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Fixed Deposits Or Treasury Bills, Which Is Better? / Fixed Deposit And Treasury Bill Investments From Abroad / I Need Information On Treasury Bills In Nigeria (2) (3) (4)
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Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by gbengalite(m): 12:27pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
Nice article so far. It is quite insightful. What would your suggestion be about financial investment such mutual funds, asset management etc at this point in time. Especially the FBN Quest |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by afroxyz: 12:39pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
emmanuelewumi: I think it has to do with the way we perceive work or jobs here. In the west, you would see a supermarket being run by the grand children of the founder. Two generations after. What I observed is that they don't view their work as a means to get salary. They place it in the context of value their work has for the larger society. If you see a truck driver, he would tell you that he has to get the goods to the location on time because people need them. A food vendor would tell you that she has to open because people need to feed. She feels that if the business closes for one day that people would not get to eat and in that way she has failed them. But over here we attached monetary gains to a job and not the value it creates. That is why we attched prestige to jobs because we see them as social titles and not for their value. Same reason why people would go abroad and do menial jobs that they would not have done here in the first place. We don't cherish the dignity in labour here. So how would you convince your kid who wants to be a highflyer to come into your business and grow it after your demise. Even if he comes in, you would not want him to start at the bottom like the others because you feel it would demean his/your status as the owner, forgetting that it is in the trenches that one learns the trick of the trade. How do you now expect generational transfer of wealth when we see our jobs as social titles and not value they create? 39 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by afroxyz: 1:06pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
ahiboilandgas: Enough plan wine dey Udi na. Na just to begin dey bottle am |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmasoft(m): 1:21pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
Born2conquer: Suggestions: You can do: Mutual Funds - VGIF Recommended Shares of dividend paying companies e.g Gtbank, Zenith, MTN etc Bonds - You can be building your funds in VGIF before a primary auction of Sukuk or FGN Bonds Open account with the link on my signature to venture into the above options with Investment one (Former GTBank Asset Management) |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by steveneche(m): 1:33pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
emmasoft:pls i need help with this VGIF thing.. i already have a stock broking account with investment one, but how do i subcribe this VGIF. i noticed the fund i have in my account balance can only be used to trade stocks.. how do i make deposits for VGIF? |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 1:42pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
Donbrig: Well said |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 1:44pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
afroxyz: Well said It's also about the mindset prevalent in Nigeria Among the elite class Its destructive to the kids 7 Likes |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 1:46pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
Barrytone: Hahahahahaha This comment made me laugh out so loud |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 1:47pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
ahiboilandgas: Hahahaha |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 1:49pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Tobex4realTobex234(m): 1:52pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
This Forex guy go create your own thread. We don't do forex here please. 1 Like |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 1:55pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
emmanuelewumi: Being a good business man has no link to being a socialite A socialite can be a good manager Case in point... The CEO of Goldman Sachs is a part time DJ 1 Like |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmasoft(m): 1:58pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
steveneche: All you need now is to click the link on my signature and open VGIF account. If you do it today by tomorrow you get your account details. Stockbroking account has a different account you cannot use the funds there except you open a VGIF account and give instructions for the money to be transferred. You can call or chat with my number on my signature. 1 Like |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 1:59pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
ahiboilandgas: African men in general dont live good life in that regard |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 2:02pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
Donbrig: Well said We got that part upside down in Nigeria 1 Like |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Donbrig: 2:08pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
Corruption in Nigeria might drain all our investments and businesses. Considering the embezzlement and heavy corrupt cases against Magu, it is very embarrassing, and this might further hinder foreign investors from investing in Nigeria. I don't just know why, everybody seems to be a thief in Nigeria, even those who are claiming to be saints won't waste anytime to steal if they have the opportunities. 5 Likes |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 2:08pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
DexterousOne: A socialite and politician are not got business manager Most of the chronic bank debtors are socialites. A socialite craves for attention, media hype and acceptance. Rather than ploughing back money for the expansion of his business, a social is more concerned about his societal credibility and building his social capital 3 Likes |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 2:16pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
emmanuelewumi: I disagree sir Maybe our definition of being a socialite is what is causing our divergent views. I made mention of the CEO of Goldman Sachs He is a part time DJ and a club rat Some of the best performing investment houses on walk street have party junkies as their top management It's what it is And depends on the person 1 Like |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Born2conquer: 2:26pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
emmasoft:What are the ROI sir? |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 2:27pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
DexterousOne: Managing a business is different from trading on Walls street. A socialite can owe his workers 3 months salaries, but just changed his private jet, recently spent N300 million organising destination wedding for his Son in Dubai, but still indebted to banks to the tune of over N20 billion . Daar Communication has not paid dividend in 14 years, still indebted to banks 3 Likes |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 2:29pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
emmanuelewumi: I'm not so sure about that |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 2:31pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
emmanuelewumi: The socialite is not failing at his business because he is a socialite He is failing at his business because he is not a good business man. That's just it Elon Musk is another social rat But Tesla is growing in leaps and bounds It's to draw the line between business and pleasure That's the key 8 Likes |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 2:35pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
DexterousOne: Managing a business involves managing materials, resources, money, people, customers, suppliers, regulatory bodies, bankers, financiers, market etc. and you should be able to make profit, create wealth and enhance sustainability of the Enterprise. Trading on Walls street involves your knowledge of technical analysis, fundamental analysis, sentimental analysis, human psychology and behavioural finance 9 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 2:37pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
DexterousOne: Based on market sentiment at a PE of about 1000, will you place a bet on that. The business currently has no earnings. Investors have lost money investing in Businesses managed by Socialites. Oando is an example, the company has the record of the biggest loss after tax in corporate Nigeria. At a loss of over N250 billion about 3 years ago 1 Like |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 2:42pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
emmanuelewumi: Okay Let us simplify this thing Are you saying that a "socialite" by default is a bad business man? Or being a socialite means that you wont run a successful business? 3 Likes |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 2:50pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
DexterousOne: No, but unfortunately 90% of badly managed businesses in Corporate Nigeria had socialite owners/CEO or politically exposed owners/CEO. To a typical Nigerian socialite societal credibility, societal perception, media hype is more important to them than anything. The guy that owed Polaris Bank a whopping N220 billion is a socialite and a politically exposed business man As an investor, I avoid businesses that are owned or managed by such people. A Nigerian socialite is not ready to downgrade if his income reduces, because of the perceived fall in his societal credibility, they will rather ruin their business or get loans which they don't hope to pay back in order to maintain the status quo 11 Likes |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 2:55pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
emmanuelewumi: Now you have made the distinction A typical Nigerian socialite I can agree with that A typical Nigerian socialite 2 Likes |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Phraences: 2:57pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
DexterousOne: I think the belief is that a socialite might be too consumed by pleasure and the outward appearance of success and would not have what it takes to be conservative in business which is what a business sometimes needs. Don't know how true this is anyway. Just thinking out loud. 3 Likes |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by ahiboilandgas: 3:00pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
Donbrig:the thing tire me... |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 3:02pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
Phraences: You are correct. When Oando made a loss of over N250 billion, the salary of their CEO was more than the combination of what the CEOs of Zenith, Access, UBA and First Bank earned 2 Likes |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by DexterousOne(m): 3:10pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
emmanuelewumi: This one is financial recklessness 4 Likes |
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 3:14pm On Jul 12, 2020 |
DexterousOne: He is a corporate Wizkid, who craved media hype, the company had fleet of privates jets, he adorned a lot business newspapers and magazines in Nigeria and abroad, first Nigerian owned business to be quoted on Johannesburg Stock exchange, in fact he was a noise maker. The Businesses making money for Investors are quiet and smooth operators 4 Likes |
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