Success Trades📊

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Success Trades📊

Success Trades📊

@SuccessTralf

Katılım Eylül 2010
596 Takip Edilen575 Takipçiler
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ℕOLIMIT🪼
ℕOLIMIT🪼@LIMITLESSDAMI·
There is 5 ways you can make money from this World Cup - Sporty - Clipping - Writing - Polymarket - International Oversea friends💣 Pick 3 and lock in Don’t say I didn’t teach you nothing today Goodluck
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🥞C4B Freedom🥞
🥞C4B Freedom🥞@Crypto4bailout·
What ever you do in this industry Don't ever run out of USDT +++
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OBI OF ABUJA🇳🇬
Why do poor people always believe that the rich don't do anything legal to make money?
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Tuchel
Tuchel@Officially_Kriz·
Before you criticize a struggling man with N1m, ask yourself the following: • What is his risk appetite? If he has a low risk appetite, then investing in business isn't for him • What business can even give him 20% ROI with N1m right now? • What is the use case of the N1m? If it's for his rent or children's fees, why invest in a risky venture? If the struggling man cannot afford to lose his N1m, pls let him lock his money.
MAYOR 🇳🇬@mayorde4you2

But why would a struggling man lock 1M Naira up for 365days just for 20% ROI? Bro that’s just 200,000 Naira after 365days! Is that you don’t have any investment/business in mind? Or you see the 200k as a good profit? Why should I lock my money up for 20% ROI over 365 days?. someone should teach me, I want to learn.

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Wale Banks 📊
Wale Banks 📊@iamwalebanks·
I’m done buying new US 🇺🇸 stocks for now. Till Q3 or Q4. Focus is now on NGX 🇳🇬 and I’m looking for discounts. Also, increase my mutual funds and then look into bonds.
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Olumide Adesina
Olumide Adesina@olumidecapital·
Forbes should update their data because the 🇳🇬 stock market data highlighted Tony Elumelu's total worth is $1 billion
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MrBanks💰
MrBanks💰@Mrbankstips·
Are we long or short Bitcoin?
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Success Trades📊@SuccessTralf·
If you sabi, you go cash out steady! 4–12% daily with triangle arbitrage, verified sites like Binance, Bybit, MEXC. No risk, na soft life straight. I fit plug you, you’re not paying upfront only after you make profit
🖤🕷️🕸️@_peternotnice

@jeriqthehussla Abeg put me on na

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Success Trades📊
Success Trades📊@SuccessTralf·
If you sabi, you go cash out steady! 4–12% daily with triangle arbitrage, verified sites like Binance, Bybit, MEXC. No risk, na soft life straight. I fit plug you, you’re not paying upfront only after you make profit
BIG ZEECKOH 💼@bigzeeckoh

@john322226 Abeg put me on also Make I make this happen too

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Adekunle Johnson
Adekunle Johnson@A_lan_wake·
@honest30bgfan_ 300 million compounding interest vs. Vehicles that lose more than 30 percent of their value just in the first year. I think i know what my choice would be. A 20 to 30 million naira car should be more than adequate. I dont have a need to impress.
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Smart 🤓
Smart 🤓@wallia_raja·
Invest in dollars instead $1 = 86 naira in the last 20 years $1 =20,000 is not impossible in the next 20 years @ 12% per annum + compounding would be almost $15k Do the math and you'll be sitting on over 300 million naira by then
Feji Iyeke YMG@iyekefejiymg

Imagine telling your younger self: “Just put ₦20k aside monthly. No stress. No noise. No pressure.” 20 years later: You’re sitting on ₦31.8m But no. You chose vibes. Vibes don’t compound.

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WalesCypt.
WalesCypt.@WalesCypt·
If you start with ₦10 million today and invest it at a steady 15% per annum compounded annually (no extra contributions), after 30 years you'd have roughly ₦662 million. But here's the harsh truth: At Nigeria's historical long-term average inflation (~14–16.6% over decades, per sources like Worlddata.info, Macrotrends, and Trading Economics), that ₦662 million in 30 years would buy roughly what ₦10 million buys today. Your real purchasing power stays flat the naira grows big on paper, but prices rise just as fast. Current inflation (December 2025) is down to **15.15%** (NBS data, revised methodology), with forecasts for 2026 around **12–14%** (CBN projects ~12.94%, others 14–16.5%). If it trends lower long-term (say 10–12%), you'd get some real growth — but historically, it often matches or exceeds "safe" returns like high-yield savings. So is saving/investing pointless? No but pure low-risk compounding at 15% won't build serious wealth in Nigeria's environment. You're mostly preserving (not growing) real value. The Way Forward in 2026 Reality To actually beat inflation and grow real wealth over decades: Target higher nominal returns (20%+ average) via growth assets equities have delivered strong periods (NGX All-Share up ~37–62% in recent years, long-term stretches often 15–25% in bull runs, though volatile). - Diversify aggressively : -Equities/NGX stocks or equity funds (banking, consumer goods, oil & gas sectors often cited for inflation-beating potential). - Dollar assets or forex-hedged investments (to counter naira devaluation). - Real assets like real estate, agriculture-linked investments, or commodities. - Mix in money market funds/T-bills (currently 20–26% yields) for safety, but allocate more to growth. - Aim for real returns of 5–10%+ (nominal 20–25% if inflation averages 12–15%). - Shorten timelines where possible compound at higher risk/return for 10–15 years instead of 30. - Add contributions, if you can regular top-ups turbocharge growth even more. - Stay disciplined, inflation erodes cash fastest; consistent investing (even imperfect) beats doing nothing. Bottom line: In Nigeria, "safe" often means treading water. To win, you need calculated risk for higher returns diversified, long-term, and inflation-aware. #InvestSmart #BeatInflation #NigeriaFinance
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BIG Chris.🇨🇭
BIG Chris.🇨🇭@creed_chris_·
If you can grow your networth by at least 30% annually, in 20 years you would be worth 18,900% of whatever capital you started with. Meaning if you start with 10 million naira you could be worth 1.89 billion. Thanks to the effect of compounding. Slow but sustainable!!
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Slim
Slim@onu_slim·
In the year 2000, this young man in Kaduna started a hospital equipment supply business with ₦200,000. At that time ₦200,000 looked small, but it was not insignificant. When you adjust for inflation and the collapse of the naira, that amount would roughly equal ₦2.5 million to ₦3 million in today’s money. Still modest. He had no venture capital, neither was his family rich. Just discipline and patience. He started by supplying basic medical equipment to small clinics around Kaduna. Blood pressure machines, thermometers, stethoscopes, simple diagnostic tools, IV stands, and hospital beds. Nothing glamorous. But here is the part most people miss when they study success stories. Mathematics. Business growth is rarely magic. It is often consistent compounding. Let’s assume something simple. He buys a batch of medical equipment worth ₦200,000. Because medical supplies often carry margins of 25–35%, assume he sells them with a 30% margin. That means: ₦200,000 × 30% = ₦60,000 profit Total turnover after the first cycle = ₦260,000 Now imagine he reinvests everything instead of spending it. Second cycle: ₦260,000 × 30% margin = ₦78,000 profit New capital becomes: ₦338,000 Third cycle: ₦338,000 × 30% = ₦101,400 profit New capital becomes: ₦439,400 Fourth cycle: ₦439,400 × 30% = ₦131,820 New capital becomes: ₦571,220 Within just four successful trade cycles, his capital has nearly tripled. And medical equipment supply is not a once-a-year business. Hospitals buy regularly. If he manages 5 cycles per year, something interesting happens. Year 1 capital progression could look like this: Start: ₦200,000 After cycle growth across the year: roughly ₦1 million – ₦1.2 million Now imagine he continues the same discipline the following year. If ₦1,000,000 grows with the same 30% reinvested trade cycles, it can reach roughly ₦5 million within a few years. At ₦5 million, something powerful happens in business. You move from small clinic supplies to hospital procurement. Hospitals order larger things: • Patient monitors • Operating tables • Ultrasound machines • Laboratory equipment Some of these single items can cost ₦2 million – ₦15 million. One contract can suddenly equal what you used to sell in six months. Fast forward several years. From clinics in Kaduna to private hospitals to government hospitals to supply partnerships across states. Today his company supplies hospital equipment across Nigeria. Not because he started with millions. But because he understood three simple principles many people ignore. First, discipline beats excitement. He did not rush to look successful. Second, reinvestment beats consumption. Every profit strengthened the next trade cycle. Third, time multiplies consistency. When you compound growth for 20–25 years, even modest beginnings become powerful. The man who started with ₦200,000 in Kaduna did not chase quick wealth. He simply repeated small profitable decisions for decades. And that is how real businesses grow. Not by miracles. But by mathematics, patience, and discipline. This morning he both calculated his worth even if he dint want me to….. this guy is worth $8,000,000. Somebody say abracadabra: ₦200,000 ==>After 25 years of consistency ==> $8,000,000
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MC9J FX
MC9J FX@AM_THE_CPI_ATM·
@AsakyGRN Average poor Nigeria offering in a week is #500 Estimated members 6 million 52 weeks in a year × all the figures #156,000,000,000 naira yearly I didn't add title or donations plus those that give in millions just simple #500 over time compounding Feed on it.....
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Manuel
Manuel@Nuntofuh·
@wizyeru But a more easier approach is to save at least N2,000,000 and forget about it, you don't add any money to it, just allow it to keep compounding at 18% for 35 years. That's exactly 656 million naira after 35 years. 2M to 656M. That's the power of compound interest
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yourcoindoctor
yourcoindoctor@dr90ng·
If I had ₦100 million today with a target of ₦500 million in 7 years (a ~5x return, requiring ~26% CAGR compounded), here’s exactly how I would allocate it as an aggressive but disciplined investor in Nigeria. This is not conservative retirement planning — it is a high-conviction growth portfolio designed for that specific multiple in a high-inflation, naira-volatile environment. I would use only paper investments (listed equities, fixed income, ETFs, REITs, mutual funds/unit trusts) for liquidity and transparency. No real estate, crypto, or private deals. Overall Portfolio FrameworkTime horizon: 7 years — long enough for compounding, short enough to stay liquid. Risk tolerance: Aggressive but not reckless — I would keep 20–25% in defensive assets to survive drawdowns. Core principles: Diversification across sectors and asset classes. Focus on businesses with strong moats, earnings visibility, and macro tailwinds (oil revenue, banking recap, infrastructure, consumer growth, food security). Regular rebalancing every 6 months. Reinvest all dividends and interest. Use limit orders only; never chase. Proposed Allocation (₦100M)1. Equities – 65% (₦65 million) Growth engine of the portfolio. I would spread across 8–10 high-conviction names with a mix of growth and value. ARADEL Holdings (15–18%) – Pure upstream oil & gas play. With Brent likely to stay elevated (geopolitical risks + Nigeria’s production push), this has the highest torque to oil revenue windfalls and government spending. GTCO (10%) – Best-in-class governance and fintech exposure. Record dividend in 2025 shows cash flow strength. Post-recap earnings ramp is still early. MTN Nigeria (8%) – Defensive telecom giant with data and fintech (MoMo) growth. Stable cash cow in a high-inflation environment. Presco (7%) – Leading integrated palm oil producer. Export revenue provides FX hedge; consistent dividends and strong margins in a food-security-driven economy. MECURE (6%) – Pharma growth story with revenue/profit acceleration. Healthcare is under-penetrated and benefits from population + middle-class expansion. NAHCO (5%) – Aviation handling with diversification into agriculture and free trade zones. Strong 2025 growth and corporate actions (dividend + bonus). BUA Foods (5%) – Diversified food processing leader (sugar, flour, pasta). Backward integration and scale give it pricing power in an inflationary environment. Vitafoam or Berger Paints (3–4% combined) – Industrial/consumer plays tied to construction and housing boom. 2. Fixed Income & Money Market – 25% (₦25 million) Stability and income layer to survive volatility.FGN Bonds / Treasury Bills (15%) – Current yields are attractive (18–22% range depending on tenor). Provides ballast and beats inflation in most scenarios. High-quality Corporate Bonds / Commercial Papers (5%) – Selective exposure to strong issuers (e.g., banking or infrastructure-related). Money Market Funds / Unit Trusts (5%) – Liquidity buffer for opportunistic equity dips. Current yields ~20–25%. 3. Other Paper Assets – 10% (₦10 million) REITs (5%) – Exposure to commercial real estate without direct ownership (e.g., UPDC or Union Homes REIT). Inflation hedge with rental income. Broad Market ETFs (5%) – NGX or Africa-focused ETFs for instant diversification without single-stock risk. Why This Mix Delivers the Target Equities (65%) provide the growth torque needed for 5x. Fixed income (25%) protects capital during drawdowns and generates reinvestable income. Diversification across energy, banking, telecom, consumer, industrials, and real estate reduces single-sector risk. Macro alignment: Oil revenue tailwinds, banking recap benefits, food security/infrastructure push, and population-driven consumption are the dominant Nigerian themes for the next 7 years. Expected range: In a base-case NGX bull environment (25–35% average annual equity returns), this could realistically hit ₦450M–600M+ by year 7.
Mudi@MudiTheInvestor

If you had ₦100 million today and a target of ₦500 million in 7 years, how would you invest it? Which companies would make your list?

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