oluwaseyi

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oluwaseyi

@logistics02

Lagos, Nigeria Katılım Şubat 2019
294 Takip Edilen182 Takipçiler
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oluwaseyi
oluwaseyi@logistics02·
It is impossible to live without failing at something.. unless you live so cautiously that you might as well have not lived at all... In which case- you failed by default" -J.K Rowling
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oluwaseyi
oluwaseyi@logistics02·
@stepphhyy_ A man who can say Ronaldo over Messi with a straight face has already shown you exactly how comfortable he is lying to your face.
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Stephanieeee Esq💗
Stephanieeee Esq💗@stepphhyy_·
Date cancelled. He said Ronaldo is better than Messi🤦‍♀️
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oluwaseyi
oluwaseyi@logistics02·
@Bond_not_james The guy is actually good. Didn’t have a good game tonight but he’s good..A lot better than rashford
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oluwaseyi
oluwaseyi@logistics02·
@Mochievous This is the kind of public interest litigation that strengthens and tests our jurisprudence. Doing it on your own dime says a lot. Happy to support however I can — research, testimonies, amplification, whatever helps. Nigeria needs more of this.
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Jola
Jola@Jolaolu12·
@logistics02 @Mochievous Nope it’s not. When I first moved abroad I was paying for 60-100g plans. I changed to 10gb and I’ve never run out. Before you say I have WiFi at home, I also had WiFi in Nigeria but I’ll still use 50gb easily every month.
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Moe
Moe@Mochievous·
I’ll go to another country and 1GB will last me throughout my stay but in Nigeria it is like 1hr. What’s really going on?
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oluwaseyi
oluwaseyi@logistics02·
@jayhemz The argument isn’t the cost now but the quality of data… is 1G really 1G? If you’re are going to charge more by all means do but give quality data.. Averaging 100 Gig monthly for personal use does not make sense..
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Johnmark Obiefuna
Johnmark Obiefuna@jayhemz·
The problem is tariffs. Nigerian telcos carry cost burdens Western telcos mostly don’t, > running towers on diesel generators due to grid instability, > naira volatility raising the cost of imported equipment, > multiple layers of state/federal taxation and right-of-way charges, and frequent fibre cuts/vandalism. Those costs get passed straight into tariffs. In summary, telcos need to make money and the business environment isn't friendly. So something must give.
Moe@Mochievous

I’ll go to another country and 1GB will last me throughout my stay but in Nigeria it is like 1hr. What’s really going on?

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Motayo🛍️
Motayo🛍️@felicitykoncept·
@NaijaFlyingDr Because the business of banking is financial intermediation. It's different from venture capital. We take from the have and give the have not. Nobody will find it funny that they get to their bank tomorrow and they're unable to withdraw cash from their balance.
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oluwaseyi
oluwaseyi@logistics02·
@Babajiide No properly educated person would say this! It’s just a coping mechanism for those that not educated or the educated illiterates
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oluwaseyi
oluwaseyi@logistics02·
@markessien Product and distribution both matter — SaaS has never been won on one alone. Distribution gets you noticed. Product gets you kept
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Mark Essien
Mark Essien@markessien·
SaaS has never been about product, but about distribution.
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Daddy D.O🇳🇬
Daddy D.O🇳🇬@DOlusegun·
You could not contain your joy when these kids were abducted. Every argument you lost always ended with “where are the kids”. You were gleefully posting the picture of the beheaded teacher said Govt is doing nothing about the kids. Now the kids are rescued you say it’s staged.
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Moe
Moe@Mochievous·
@logistics02 using 4G daily is a lot anywhere else asides Nigeria. and no, interestingly i am on mobile data more when i travel. I am on wifi more in Naij since i work from home and my mobile still disappears
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oluwaseyi
oluwaseyi@logistics02·
@Padii_me @MudiTheInvestor He wrote rubbish.. what they are measuring is just returns! Not GDP , not ppp.. just return on equities..
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Sultan
Sultan@Padii_me·
@MudiTheInvestor I see his points. He thinks that there is a growing disconnect btw the real economy & market performance. He also suggests that the market boom is an indicator of current hyperinflation and a looming economic collapse, drawing parallels to Mexico’s 1995 financial crisis
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Mudi
Mudi@MudiTheInvestor·
Dear Chinagolum The Mathematician, Let me explain in plain English what the article is actually saying, since you seem to have struggled with the math. The news that broke did not claim that Nigeria’s GDP is outperforming South Korea’s, nor does it suggest that Samsung’s revenue is lower than any business entity in Nigeria. What the news is all about is that if you had invested in the Nigerian Stock Exchange and the Korean Stock Exchange on the first trading day of this year, the Nigerian market would have yielded higher returns than any other stock market in the world, including South Korea’s. This is not difficult to understand if you had truly read the article before coming on social media to expose the depth of your mathematical genius shallowly.
Chetuya Chinagolum@Chetuyachinago

It is highly interesting and deeply ironic that Nigeria is currently being paraded as having the "world's best-performing stock market." To put statistical illusion into clear mathematical perspective, South Korea comfortably has over 200 publicly traded companies with an individual market capitalization exceeding $1 billion USD. In stark contrast, the total number of companies on the Nigerian Stock Exchange with a market cap exceeding that same $1 billion mark sits at a measly, fluctuating 11 to 18. Furthermore, the South Korean Stock Exchange is home to over 2,500 listed companies, whereas the entire Nigerian stock exchange is struggling to maintain even 150. To make matters infinitely worse, the annual revenue of just one single South Korean conglomerate, Samsung, comfortably exceeds the entire, devalued annual Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. So, it is obviously completely insane and deeply delusional to imagine that Nigeria is genuinely outperforming the rest of humanity in its actual economic output, industrial productivity, or stock market indices. Nigeria is currently the undisputed poverty capital of the world, where small businesses are collapsing by the dozens every single day. So that begs the question: what does this glowing market report actually mean for the ordinary people of Nigeria? Well, for one, if a struggling, debt-ridden developing nation suddenly starts to heavily outperform advanced, highly industrialized nations on its stock exchange, it is actually a massive, flashing red indicator that the country in question is facing a severe and monumental hyperinflation. Nigeria is currently experiencing historic, record-breaking inflation, so this stock market boom is merely an indicator that wealthy oligarchs, institutional investors, and local investment banks have smartly recognized that if they hold their cash in standard bank accounts during this highly volatile period, they will lose their purchasing power every single day. Since they cannot easily access scarce foreign currencies like US dollars or Euros due to strict government currency controls, they desperately dump their fast-depleting Naira into solid, tangible local stocks like Dangote Cement, BUA Group, or MTN Nigeria just to preserve their wealth. So, this triumphant news report that we are passionately commanded to celebrate is actually a terrifying warning sign that Nigeria is experiencing severe, runaway inflation. The local elites, corporate cartels, and bank directors are frantically tripping over themselves to buy blue-chip local stocks strictly to hedge against currency collapse, and this sudden, desperate surge in local demand has artificially driven up the prices of these shares to such a disproportionate, heavily padded percentage that on paper, it looks much more profitable to invest in the Nigerian stock market than in the highly productive, technologically advanced South Korean stock exchange. Another major reason for this artificial stock market spike is the aggressive, reckless increase in interest rates by the Central Bank of Nigeria on behalf of the IMF and the World Bank. While this brutal rate hike has successfully collapsed thousands of local manufacturing businesses because commercial banks are now charging as high as 40% interest on business loans, it has also temporarily attracted a massive influx of volatile "hot money" from foreign speculators who are lending money to the Nigerian government by purchasing short-term treasury bills and sovereign bonds just to greedily exploit these high yields. It is crucially important to historically emphasize that Nigeria is absolutely not the only developing country to be declared the "best-performing stock market in history." Mexico proudly achieved this exact same fraudulent title in the run-up to 1994, and it ended up almost collapsing their entire national economy into absolute oblivion. At the time, the Mexican government, acting on the strict advice of the World Bank, aggressively increased interest rates and adopted painful Structural Adjustment Programmes that triggered massive hyperinflation across the country. This temporarily, artificially increased their foreign reserves as yield-hungry international speculators dived in to exploit these high interest rates, causing their local real estate markets and stock exchanges to explode into a virtual goldmine for foreign investors. But this artificial boom did not even last for a few years. The moment the United States Federal Reserve increased its own interest rates, international investors panicked, liquidated their assets overnight, and pulled their hot money completely out of Mexico. This massive, sudden capital flight almost collapsed the Mexican Peso, forcing their desperate government to raise domestic interest rates to an astronomical 70%, but even this extreme measure was not enough to save the country from descending into total state failure. This was the exact moment Mexico was forced to accept a humiliating, sovereignty-destroying bailout from the IMF and the United States totaling a massive $57 billion. Exactly $20 billion of that came directly from the US treasury, but it came with the highly insulting, neocolonial condition that all revenues from the global sales of Mexican state-owned oil must be deposited directly into the Federal Reserve Bank in New York City as collateral to secure the debt, while the IMF forced even more brutal, structural adjustment programs on Mexico that the country has still not fully recovered from even to this very day. So, while this stock market boom is currently being heavily marketed as another monumental, ground-breaking macroeconomic achievement by the Tinubu Administration, it is in reality extremely dangerous, deceptive, and reckless. Not only does it completely fail to reflect the actual, material reality on the ground, which is that Nigeria is currently the bleeding poverty capital of the world, but this exact, artificial economic bubble has the direct, terrifying potential to completely collapse the Nigerian economy, trigger massive capital flight, and permanently reduce the country to a subservient, bankrupt puppet state run entirely by the harsh austerity measures, economic dictates, and financial chains of boardroom terror organizations like the IMF and the World Bank.

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oluwaseyi
oluwaseyi@logistics02·
@Amabeth001 @Rufyb Stock is just a tiny part of the economy..there’s little correlation between stock returns and poverty reduction. Returns is just anticipated growth! Plus the industry having the highest returns are not largely pro poor. say financial industry.
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Rufybaba
Rufybaba@Rufyb·
A lot of stuff (actually nonsense) in here. Where person wan even start? Wo, you'd be fine jare.
Chetuya Chinagolum@Chetuyachinago

It is highly interesting and deeply ironic that Nigeria is currently being paraded as having the "world's best-performing stock market." To put statistical illusion into clear mathematical perspective, South Korea comfortably has over 200 publicly traded companies with an individual market capitalization exceeding $1 billion USD. In stark contrast, the total number of companies on the Nigerian Stock Exchange with a market cap exceeding that same $1 billion mark sits at a measly, fluctuating 11 to 18. Furthermore, the South Korean Stock Exchange is home to over 2,500 listed companies, whereas the entire Nigerian stock exchange is struggling to maintain even 150. To make matters infinitely worse, the annual revenue of just one single South Korean conglomerate, Samsung, comfortably exceeds the entire, devalued annual Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. So, it is obviously completely insane and deeply delusional to imagine that Nigeria is genuinely outperforming the rest of humanity in its actual economic output, industrial productivity, or stock market indices. Nigeria is currently the undisputed poverty capital of the world, where small businesses are collapsing by the dozens every single day. So that begs the question: what does this glowing market report actually mean for the ordinary people of Nigeria? Well, for one, if a struggling, debt-ridden developing nation suddenly starts to heavily outperform advanced, highly industrialized nations on its stock exchange, it is actually a massive, flashing red indicator that the country in question is facing a severe and monumental hyperinflation. Nigeria is currently experiencing historic, record-breaking inflation, so this stock market boom is merely an indicator that wealthy oligarchs, institutional investors, and local investment banks have smartly recognized that if they hold their cash in standard bank accounts during this highly volatile period, they will lose their purchasing power every single day. Since they cannot easily access scarce foreign currencies like US dollars or Euros due to strict government currency controls, they desperately dump their fast-depleting Naira into solid, tangible local stocks like Dangote Cement, BUA Group, or MTN Nigeria just to preserve their wealth. So, this triumphant news report that we are passionately commanded to celebrate is actually a terrifying warning sign that Nigeria is experiencing severe, runaway inflation. The local elites, corporate cartels, and bank directors are frantically tripping over themselves to buy blue-chip local stocks strictly to hedge against currency collapse, and this sudden, desperate surge in local demand has artificially driven up the prices of these shares to such a disproportionate, heavily padded percentage that on paper, it looks much more profitable to invest in the Nigerian stock market than in the highly productive, technologically advanced South Korean stock exchange. Another major reason for this artificial stock market spike is the aggressive, reckless increase in interest rates by the Central Bank of Nigeria on behalf of the IMF and the World Bank. While this brutal rate hike has successfully collapsed thousands of local manufacturing businesses because commercial banks are now charging as high as 40% interest on business loans, it has also temporarily attracted a massive influx of volatile "hot money" from foreign speculators who are lending money to the Nigerian government by purchasing short-term treasury bills and sovereign bonds just to greedily exploit these high yields. It is crucially important to historically emphasize that Nigeria is absolutely not the only developing country to be declared the "best-performing stock market in history." Mexico proudly achieved this exact same fraudulent title in the run-up to 1994, and it ended up almost collapsing their entire national economy into absolute oblivion. At the time, the Mexican government, acting on the strict advice of the World Bank, aggressively increased interest rates and adopted painful Structural Adjustment Programmes that triggered massive hyperinflation across the country. This temporarily, artificially increased their foreign reserves as yield-hungry international speculators dived in to exploit these high interest rates, causing their local real estate markets and stock exchanges to explode into a virtual goldmine for foreign investors. But this artificial boom did not even last for a few years. The moment the United States Federal Reserve increased its own interest rates, international investors panicked, liquidated their assets overnight, and pulled their hot money completely out of Mexico. This massive, sudden capital flight almost collapsed the Mexican Peso, forcing their desperate government to raise domestic interest rates to an astronomical 70%, but even this extreme measure was not enough to save the country from descending into total state failure. This was the exact moment Mexico was forced to accept a humiliating, sovereignty-destroying bailout from the IMF and the United States totaling a massive $57 billion. Exactly $20 billion of that came directly from the US treasury, but it came with the highly insulting, neocolonial condition that all revenues from the global sales of Mexican state-owned oil must be deposited directly into the Federal Reserve Bank in New York City as collateral to secure the debt, while the IMF forced even more brutal, structural adjustment programs on Mexico that the country has still not fully recovered from even to this very day. So, while this stock market boom is currently being heavily marketed as another monumental, ground-breaking macroeconomic achievement by the Tinubu Administration, it is in reality extremely dangerous, deceptive, and reckless. Not only does it completely fail to reflect the actual, material reality on the ground, which is that Nigeria is currently the bleeding poverty capital of the world, but this exact, artificial economic bubble has the direct, terrifying potential to completely collapse the Nigerian economy, trigger massive capital flight, and permanently reduce the country to a subservient, bankrupt puppet state run entirely by the harsh austerity measures, economic dictates, and financial chains of boardroom terror organizations like the IMF and the World Bank.

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Chetuya Chinagolum
Chetuya Chinagolum@Chetuyachinago·
It is highly interesting and deeply ironic that Nigeria is currently being paraded as having the "world's best-performing stock market." To put statistical illusion into clear mathematical perspective, South Korea comfortably has over 200 publicly traded companies with an individual market capitalization exceeding $1 billion USD. In stark contrast, the total number of companies on the Nigerian Stock Exchange with a market cap exceeding that same $1 billion mark sits at a measly, fluctuating 11 to 18. Furthermore, the South Korean Stock Exchange is home to over 2,500 listed companies, whereas the entire Nigerian stock exchange is struggling to maintain even 150. To make matters infinitely worse, the annual revenue of just one single South Korean conglomerate, Samsung, comfortably exceeds the entire, devalued annual Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. So, it is obviously completely insane and deeply delusional to imagine that Nigeria is genuinely outperforming the rest of humanity in its actual economic output, industrial productivity, or stock market indices. Nigeria is currently the undisputed poverty capital of the world, where small businesses are collapsing by the dozens every single day. So that begs the question: what does this glowing market report actually mean for the ordinary people of Nigeria? Well, for one, if a struggling, debt-ridden developing nation suddenly starts to heavily outperform advanced, highly industrialized nations on its stock exchange, it is actually a massive, flashing red indicator that the country in question is facing a severe and monumental hyperinflation. Nigeria is currently experiencing historic, record-breaking inflation, so this stock market boom is merely an indicator that wealthy oligarchs, institutional investors, and local investment banks have smartly recognized that if they hold their cash in standard bank accounts during this highly volatile period, they will lose their purchasing power every single day. Since they cannot easily access scarce foreign currencies like US dollars or Euros due to strict government currency controls, they desperately dump their fast-depleting Naira into solid, tangible local stocks like Dangote Cement, BUA Group, or MTN Nigeria just to preserve their wealth. So, this triumphant news report that we are passionately commanded to celebrate is actually a terrifying warning sign that Nigeria is experiencing severe, runaway inflation. The local elites, corporate cartels, and bank directors are frantically tripping over themselves to buy blue-chip local stocks strictly to hedge against currency collapse, and this sudden, desperate surge in local demand has artificially driven up the prices of these shares to such a disproportionate, heavily padded percentage that on paper, it looks much more profitable to invest in the Nigerian stock market than in the highly productive, technologically advanced South Korean stock exchange. Another major reason for this artificial stock market spike is the aggressive, reckless increase in interest rates by the Central Bank of Nigeria on behalf of the IMF and the World Bank. While this brutal rate hike has successfully collapsed thousands of local manufacturing businesses because commercial banks are now charging as high as 40% interest on business loans, it has also temporarily attracted a massive influx of volatile "hot money" from foreign speculators who are lending money to the Nigerian government by purchasing short-term treasury bills and sovereign bonds just to greedily exploit these high yields. It is crucially important to historically emphasize that Nigeria is absolutely not the only developing country to be declared the "best-performing stock market in history." Mexico proudly achieved this exact same fraudulent title in the run-up to 1994, and it ended up almost collapsing their entire national economy into absolute oblivion. At the time, the Mexican government, acting on the strict advice of the World Bank, aggressively increased interest rates and adopted painful Structural Adjustment Programmes that triggered massive hyperinflation across the country. This temporarily, artificially increased their foreign reserves as yield-hungry international speculators dived in to exploit these high interest rates, causing their local real estate markets and stock exchanges to explode into a virtual goldmine for foreign investors. But this artificial boom did not even last for a few years. The moment the United States Federal Reserve increased its own interest rates, international investors panicked, liquidated their assets overnight, and pulled their hot money completely out of Mexico. This massive, sudden capital flight almost collapsed the Mexican Peso, forcing their desperate government to raise domestic interest rates to an astronomical 70%, but even this extreme measure was not enough to save the country from descending into total state failure. This was the exact moment Mexico was forced to accept a humiliating, sovereignty-destroying bailout from the IMF and the United States totaling a massive $57 billion. Exactly $20 billion of that came directly from the US treasury, but it came with the highly insulting, neocolonial condition that all revenues from the global sales of Mexican state-owned oil must be deposited directly into the Federal Reserve Bank in New York City as collateral to secure the debt, while the IMF forced even more brutal, structural adjustment programs on Mexico that the country has still not fully recovered from even to this very day. So, while this stock market boom is currently being heavily marketed as another monumental, ground-breaking macroeconomic achievement by the Tinubu Administration, it is in reality extremely dangerous, deceptive, and reckless. Not only does it completely fail to reflect the actual, material reality on the ground, which is that Nigeria is currently the bleeding poverty capital of the world, but this exact, artificial economic bubble has the direct, terrifying potential to completely collapse the Nigerian economy, trigger massive capital flight, and permanently reduce the country to a subservient, bankrupt puppet state run entirely by the harsh austerity measures, economic dictates, and financial chains of boardroom terror organizations like the IMF and the World Bank.
Kalshi@Kalshi

JUST IN: Nigeria has now the world's “best” performing stock market

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oluwaseyi
oluwaseyi@logistics02·
@Amabeth001 @Rufyb it’s returns — just naira-denominated stock gains plus naira strength vs. dollar, and a rival market stumbling at the same time.
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Amarachi Bethel Odoemena
@Rufyb But sincerely, I want to understand, how does Nigeria have the best performing stock in the world and we're still in the top 20th poorest countries. I want to understand the disconnect
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TA 🍊
TA 🍊@Tope_soft·
My Team of the tournament so far. Porro. Cubarsi. Romero. Nuno Mendes. Bellingham. . Olise. Olmo. Mbappé. Kane. Messi..
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richie
richie@richmanarchade·
@bossolamilekan1 You don get FRA short man. Ronaldo already won UCL with United, Ballon Dor amongst other things. Mbappe never near UCL final for hn life talkless of bigger trophies.
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Bossolamilekan
Bossolamilekan@bossolamilekan1·
Ronaldo at 27 and Mbappe at 27,bring out the stat.
Bossolamilekan tweet media
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oluwaseyi
oluwaseyi@logistics02·
@eldivine I’m writing a whole ass article as a response to this.. just wait!
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-valar morghulis-
-valar morghulis-@eldivine·
To me at the end of the day, Messi is the most naturally gifted and arguably the most successful baller of all time. But I respect and admire CR7's accomplishments more. Ultimately there's no winning the debate. It's like saying Ibrahimovic vs Henry, there is no wrong answer, just preference.
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