public or private is out to make money. So it is actually what about what comes with you to the table. Yes they may have a specification required of their staff. However, once something more serious is involved they overlook some rules...
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Elsueno: 5:07pm On Nov 11, 2021
Tobex4realTobex234:


Na so. PWC na government agency Abi. Make una stop all these una mentality for government work, it doesn't work like that in private firms.

Have you gone to LinkedIn to see the caliber of people that work in these firms? KPMG, PWC and the likes will not even shortlist you for assessment if you dont have a 2'1.

Make una stop all these crap.

They want to make money, if hiring one "dummy" will make them plenty profit, nothing will stop them from doing so. I can confirm banks do this shyt..once they get the deal, they give oga slot to bring his/her candidates
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by NL1960: 6:10pm On Nov 11, 2021
freeman67:


Nothing like crap there. If you don't understand ask for more explanation. Every business either public or private is out to make money. So it is actually what about what comes with you to the table. Yes they may have a specification required of their staff. However, once something more serious is involved they overlook some rules...

Leave him, He thinks everybody that comes in is through shortlisting and competitive tests and interviews that take months. Iam sure he has not heard of 'if you want the N2Billion Consultancy job, then you have to employ my son or employ my niece or employ my nephew'. A Partner earns according to the business he/she brings to the organization and not by the number of First Class or 2.1s that he employs.

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 6:22pm On Nov 11, 2021
Tobex4realTobex234:


Na so. PWC na government agency Abi. Make una stop all these una mentality for government work, it doesn't work like that in private firms.

Have you gone to LinkedIn to see the caliber of people that work in these firms? KPMG, PWC and the likes will not even shortlist you for assessment if you dont have a 2'1.

Make una stop all these crap.

There is nothing special about working in PWC in the US. Achievers in finance in Yankee don’t end up in audit firms. That’s a freaking dead end job to them. High flyers in finance from school go to work for top investment banks like Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley dey there.

That your Eke guy or whatever his name is..He is not qualified to take money and invest for people. Naija people can fall for nonesense as long as person say he cone from Yankee. I will be here sipping tea when premium tears start pouring…..

3 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 6:25pm On Nov 11, 2021
See the boy wey Baba agbas dey give their retirement money to invest for them cheesy grin

4 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by otomatic(m): 6:29pm On Nov 11, 2021
Tobex4realTobex234:


Na so. PWC na government agency Abi. Make una stop all these una mentality for government work, it doesn't work like that in private firms.

Have you gone to LinkedIn to see the caliber of people that work in these firms? KPMG, PWC and the likes will not even shortlist you for assessment if you dont have a 2'1.

Make una stop all these crap.

What do you think the term "strategic hire" means?

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by XiaoLi: 7:02pm On Nov 11, 2021
Anyone doing well here is either considered as audio or uber driver by your Nairaland CIA suffering from mental disorder and inferiority complex..


Laff wan scatter me grin grin grin grin
Macktaob:

grin

2 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by LordAdam16: 10:03pm On Nov 11, 2021
skydiver01:
Few centuries? It has started already in many automated manufacturing facilities in Europe and Asia including China. E.g. over the last 30 years, 70% of the human labour assembly components of vehicles have disappeared (now automated with robots). And there are other examples too like automated warehousing logistics, package deliveries by drones etc etc.


True. It has started. However, the entire Western hemisphere is unlikely to have fully-automated societies with low-skilled natives paid to exist and consume before 2100. Futurism projections have to be modest, otherwise they can turn out to be way off.

To illustrate, it took us 120 years to go back to electric cars. It'd most likely take us at least 60 years to return to the moon.

Progress doesn't always occur logarithmically. Unforeseen setbacks, like another East-West Cold War, can reset the clock by several decades. Not to mention there are anthropological concerns with making a systemwide switch; such that even when technology advances to the point where it becomes feasible, the plutocrats will delay implementation until the time is right.

Poor timing and/or shabby implementation can result in widespread unrest, spike in drug usage and vices (idle minds can be particularly destructive), amidst other unpleasant consequences.

For instance, there are enough minerals in the asteroid belt (between Mars and Jupiter) to give each human on the planet over $100b and current technology is advanced enough to refine space mining within the next two decades to make extraction feasible. However, the elite isn't in a hurry to green light that for obvious reasons. Likewise with global food production, as a species, we have the means to affordably feed everybody on the planet employing no more than 5% of the global population but the economic system we practice globally does not allow that and the displacement could be catastrophic if done abruptly.

Not to mention, handing a restless demography free stuff for life isn't exactly a panacea. Humans are notoriously insatiable.

-Lord
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by LordAdam16: 10:57pm On Nov 11, 2021
EarlyCareer:


Fantastic perspective shared.

I do hope my previous comments did not send the wrong message. There was no intention to 'diss' our abroadian bros and sister. If it did, apologies.

That being said. The great resignation which I wrote about does not affect only blue collar workers, it also includes 'high level paying' - e.g. senior software developers, big tech, engrs. Now, this could be linked to many more factors asides toxic work culture, and long hours. The covid pandemic helped fast track a lot of other underlying issues too, including general burn out.

It is typical that due to this challenge, and taking into consideration inflation, most companies including big tech will have to increase their wages/salaries/benefits in order to retain and attract workers. - it is currently an employees market in the USA. (Which is a good thing, if you look at it from another perspective). Workers can demand better incentives. Another example, A top earning JP Morgan staff made headlines for resigning to focus on play to earn crypto industry.

I'm sorry, I don't have much sympathy for six-figure developers leaving their current job because they think they can get a better offer or better conditions elsewhere. That sounds like a first world problem to me.

One in four millennials has $100,000 in savings. https://finance.yahoo.com/news/much-millennials-savings-means-future-110040971.html

I'll like not to conflate the concerns of this privileged class with the very real issues of low-skilled workers who are unfortunate to not have the capacity to provide more economic value and have to work multiple jobs with depressed wages.

Needless to say, regardless, workers in both camps have something a lot of folks in third world countries can't comprehend: CHOICE.

Many are switching jobs, going remote, retiring early (the financial markets have been on a roll), relying more on their partners, and downsizing a bit to permanently get on welfare. The system and developed economy makes that possible.

Now, regarding us third world workers, many remote works are actually not only in tech. I am not. I work within the international development space, and even there, many remote opportunities abound. To God be the glory, I do not live a miserable life. There are many more here in Nigeria earning very good wages in top level remote jobs, nor per hour. And yes, the cost of living does favour us, besides the typical Nigerian challenges you mentioned.

Do you think those remote jobs fell from the sky?

You're only able to get those remote jobs because these countries that so many like to sh*t on (the U.S. inclusive) created the perfect conditions and developed the technologies to untether productive tasks to a specific location with little or no efficiency loss.

Interestingly, this offshoring and H1B1 visa onshoring causes a substantial downward pressure on wages that essentially stops it from spiking. Also, it enables these economies to tap top talent regardless of location at the detriment of less developed economies. Further perpetuating a hierarchical global economic system where the rich countries have a monopoly on high-value products and services; middle-income countries thrive on labor-intensive, environmentally-unfriendly products of low- to- average economic value (what development economists call the middle-income trap); and poor countries have to forever rely on aid to balance budgets.

In all, with a remote job, you're part of these rich economies, just not residing there and have zero political representation. And there's a non-negligible bidirectional impact between you and primarily the OECD economic sphere.

Our people abroad work very hard and must be respected for that. The realities of life abroad still remains, just as our reality too remains. Let folks do what works for them. Hopefully, the examples below could help stimulate better conversations.



https://medium.com/codex/why-senior-developers-are-leading-the-great-resignation-movement-37b93ab9a634



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhIu4AWVfHc


https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/19/the-great-resignation-why-people-are-quitting-their-jobs.html


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2retN4TEA0






Your argument and the videos don't fit like a glove. The software engineer is quitting because he didn't like his long commute. And he said he'd get a remote job later. If you gave a lot of the people in Lagos who are stuck in traffic for hours on end both ways the option to work from home with good or better working conditions, you'd see the same "Great Resignation" effect amongst the high-flying professionals.

The second video is even more descriptive of the several perfectly understandable reasons, many spurred by the pandemic, like older workers retiring early because of COVID concerns and the market bump. Not to mention, the US employment rate has clawed back to 3.3% dip as a whole compared to pre-pandemic numbers which by the way were the best in the US in the last 30 years.

Workers demanding better pay and working conditions is a good thing. Whether it was caused by COVID or not and it is evidence of progress. Already, the effects are being felt across the labor market. Over here, workers and pensioners aren't paid by their employers (including the government in specific cases) and everyone just goes on their merry way like its normal.

But then when they point out the inconveniences that they aren't comfortable with, folks over here with invisible axes to grind jump on it like it's a revelation, totally oblivious of the irony and how far behind this nation is. It's not like they're doing it to provide solutions or to somehow enable us leapfrog these countries; it simply a sick, nasty case of "misery loves company."

-Lord

3 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by LordAdam16: 11:01pm On Nov 11, 2021
jedisco:
Alot of sarcasm has been shared over the last two pages...

Some comparisons can be like apples and oranges if not put into perspective. Every nation has its challenges and of course, there is no free lunch anywhere. But then, opportunities differ. Some of our perceptions are worsened by those who feel western nations are without challenges or by those back home who feel relatives in diaspora are plucking money from trees.

Problems can be relative. When citizens in Western nations complain about certain things e.g security, education, job.. among themselves, it's worth asking them what they feel about same situations in African nations... You'd be surprised at how they see us.
Like the post from Reddit subgroup, ask those folks what they think about migrating to Nigeria and see their response.

To me, it all boils down to the pyramid of need... It's not just individuals that be be graphed on it but also nations.... What a nations in one group mean by poor work conditions is usually very different from what nations in another group mean

Nope!

According to the purveyors of blighted sarcasm in the penultimate pages, all issues have to be equal.

-Lord

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by jedisco(m): 11:05pm On Nov 11, 2021
EarlyCareer:


Great perspective.

Again, as much as I agree with you, jedisco, the focus is on the USA. Your comment, while being true, is a blanket statement.

Things are very different when compared with other developed nations. All you mentioned here is well obtained in Europe, Australia, and other good developed nations. My preference for Europe is because people have much better work life balance and living standards regardless of justified high taxes and other challenges too. Of course, nothing is free, the high tax is the price to pay.

Edit: on second thought, even a banker living in Ibadan has access to cheaper food prices more than a banker earning the same wages living in Lagos. If you could share a link to where you got that food price comparison, then maybe I'd believe that statistics you mentioned.


I wasn't into comparing the US to Western Europe and frankly I'm not holding forte for any...... In most of my writings, I clump them up together as 'the West'. If I may, I'd say each group have their pros and cons with none being perfect. The US is more capitalist and Europe has a good socialist sprinkle. I'd say, for folks well qualified in good paying jobs, the US generally gives higher financial returns with less taxes comparatively. Western Europe OTHO has a better social safety net for those struggling. I do not include tax havens for obvious reasons. There's a reason why most of the wealthiest folks/largest corps are in the US. While Nigerians migrating could look into what place is more suitable, fact is very few have the liberty of multiple options as other dynamics are involved.

On food, it's quite clear. Affordability and being expensive/cheap is not just a function of surface price. Nothing tells how 'cheap' food is in a nation or state as the percentage of their population (moreso children) struggling or dying from hunger or malnutrition

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by LordAdam16: 12:00am On Nov 12, 2021
EarlyCareer:


Great perspective.

Again, as much as I agree with you, jedisco, the focus is on the USA. Your comment, while being true, is a blanket statement.

Things are very different when compared with other developed nations. All you mentioned here is well obtained in Europe, Australia, and other good developed nations. My preference for Europe is because people have much better work life balance and living standards regardless of justified high taxes and other challenges too. Of course, nothing is free, the high tax is the price to pay.

In the US, many, and I mean, very many people do not even earn minimum wage, hence the strong tipping culture and overtime drive there (mostly blue collar to be fair. Remember however that blue collars are the backbone of every economy). Many Americans may not be able to access quality health care due to high cost. - the highest globally. I might even say that a well to do/well earning Nigerian with international insurance has access to better health care than most Americans. Unless you have a good job that offers good health insurance a benefit. I'd think that this may be why there is some push for universal health care and universal basic income by leftist politicians...some radical left are even pushing for a mix of socialistic approaches to some of the challenges stated.

Many wealthy Americans or financially independent Americans are considering moving away to better or cheaper cointries such as Portugal etc and in some cases, outrightly denouncing citizenship. There is push for higher taxes for billionaire and wealthy people due to high wealth inequality and many other factors.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/americans-drop-citizenship-record-2020-b1897461.html

Of course, life is more precious there and crisis such as kidnapping and terrorism are taken much more seriously than here in Nigeria where we don't care at all. However, America is still not even a relatively safe country to live in when you consider gun violence, even the same kidnapping too. The statistics is all over the Internet if anyone is interested in checking. I Don tire to dey copy paste.

In summary, the purpose of the previous discussion was to reteriate the importance of having realistic understanding of where young Nigerians want to move to, and to go to much better places if possible. And the great opportunity that remote work provides....USA is not Eldorado, there are other better countries. Opportunities remain there and folks who are strategic and go with the right mindset will still make it.....platforms like nairaland ensure that the right info is shared for people to make better decisions.

Yes, Nigeria is a shithole. We all agree. The poverty capital of the world is currently in ticking time bomb mode. Unemployment is at critically and dangerously high levels, yes. Which is why youths must make the right decision when moving abroad. I don't think a worker here in Nigeria who earns as much as a worker in the same job role in the USA will feel cost of food prices as much as the USA counterpart. I will not explain beyond this. This is my experience.

Edit: on second thought, even a banker living in Ibadan has access to cheaper food prices more than a banker earning the same wages living in Lagos. If you could share a link to where you got that food price comparison, then maybe I'd believe that statistics you mentioned.

I insist. The USA is a great place, however some other developed countries are better. I say this without malice or disrespect to abroadians.

Your last sentence in bold is all you really had to share. The USA is a great place, some developed countries are better. AND THE USA AND THESE OTHER DEVELOPED COUNTRIES ARE COLLECTIVELY AND INDIVIDUALLY BETTER THAN NIGERIA.

So let anyone who wants to move, figure out the ideal destination for their career path, preferred lifestyle, and other living factors.

A Nigerian professional in tech will most likely pick the USA 9/10 times. One in the life sciences will pick Switzerland. Those in finance will go to either the US or the UK. Canada, Netherlands, Australia, Germany are other options.

The West is not a monolith and the US is peculiar for the puritan form of capitalism it practices with a heavy tincture of individualism. That is cause for several the unique problems they face that do not plague their contemporaries, such as expensive healthcare or gun violence.

The former because everything is for profit in the US: That's how you build a $21 trillion economy and provide gainful employment for 157.4m workers supporting a population of 330m. In contrast, most other Western countries are more homogenous and collectivist; which reflects in their socially-oriented approach to the economics of necessities like education, health, and utilities.

In Nordic culture, it is called Jantelagen, or the Law of Jante. Also it helps that they have more manageable population size. It always strikes me as odd when folks discuss healthcare when they don't have the slightest clue how complicated it is or how many levers work in synchrony.

I don't need to explain the latter. Nigerians didn't have to fight a War of Independence; it was gifted to us due to pressure from the US.

These complex issues are what many here reduce to quips and sound bites; without the slightest tinge of self-awareness to reflect on how basic and rudimentary Nigeria's problems are in comparison.

I firmly believe that those who are inclined to leave should do their research. Nigeria is only 1.4 times larger than Texas. In fact, the US is larger than the entire European Union with 100m less people. You could stay in parts of California and never see snow for decades, yet be in North Dakota and think someone dropped you in Siberia in error.

If you have a good job, medical care isn't a major concern. If you want single payer healthcare, just cross the border to Canada, but don't complain when you have to wait at least three times as long for comparable procedures. If you stay back in Nigeria, you have zero protection or recourse in the event of a medical error, so pick your poison.

Economic migration is not a novel concept. Half a century before the World Wars, the Japanese and Chinese flocked to the US leaving their unstable, poor countries behind. That isn't the case today. If you want to stay, stay; those who want to leave should do so. You only live once! There is no shame in abandoning a sh*thole to eke out a better living elsewhere. Whenever Nigeria get its sh*t together and the elite and professional class stop pilfering and plan for the long-term, your descendants can return or vacation here.

Those who want to keep shouting "Up NEPA!" until they bite the dust are welcome to do so. No point getting all antsy and making snide remarks.

-Lord

8 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Labadi69: 12:11am On Nov 12, 2021
All these people still writing very long senseless epistles make una take time o before yamayama nack una bald head angry

3 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by LordAdam16: 12:36am On Nov 12, 2021
AlphaLion:
[s]Dis one sounds soooo triggered. grin grin. The nerve of this fóól to form elitist when his race already puts him at the very bottom of that society.
And if you look well before u rushed in like a headless chicken, u will see dey were discussing about America. Everyone knows Europe is better.
But nah, you want everyone to believe that America is utopia and you are balling, Mr. Baller.
I am sure you go come here and lie you are being paid well and claim to be the most sUcCeSsfUl iMmIgRaNts in America when statistics show that is a HUGE lie. Una no even reach Indians quarter. We sha know as una dey package.
As it was earlier mentioned, na white people dey complain like dat. And if whites dey complain, dat means you the blacks are living worse on average. We see the statistics, you guys are always at the bottom of every metric. But at least you have security and light, and everything works with a liru sprinkle of racism. So E no too bad for Una. And you get pali.
Well after working 2-3 jobs just to live well, it is understandable why you are so pained. So vent oga. Anyway, na Poco.han.tas get your medicine.
-Fake Lord[/s]

Don't quote me if you have a single-digit IQ.

Explain how Nigeria is better than the US if you can. The U.S. and the U.K support the largest diaspora Nigerian communities that funnel most of the $30b in remittances that's as large as our federal budget which we can't even balance because of revenue shortfall.

So I don't have to claim anything. Nigerians who know they'd have a better quality of life in the U.S. know themselves and go to the embassy to process their emigration. Those who prefer Europe, Canada, Australia go to the respective Foreign Missions.

Just know, you cannot share your ignorance here using ret*rded sarcastic quips without rebuttal.

AlphaLion:
[s]I even think say na beta person comment o!
Dis scammer wey never even enter plane for him life come here dey abuse people legitimately working to earn jobs no matter how menial. I am not surprised, it’s common to those wey never cross border.
Your head fit carry am but na scam you use am do. Hopefully, you fit gather all dat money buy one way ticket out of this shithole.
-Lord scammer[/s]

Congratulations, you can upload pictures. Are you done?

Folks solicit and take loans all the time from institutional and private sources.

I've made 3000 posts on Nairaland, so your next assignment is to scour for anything else you think is scandalous.

I don't even consider it a personal attack. You're just trying to be a low-budget Sherlock Holmes but coming across as an impish cr*tin.

When you're done swimming in the mud, explain how Nigeria is better than the U.S or get lost.

-Lord

7 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by ositadima1(m): 6:03am On Nov 12, 2021
Labadi69:
All these people still writing very long senseless epistles make una take time o before yamayama nack una bald head angry

Feels like an essay competition. grin
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by ositadima1(m): 6:05am On Nov 12, 2021
LordAdam16:


Your last sentence in bold is all you really had to share. The USA is a great place, some developed countries are better. AND THE USA AND THESE OTHER DEVELOPED COUNTRIES ARE COLLECTIVELY AND INDIVIDUALLY BETTER THAN NIGERIA.

-Lord

Too long; didn't read
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by ositadima1(m): 6:07am On Nov 12, 2021
EarlyCareer:


Great perspective.

Again, as much as I agree with you, jedisco, the focus is on the USA. Your comment, while being true, is a blanket statement.

TL;DR

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by ositadima1(m): 6:20am On Nov 12, 2021
On a serious note, these headlines though:

"e-Naira offers cheaper, fast remittance option, says CBN" - Punch Newspaper

"eNaira would boost diaspora remittance flows – CBN" - Nairametrics

And a few others. Now, how is this so? I am not saying e-Naira has no potential, but how is it going to boost remittances?
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 8:46am On Nov 12, 2021
[s]
LordAdam16:


Don't quote me if you have a single-digit IQ.

Explain how Nigeria is better than the US if you can. The U.S. and the U.K support the largest diaspora Nigerian communities that funnel most of the $30b in remittances that's as large as our federal budget which we can't even balance because of revenue shortfall.

So I don't have to claim anything. Nigerians who know they'd have a better quality of life in the U.S. know themselves and go to the embassy to process their emigration. Those who prefer Europe, Canada, Australia go to the respective Foreign Missions.

Just know, you cannot share your ignorance here using ret*rded sarcastic quips without rebuttal.



Congratulations, you can upload pictures. Are you done?

Folks solicit and take loans all the time from institutional and private sources.

I've made 3000 posts on Nairaland, so your next assignment is to scour for anything else you think is scandalous.

I don't even consider it a personal attack. You're just trying to be a low-budget Sherlock Holmes but coming across as an impish cr*tin.

When you're done swimming in the mud, explain how Nigeria is better than the U.S or get lost.

-Lord

[/s]
Hungry, frustrated, and shameless scammer!
Whoever said Nigeria was better than US here? Point out where I said it.
Common comprehension you can't comprehend. Obviously hunger don finish your thinking capacity.
You walk around nairaland typing big words YET nothing dey pocket.
Are you still learning digital marketing sir? After how many years?
Your head no fit carry am?
See wetin you dey even learn at your big age. No wonder you turned to scam.
Nobody will give you 300k here o! So you are fishing in the wrong sea.

Your life is already useless and hopeless. When you log out, you face your wretched condition. Na wetin sweet me be dat. grin grin
-Lord scammer

3 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 8:58am On Nov 12, 2021
ositadima1:
On a serious note, these headlines though:

"e-Naira offers cheaper, fast remittance option, says CBN" - Punch Newspaper

"eNaira would boost diaspora remittance flows – CBN" - Nairametrics

And a few others. Now, how is this so? I am not saying e-Naira has no potential, but how is it going to boost remittances?

They are LYING, eNaira is not a blockchain, it's
a wallet app that holds long existing digital naira. You can add money in dollars through a domicilary account, but only Nigerians with BVN can use the app.

eNaira is a scam to fool foreign investors, NIGERIA IS GOING TO GET BLACKLISTED AGAIN!!!

If you thought being locked out of the US was fun, prepare to become North Korea 2.0
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by XiaoLi: 11:03am On Nov 12, 2021
Lazzyyut use your lazzyyut moniker and stop hiding under one f00lish hungrycat. The bolded is what gives you joy..no wonder everybody is either audio or uber driver to you...bitter ldiot full of of envy and jealousy, Circa tonight ??...no commit sulcide oo grin grin grin grin
AlphaLion:
[s][/s]
Hungry, frustrated, and shameless scammer!
Whoever said Nigeria was better than US here? Point out where I said it.
Common comprehension you can't comprehend. Obviously hunger don finish your thinking capacity.
You walk around nairaland typing big words YET nothing dey pocket.
Are you still learning digital marketing sir? After how many years?
Your head no fit carry am?
See wetin you dey even learn at your big age. No wonder you turned to scam.
Nobody will give you 300k here o! So you are fishing in the wrong sea.

Your life is already useless and hopeless. When you log out, you face your wretched condition. Na wetin sweet me be dat. grin grin
-Lord scammer

2 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Ow0eg0kudi: 11:07am On Nov 12, 2021
emmanuelewumi:



A US returnee earned N100 million as the CEO of a quoted company in Nigeria.He claimed to have worked in the various big organizations in the US. He earned this pay when N180 was equivalent to $1 and he was a Bachelor.

It took about 2 years before it was discovered that his work experience was a DJ and a Nite Club manager.

The guy was mouthed sha, he knows how to communicate and market himself well


Whaaaaaaaaat??

Jerry-curls and funny dentition. I really felt so bad when I heard the beauty queen left him thinking she was just after the ow0eg0kudi not knowing that....



Ooooomo...I must tell my siblings this...I too like the man...naija I hail
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by ositadima1(m): 11:48am On Nov 12, 2021
lipsrsealed

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