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NEWS YOU CAN TRUST I **MONDAY <strong>16</strong> APRIL <strong>2018</strong> I VOL. 15, NO 33 I N300 @ g<br />

Cement makers’ profits drop to<br />

5-year low as tax credits expire<br />

BALA AUGIE<br />

A<br />

curious thing is happening<br />

to Nigerian<br />

Cement makers.<br />

While revenues<br />

are surging, profits<br />

are dropping, signalling falling<br />

margins and higher tax<br />

expenses.<br />

The firms analysed by <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

are Dangote Cement<br />

Plc, Cement Company of Northern<br />

Nigeria (CCNN) Plc and<br />

Lafarge Africa Plc, which control<br />

about 90 percent of the Nigerian<br />

cement market.<br />

Cement maker’s revenues<br />

surged to a five year high in 2017,<br />

however profits (net income)<br />

are down from the highs of 2013<br />

largely as a result of a dominant<br />

player in the sector (Lafarge<br />

Africa) recording a loss, and<br />

expiration of pioneer tax credits.<br />

Lafarge Africa profits were<br />

juiced in 20<strong>16</strong> by an income tax<br />

credit of N39.7 billion, while<br />

Dangote Cement received tax<br />

credits of N5.69 billion the same<br />

year (20<strong>16</strong>) and N10.43 billion in<br />

tax credits for 2013.<br />

The cumulative combined<br />

sales of the three largest producers<br />

of the building material hit<br />

N1.12 trillion in December 2017<br />

as against N607.56 billion recorded<br />

in 2013 as they leveraged<br />

a hike in the price of products and<br />

Nigeria’s infrastructure deficit.<br />

However, combined profits<br />

for the firms fell to an all-time<br />

low of N172.87 billion as at<br />

December 2017 from a profit of<br />

N263.71 billion recorded in 2013.<br />

Combined profits for the 3<br />

firms was N196.08 billion in<br />

2014, N209.52 billion in 2015 and<br />

N204.77 billion in 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

Investors and shareholders<br />

will be bemused at industry<br />

performance in spite of the fact<br />

that the market is largely an<br />

oligopoly.<br />

Dangote Cement with a mar-<br />

Continues on page 4<br />

L-R Adaora Umeoji, deputy managing director; Peter Amangbo, GMD/CEO; Jim Ovia, chairman, and Ebenezer Onyeagwu, deputy managing<br />

director, all of Zenith Bank plc, at the 27th annual general meeting of the bank in Abuja, at the weekend.<br />

Adeosun reassigns<br />

portfolios in SEC,<br />

Mary Uduk takes<br />

over as acting DG<br />

... demands explanation from<br />

SEC on communications with<br />

NSE on Oando<br />

ONYINYE NWACHUKWU, Abuja<br />

The Minister of Finance,<br />

Kemi Adeosun, on Friday<br />

approved the reassignment<br />

of portfolios in the Securities and<br />

Exchange Commission (SEC).<br />

Mary Uduk will assume the<br />

Continues on page 46<br />

Lagos-Badagry 2019<br />

rail completion<br />

doubtful as hoodlums<br />

take over tracks<br />

MIKE OCHONMA<br />

There are very strong indications<br />

that the 2019<br />

delivery timeline for the<br />

on-going road expansion that<br />

provides for the rail mass transit<br />

Continues on page 46<br />

Inside<br />

I&E window success snaps<br />

Nigeria’s dependence on<br />

CBN dollar supply P. A2


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

2 BUSINESS DAY


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

3


4 BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

Commodities<br />

Brent Oil<br />

$70.61<br />

Cocoa<br />

US $2,524.00<br />

NSE<br />

Biggest Gainer Biggest Loser<br />

Seplat<br />

Intbrew<br />

N698.3 4.99pc N50 -6.80pc<br />

40,928.70<br />

businessday market monitor<br />

Bitcoin<br />

Everdon Bureau De Change<br />

2,827,022.17 +8.81pc<br />

Powered by<br />

$-N<br />

£-N<br />

€-N<br />

BUY SELL<br />

360.00 363.00<br />

501.00 511.00<br />

435.50 445.00<br />

FOREIGN EXCHANGE TREASURY BILLS<br />

Market Spot $/N 3M 6M<br />

I&E FX Window 360.32 0.00 -0.01<br />

CBN Official Rate 305.55 13.18 14.31<br />

FMDQ Close<br />

5 Years<br />

-0.27%<br />

13.24%<br />

FGN BONDS<br />

10 Years<br />

-0.10%<br />

13.51%<br />

20 Years<br />

-0.18%<br />

13.34%<br />

Azura IPP deploys 450mw full capacity to national grid<br />

... as generation loss hits 1940mw<br />

OLUSOLA BELLO<br />

The country’s yearning<br />

for improved electricity<br />

generation<br />

inched closer to reality<br />

at the weekend<br />

as Azura Independent Power<br />

project (IPP) successfully deployed<br />

all it three turbines with<br />

combined generating capacities<br />

of 450 megawatts on the national<br />

grid.<br />

This is expected to improve<br />

power generation a great deal<br />

and subsequently impact positively<br />

on electricity supply generally<br />

across the country.<br />

This happened a day after the<br />

power sector suffered partial<br />

system collapsed and a severe<br />

generation drop by 606 megawatts<br />

hour (MWh/h) leading<br />

to all the generating stations<br />

sending out on the average<br />

3,370602MWh/hour last week<br />

Thursday.<br />

There was nothing to suggest<br />

that the situation was much better<br />

on Friday even after Azura<br />

had deployed its 450 mw to the<br />

national grid, as power supply<br />

to Lagos and its environs has<br />

been poor in the last few days.<br />

According to a presidency<br />

source 1325.5MW was not generated<br />

due to unavailability of<br />

gas while lack of transmission<br />

infrastructure was responsible<br />

for 40MW not generated.<br />

Another 485MW was not<br />

generated due to high frequency<br />

resulting from unavailability<br />

of distribution infrastructure<br />

just as reduced water level at<br />

the hydro at power stations<br />

also caused the loss of 190 MW,<br />

thereby indicating that there is<br />

a shortfall of 1940mw in generation.<br />

On the whole the power<br />

sector lost an estimated<br />

N979,000,000 on <strong>Apr</strong>il 12, <strong>2018</strong><br />

due to insufficient gas supply,<br />

distribution and transmission<br />

infrastructure as well as water<br />

reserves.<br />

The Federal Government<br />

through the Nigerian Bulk Electricity<br />

Trading Plc (NBET) recently<br />

paid Azura Power the<br />

sum of N8m being twelve percent<br />

of about N66 million for<br />

test power sent to the national<br />

grid in January, sources with<br />

knowledge about the transaction<br />

told <strong>BusinessDay</strong>.<br />

Meanwhile, Nigeria’s other<br />

generating companies (Gen-<br />

Cos) will today hear judgement<br />

on a suit they filed against the<br />

Federal Government for prioritising<br />

settlement of its commitment<br />

to Azura Power in the<br />

N701billion power guarantee<br />

instituted to assuage DisCos<br />

failure to settle market invoices.<br />

The rest of the GenCos have<br />

received settlement up till October<br />

2017 and since then their<br />

invoices have remained unsettled<br />

according to Joy Ogaji,<br />

the executive secretary of Association<br />

of Power Generation<br />

Companies (APGN).<br />

“The situation remains the<br />

same, we still have not received<br />

payment for our invoices since<br />

October last year,” she told <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

by phone.<br />

Ogaji said that the legacy<br />

power plants which have<br />

the capacity to generate over<br />

7,000MW of electricity were denied<br />

a sovereign risk guarantee<br />

only for the Federal Government<br />

to give Azura the same<br />

guarantee including a partial<br />

risk guarantee from the World<br />

Bank even when it has capacity<br />

to generate only 450MW.<br />

But Jubril Kareem, energy<br />

analyst at EcoBank does not<br />

agree with this view.<br />

“Part of the reason the Azura<br />

project was able to get funding<br />

and construction started was<br />

because the government committed<br />

to it and it has a very<br />

solid power purchase agreement<br />

based on the realities on<br />

ground.<br />

“Nigeria is one of the most<br />

expensive places to generate<br />

power and if they are being<br />

paid according to the terms of<br />

the power purchase agreement,<br />

there is nothing wrong with that.<br />

Kareem further said, “The<br />

agreement with Azura was so<br />

tight that if government defaulted<br />

on payment it has serious<br />

implications. This is unlike<br />

the other power plants which<br />

were mostly acquired from the<br />

government, it was built brand<br />

new and they had the time to<br />

mitigate all risk about not being<br />

paid.”<br />

Azura Power is the first Nigerian<br />

power project to benefit<br />

from both the World Bank’s<br />

“Partial Risk Guarantee” structure<br />

($237 million of debt used<br />

to build the plant) and the political<br />

risk insurance supplied<br />

by the Multilateral Investment<br />

Guarantee Agency.<br />

Azura delivered on budget<br />

ahead of schedule by 7 months<br />

and could increase Nigeria’s<br />

peak generation from 5,155MW<br />

to over 5,500MW.<br />

However, analysts are concerned<br />

about the ability of the<br />

Federal Government to sustain<br />

payment for Azura Power considering<br />

the huge cost involved<br />

in settling the test power for one<br />

month..<br />

Azura secured a $900m debt<br />

financing from a consortium<br />

of 15 banks from 9 different<br />

countries, including most of the<br />

European development finance<br />

institutions to build a 450MW<br />

Open Cycle Gas Turbine in Benin<br />

City, Edo State,<br />

Last month, it sent NBET, the<br />

market bill for test power from a<br />

single turbine of 153MW delivered<br />

to the grid on December<br />

20, 2017.<br />

L-R: Ladi Balogun, group chief executive, FCMB Group plc; Tinuade Awe, executive director, regulations, Nigerian<br />

Stock Exchange (NSE); Oladipupo Jadesimi, chairman, FCMB Group plc; Olusegun Odubogun, non-executive<br />

director, FCMB Group plc, and Olutola Mobolurin, non-executive director, during the closing gong ceremony in<br />

commemoration of the newly appointed chairman of FCMB Group plc, at the Exchange in Lagos.<br />

Cement makers see profits drop to 5 year...<br />

Continued from page 1<br />

ket capitalisation of N4.4 trillion<br />

has gained 13 percent year to date<br />

and trades at a price to book ratio<br />

of 5.4xs, according to Bloomberg<br />

data.<br />

Lafarge Africa has a market<br />

capitalisation of N385.96 billion,<br />

has returned -0.87 percent ytd,<br />

and trades at a price to sales ratio<br />

of 0.87Xs.<br />

Data gleaned by <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

shows the major drag on industry<br />

profit growth is Large Africa Plc,<br />

a company grappling with rising<br />

costs and leverage that eroded<br />

margins.<br />

For the year ended December<br />

2017, Lafarge Africa posted a loss<br />

after tax of (N34.60 billion) from<br />

a profit position of N<strong>16</strong>.89 billion<br />

the previous year, the lowest in five<br />

years since <strong>BusinessDay</strong> started<br />

compiling data.<br />

Lafarge profits for 2014, 2015<br />

and 20<strong>16</strong> were N34.66 billion,<br />

N26.98 billion and N<strong>16</strong>.89 billion<br />

respectively.<br />

Lafarge had finance costs or<br />

interest expense of N43.02 billion<br />

for the period, the highest in 7<br />

years, brought on by interest on<br />

borrowing incurred while paying<br />

the loans of subsidiary company,<br />

UNICEM.<br />

A breakdown of the combined<br />

profit in the period under review<br />

(2017) showed Dangote Cement Plc,<br />

the largest producer of the building<br />

material recorded net income of<br />

N204.24 billion, flat from the N201.19<br />

billion recorded in 2013.<br />

Dangote’s 2014, 2015 and<br />

20<strong>16</strong> profits were N159.50 billion,<br />

N181.52 billion and N186.62 billion<br />

respectively.<br />

CCNN’s profit after tax stood<br />

at N3.22 billion as at December<br />

2017, representing a 106.50 percent<br />

surge from the N1.56 billion<br />

recorded five years ago.<br />

Industry experts are upbeat<br />

that economic growth underpinned<br />

by an increase in crude<br />

oil price and production and the<br />

introduction of foreign exchange<br />

system that help curb the crippling<br />

dollar shortage will boost<br />

future earnings of firms operating<br />

in the sector as they expect an<br />

uptick in the demand for building<br />

materials.<br />

The gross domestic product of<br />

Africa’s largest oil producer expanded<br />

for three straight quarters<br />

last year after a 1.6 percent contraction<br />

in 20<strong>16</strong>, with year-on-year<br />

growth reaching 1.9 percent in the<br />

final three months of 2017.<br />

The International Monetary<br />

Fund (IMF) has projected that<br />

Nigeria’s economy will grow by 2.1<br />

percent in <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

The forecast which represents<br />

0.2 percent increase from the<br />

1.9 percent projected in October<br />

2017.<br />

“We expect revenue growth<br />

to be sustained amid a faster<br />

recovery in Nigeria, thanks to<br />

increased government infrastructure<br />

spending ahead of the 2019<br />

general election notwithstanding<br />

stiff competition,” said analysts at<br />

United Capital.<br />

President Muhammadu Buhari<br />

has presented a record budget<br />

of N8.60 trillion to the National<br />

Assembly for <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

Out of the total budget figure,<br />

N2.4 trillion has been earmarked<br />

for capital spending.<br />

Nigeria has infrastructure deficit<br />

of $2 trillion, according to the<br />

Africa Finance Corporation.<br />

Also, the 17 million housing<br />

deficit is a low hanging fruit for cement<br />

makers to grow sales volume.<br />

“We estimate that an additional<br />

two million housing units<br />

by 2020e from the public sector<br />

alone (as highlighted in the economic<br />

recovery plan), will unlock<br />

about 20-24 million tonnes (mt) of<br />

cement over <strong>2018</strong>e-2020e,” said<br />

analysts at RMBNS, in a recent report<br />

on Nigeria’s cement industry.<br />

Lafarge Africa is spending<br />

more to produce each unit of<br />

product as cost to income ratio<br />

increased to 83.03 percent, the<br />

highest in 5 years; driven by the<br />

construction of Mfamsong evacuation<br />

road at UNICEM in Calabar<br />

which failed as well as a full impairment<br />

taken on a Pre-heater<br />

project in ASHAKACEM which<br />

the cement maker hinted it has<br />

discontinued.<br />

The company is working to<br />

reduce energy and transportation<br />

costs as part of a turnaround plan,<br />

according to Michel Puchercos,<br />

the Chief Executive Officer of<br />

Lafarge Holcim Plc.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

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COMMENT<br />

comment is free<br />

Send 800word comments to comment@businessdayonline.com<br />

Severe head injuries (trust, deception and good neighbours)<br />

BASHORUN J.K RANDLE<br />

Randle is Chairman/Chief<br />

ExecutiveJK Randle Professional<br />

Services Chartered Accountants<br />

While we may differ<br />

over the coup<br />

d’état of 15th January<br />

1966 and the<br />

counter coup of<br />

29thJuly, 1966, forensic auditors<br />

have submitted their cryptic report:<br />

“The Nation Was Left With Severe<br />

Head Injuries”<br />

That is what prompted Bill<br />

Gates, the second richest man in<br />

the world who was at the Special<br />

Session of the National Economic<br />

Council held at the Presidential<br />

Villa on Thursday March 22, <strong>2018</strong>,<br />

to declare as follows:<br />

“Nigeria is one of the most dangerous<br />

places in the world to give<br />

birth, with the fourth worst maternal<br />

mortality rate in the world,<br />

ahead of only Sierra Leone, Central<br />

African Republic, and Chad. One in<br />

three Nigerian children is chronically<br />

malnourished.”<br />

“The Nigerian government’s<br />

Economic Recovery and Growth<br />

Plan identifies “investing in our<br />

people” as one of three “strategic<br />

objectives.” But the “execution priorities”<br />

don’t fully reflect people’s<br />

needs, prioritizing physical capital<br />

over human capital.”<br />

Here you can see Nigeria’s per<br />

capita GDP growth from 2000 until<br />

today. If current education and<br />

health trends continue—if you<br />

spend the same amount in these<br />

areas and get the same results—per<br />

capita GDP flatlines, with economic<br />

growth just barely keeping<br />

up with population growth.<br />

In 1978, Dr. OlikoyeRansome-<br />

Kuti, who later became the Nigerian<br />

minister of health, helped<br />

establish primary health care as<br />

the global standard.Tragically,<br />

40 years after Dr. Ransome-Kuti<br />

helped other countries set a<br />

course for the future, the Nigerian<br />

primary health care system is broken.<br />

The evidence for this can be<br />

found in the epidemic of chronic<br />

malnutrition, or stunting.”<br />

We also have the following<br />

front page report from “The Nigerian<br />

Tribune” newspaper of 26th<br />

March, <strong>2018</strong>:<br />

Headline: “How CBN moved<br />

over N100 billion to Jonathan’s<br />

residence ahead of 2015 poll” –<br />

Presidency Sources<br />

This is nothing but desperation<br />

– Jonathan’s aide<br />

“Few days after Vice-President<br />

Yemi Osinbajo alleged that billions<br />

of naira were withdrawn<br />

by former President Goodluck<br />

Jonathan-led government and<br />

shared a few days before the 2015<br />

elections, more details are emerging,<br />

showing how several tranches<br />

of funds were illegally removed.<br />

According to a Presidency<br />

source, some new but dramatic<br />

details of how some of the funds<br />

were illegally transported from the<br />

Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to<br />

the private residence of the former<br />

President Jonathan had now<br />

emerged.<br />

In that particular case, the<br />

former NSA [National Security<br />

Adviser] personally supervised<br />

the physical transfer of the money<br />

from the CBN vaults to the private<br />

residence of the former president.<br />

“In one particular instance,<br />

over N70 billion was released in<br />

parts from the national treasury<br />

between January 8 and February<br />

25, 2015. The over $289 millionwhich<br />

was also referenced last<br />

week by the vice president is said<br />

to be included in this particular<br />

“Nigeria is one of the most<br />

dangerous places in the<br />

world to give birth, with<br />

the fourth worst maternal<br />

mortality rate in the world,<br />

ahead of only Sierra Leone,<br />

Central African Republic,<br />

and Chad. One in three<br />

Nigerian children is<br />

chronically malnourished.”<br />

series of illegal transactions,” the<br />

source stated.<br />

The Presidency source also said<br />

minutes of the CBN board meeting of<br />

August 25, 2014 indicated the board’s<br />

approval of another N60 billion<br />

requested by the former president<br />

and released later by the apex bank.<br />

A Presidency source said the<br />

sum, which was okayed by the CBN<br />

board, was not tied to any project<br />

or procurement and was meant and<br />

disbursed purely for campaign purposes,<br />

through the office of the then<br />

NSA and the State Security Services<br />

(SSS) leadership at the time.<br />

Specifically that N6o billion that<br />

was okayed by the CBN on August<br />

25, 2014was said to have been shared<br />

between the two security agencies<br />

thus: N40 billionwent to the NSA<br />

while N20billion was released to the<br />

SSS,” it added.<br />

While some of these newly<br />

emerging fund disbursements have<br />

been traced to the former NSA,<br />

there were indications that some of<br />

the funds were unconnected to the<br />

ongoing defence contract trials of<br />

the former NSA.<br />

The $289 million mentioned<br />

by the vice president last week at<br />

the seventh Presidential Quarterly<br />

Business Forum for private sector<br />

stakeholders was released on February<br />

25, 2015.<br />

“Documents, including<br />

cash vouchers, indicate that<br />

$289,202,382 was released in cash<br />

to the NIA by the Central Bank of<br />

Nigeria from the Joint Venture (JV)<br />

Cash Call Account No. 000-0000-<br />

1<strong>16</strong>58-366 of the NNPC/NAPIMS<br />

with JP Morgan Chase Bank, New<br />

York, USA.<br />

At the exchange rate then of<br />

N199 to a dollar, $289 million is<br />

equivalent to about N60 billion. But<br />

had the money not been stolen, it<br />

would be at today’s rate over N104<br />

billion,” it added.<br />

According to the Presidency<br />

source, another set of illegal fund<br />

was withdrawn under one week<br />

between January 8 and <strong>16</strong>, 2015.<br />

It said the sum of N1.5 billion<br />

was released in three tranches of<br />

N300 million, N400 million and<br />

N800 million.<br />

“This money was released from<br />

the MEA Research Library Account<br />

to the Join-trust Dimension,” an official<br />

source with knowledge of the<br />

transaction disclosed.<br />

The source further said the sum<br />

was transferred to their various political<br />

associates, which included a<br />

former minister.<br />

Further findings showed that<br />

N350 million was allegedly transferred<br />

to one of President Goodluck<br />

Jonathan’s ministers on February<br />

2, 2015 and another N250 million<br />

was allegedly transferred to him on<br />

February 19, 2015.<br />

A document further showed<br />

that yet another N10 billion was<br />

released to the Office of the NSA<br />

by the CBN on September 15, 2015.<br />

The money was said to have<br />

been released in tranches of foreign<br />

exchange of $47 million, $5<br />

million, 4 million euros and 1.6<br />

million euros.<br />

A letter from the Office of the<br />

NSA in November 2014 further<br />

showed that the money was released<br />

by the CBN as ‘funds for<br />

special services’.<br />

Findings also showed that this<br />

particular CBN release of N10 billion<br />

was sourced in November 2014<br />

from a N40 billion CBN released<br />

funds meant for Corporate Social<br />

Responsibility (CSR).<br />

It was this N10 billion that the<br />

source claimed former President<br />

Jonathan instructed the CBN governor<br />

and the then NSA to deliver<br />

to him personally in a private residence<br />

in Abuja.<br />

Sources said the money was illegally<br />

transferred using CBN van<br />

for the use of “PDP presidential<br />

primaries.”<br />

Responding to the allegations,<br />

special assistant on new media<br />

to Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, Reno<br />

Omokri, said “this is nothing<br />

but the desperate last throes of a<br />

government that came in through<br />

propaganda and is about to go out<br />

because of a lack of proper agenda.”<br />

In a statement on Sunday night,<br />

Omokori said the allegation was<br />

false, adding that the former administration<br />

was acknowledged<br />

globally for its anti-corruption<br />

drive.<br />

“President Jonathan’s administration<br />

has the enviable record of<br />

advancing Nigeria’s anti-corruption<br />

war and delivered results to<br />

the point where we made our best<br />

ever improvement in Transparency<br />

International’s CPI in 2014, when<br />

we moved eight places forward<br />

from 144 to 136,” he said.<br />

He said there was nobody involved<br />

in ensuring the emergence<br />

of President Muhammadu Buhari<br />

who had not secretly or openly regretted<br />

it, adding that “even his<br />

own wife, Aisha, is full of regrets<br />

and has not hidden it.”<br />

Send reactions to:<br />

comment@businessdayonline.com<br />

BISI ADEYEMI<br />

Bisi Adeyemi is the Managing Director of<br />

DCSL Corporate Services Limited. For<br />

comments and reactions, kindly contact<br />

badeyemi@dcsl.com.ng.<br />

Executives inevitably see<br />

themselves as responsible<br />

for the success of<br />

their organizations - and<br />

perhaps blame the microeconomic<br />

environment and other<br />

factors when they fail. This sense<br />

of accomplishment oftentimes<br />

comes with a surreal feeling<br />

of invincibility and executives<br />

sometimes have a sense that with<br />

all the responsibility on their<br />

shoulders, Non-Executive Directors<br />

should not question their<br />

proposals as that would only distract<br />

them.Thus, they sometimes<br />

tend to take excessive risks which<br />

could put shareholders value at<br />

risk. Where these pay off, they<br />

feel justified to “extract” excessive<br />

Preventing ethical misconduct<br />

compensation.<br />

However, there is a thin line<br />

between excessive risk taking<br />

and unethical conduct. In<br />

the continuous effort to align<br />

shareholder value with those of<br />

Managers, the Board seeks ways<br />

of linking executive compensation<br />

to corporate performance.<br />

Performance bonuses based on<br />

profit and other metrics, share<br />

options and grants are incentives<br />

that seek to achieve this<br />

alignment. For the most part,<br />

these are effective. However,<br />

where the Board has not hired<br />

executives with high ethical<br />

values, these tend to engender<br />

bad behavior- performance at<br />

all cost.<br />

This is not to say that all that<br />

is required is seeking and hiring<br />

“honest, morally upright<br />

and good people”. Executives<br />

with a track record of “moral<br />

uprightness” have been known<br />

to “turn coat” or “succumb to<br />

temptation”. In the same vein,<br />

formulating a detailed written<br />

statement of ethics or specific<br />

documented policies do not<br />

necessarily prevent ethical misconduct.<br />

The 65-page Enron<br />

Corporate Code of Ethics was intended<br />

to help guide employees in<br />

“conducting the business affairs…<br />

in accordance with all applicable<br />

laws and in a moral and honest<br />

manner.” Things didn’t quite pan<br />

out as envisaged.<br />

What then should the Board do?<br />

Typically, the start point is for the<br />

Board to define the culture of the<br />

organization. This is a major responsibility<br />

of the Board which it cannot<br />

delegate to Management. Clearly,<br />

drilling down across the organization<br />

will be the responsibility of Management<br />

and monitored periodically by<br />

the Board. What values do we want<br />

to espouse? What kind pf people do<br />

we want to be? How do we want to<br />

do business? Once the Board has<br />

clarity on this, it needs to have this<br />

documented in the form of a Code of<br />

Ethics, which provides guidance on<br />

compliance expectations. As much<br />

as possible, the Code should provide<br />

examplesto guide employees and<br />

clarify expectations. A Whistle Blowing<br />

Policy and appropriatemechanism<br />

for implementation should also<br />

be put in place.<br />

The Board then needs to set the<br />

appropriate “tone at the top” by<br />

demonstrating a commitment to<br />

the ethical values it has defined.<br />

Designating a corporate ethics<br />

officer of sufficient seniority, reporting<br />

to the Board (this is critical)<br />

and an ethics management<br />

team to manage Corporate Ethical<br />

Culture is an indication of the<br />

Board’s commitment and sends a<br />

message that the Code of Ethics<br />

and related policies are not perfunctory.<br />

In addition,hiring and<br />

firing decisions must incorporate<br />

the organization’s values. The<br />

performance appraisal process<br />

must tie reward systems to indicators<br />

of integrity as well as to other<br />

measurements of productivity.<br />

Furthermore, it is important to<br />

consistently reward integrity and<br />

to make sure that these instances<br />

are publicized throughout the<br />

organization. It is also important<br />

that a transparent disciplinary<br />

process is in place to deal with<br />

violations.There should be no<br />

“sacred cows” and decisive action<br />

should be taken where violation<br />

is established – at whatever level.<br />

The Board should ensure that<br />

there is on-goingethicaltraining,<br />

not just for employees, but for<br />

third parties the organization<br />

deals with – vendors, suppliers,<br />

consultants, regulators, etc. As<br />

much as possible, practical sessions<br />

should beincorporated into<br />

the training programs to ensure<br />

clarity.<br />

Having set out the ground<br />

rules, the appropriate tone, there<br />

should be asystem in place to<br />

monitoremployee conduct to<br />

ensure there is alignment with<br />

expectations. A periodic review<br />

of the various decision-making<br />

systems and critical points where<br />

the organization may be vulnerable<br />

should be undertaken. The<br />

Board should ensure that the<br />

Whistle Blowing Mechanism<br />

continues to be effective and that<br />

whistle blowers are adequately<br />

protected. It is good practice to<br />

outsource the whistle blowing<br />

mechanism to ensure confidentiality<br />

and encourage employees<br />

to use it. To ensure that it is not<br />

perceived as a “feel good” or<br />

“nice to have”, it is imperative that<br />

decisive action is taken against<br />

ethical misconduct – no matter<br />

who the culprit is.<br />

Send reactions to:<br />

comment@businessdayonline.com


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

COMMENT<br />

C002D5556<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

11<br />

comment is free<br />

Send 800word comments to comment@businessdayonline.com<br />

Buhari’s insincerity on corruption portends future failure<br />

OLADIRAN OLA BELLO<br />

Dr. Bello, holds MPhil and PhD<br />

degrees from Cambridge University<br />

and is the Executive Director of Good<br />

Governance Africa (GGA).<br />

Analysts are likely to<br />

look back in a decade<br />

from now and<br />

adjudge President<br />

Buhari’s floundering<br />

anti-graft efforts as a case-study in<br />

how not to fight corruption. This is<br />

given all the challenges – many endemic,<br />

some recently self-inflicted<br />

– that Nigeria continues to grapple<br />

with. Issues that have hampered<br />

the ongoing attempts to tackle<br />

theft and wilful mismanagement<br />

of the country’s resources are legion.<br />

They range from operational<br />

lapses including institutional<br />

gaps, wrong tooling, a proclivity<br />

for media spectacle instead of<br />

serious investigative work, and a<br />

counter-productive tendency to<br />

disregard due process. This is not<br />

mentioning the political failings<br />

evident in the government’s lack<br />

of political will, balance, sincerity,<br />

and the naked politicisation that<br />

has created sacred cows to the detriment<br />

of Buhari’s very credibility.<br />

Whilst the above needlessly<br />

hobble government efforts to rein<br />

in corruption, the absence of an<br />

informed and engaged citizenry<br />

has also not helped. We must be<br />

more willing to transcend the ethnic<br />

and the other distractions better<br />

to maintain effective vigilance<br />

over our public functionaries. The<br />

immediate spur for this article is<br />

the N1.4tn, which according to<br />

the junior oil minister, is now being<br />

spent annually on oil subsidy<br />

outside the regular budget. Essentially,<br />

the difference between the<br />

N171 cost of importing petrol per<br />

litre and the regulated N145 pump<br />

price is being funded from the accounts<br />

of the Nigerian National<br />

Petroleum Company (NNPC) as<br />

“under recovery”.<br />

We have simply moved from<br />

a not very transparent subsidy<br />

system under the previous administration<br />

to an extremely opaque<br />

one in the current dispensation.<br />

The NNPC spends what is effectively<br />

billions of dollars on petrol<br />

subsidy, without any detailed<br />

account being rendered publicly<br />

or the underlying mechanisms<br />

transparently explained. Little<br />

wonder that the NNPC has quietly<br />

stepped away from its widely commended<br />

move in 20<strong>16</strong> towards the<br />

monthly publication of its detailed<br />

financial position. With much of<br />

the earmarked subsidy disappearing<br />

into private pockets in years<br />

past, Nigeria now has even less of a<br />

chance at ensuring accountability<br />

with the present arrangement. The<br />

extant NNPC subsidy programme<br />

and the obfuscation over how it<br />

is financed away from legislative<br />

oversight is the biggest economic<br />

corruption scandal that Nigeria<br />

has seen in the past three years.<br />

And that is leaving aside the currency<br />

subsidy in the form of the<br />

N285 concessional rate at which<br />

the NNPC accesses dollars from<br />

the central bank for fuel importation.<br />

Faulty foundation<br />

Evidence of the logical and<br />

procedural flaws in Nigeria’s<br />

battle against graft are littered<br />

all around us and threatening<br />

to drown the nation. The Buhari<br />

government’s lack of consistent<br />

attention to strengthening procedural<br />

accountability remains<br />

all-too-central to the difficulty<br />

dogging fiscal administration and<br />

reform. Changing this will be vital<br />

to improve our perception in the<br />

Transparency International ranking.<br />

For a government that prides<br />

itself on its anticorruption stance,<br />

the “invisible” subsidy represents<br />

a regrettable step backwards in<br />

terms of embedding transparency<br />

in the workings of government.<br />

What is most pressing is not loot<br />

recovery or naming and shaming<br />

perpetrators. It is the reshaping<br />

of institutions and fine-tuning<br />

of processes throughout government<br />

to make it difficult to divert<br />

or intentionally mismanage public<br />

funds in the first place.<br />

Just this week, a call went out<br />

from the administration for the<br />

EFCC and ICPC to investigate violations<br />

of the Public Procurement<br />

Act of 2007. Many observers doubt<br />

the sincerity or even the political<br />

neutrality of this sudden show of<br />

interest in regularising procurement.<br />

It normally should be a<br />

routine, institutionalised process<br />

overseen by empowered bodies<br />

such as the Auditor-General’s<br />

office. The latter though remains<br />

of marginal relevance even as<br />

Nigerians agitate unsuccessfully<br />

for the public disclosure of the<br />

emolument package of national<br />

lawmakers. Neither the demand<br />

side petitions using Nigeria’s<br />

Freedom of Information Act of<br />

2011 nor the supply side relying<br />

on the discretion of the Auditor-<br />

General’s office have led to this<br />

information being published.<br />

The Public Complaints Commission<br />

(the Ombudsman) remains<br />

moribund, which arguably suits<br />

errant functionaries.<br />

Meanwhile, the limitations of<br />

the Revenue Mobilisation and<br />

Fiscal Allocation Commission<br />

Board have been exposed with<br />

the March<strong>2018</strong> revelation by<br />

Senator Shehu Sanni of the unappropriated<br />

“running expenses”<br />

of N13.5m paid to each Nigerian<br />

senator monthly and a slightly<br />

lesser sum given to those in the<br />

lower legislative house. This was<br />

just one in a series of revelations<br />

that should normally cause outrage<br />

among Nigerians. Citizens<br />

though have failed consistently<br />

to leverage the sort of opportunity<br />

for mass action for change that<br />

such occasions present. The bar<br />

for anti-corruption has been set<br />

so low in Nigeria that citizens<br />

Why didn’t the squabbling<br />

political actors save face by<br />

requesting the secondment<br />

of a suitably qualified anticorruption<br />

technocrat from<br />

the UK to replace Magu?...<br />

Nothing is more injurious to<br />

Nigeria’s bid to instil discipline,<br />

probity and accountability<br />

than a government<br />

which undermines the law<br />

in its ill-conceived and incompetent<br />

pursuit of justice<br />

willingly credit Buhari’s mediocre<br />

achievement on graft.<br />

The dominant incentive pattern<br />

determines the morality of a<br />

society. Alleged mismanagement<br />

of Nigeria’s treasury is left unpunished.<br />

From the outgone president,<br />

Goodluck Jonathan, to his<br />

predecessors, all remain immune.<br />

It is inconceivable that we could<br />

deter would-be offenders when<br />

current and past misdeeds are papered<br />

over. A bold anti-corruption<br />

leader would take risks in seeking<br />

exemplary prosecutions that touch<br />

errant public office holders from all<br />

of Nigeria’s geopolitical zones.<br />

That surely would give the lie<br />

to politicians who have always<br />

exploited our dysfunctionality<br />

and ethnic and religious fractiousness<br />

to allege that anti-corruption<br />

prosecutions are sectional or biased.<br />

Brazil’s former president<br />

Lula began a twelve year jail term<br />

this week after being convicted<br />

for corruption. Jacob Zuma, South<br />

Africa’s immediate past president,<br />

is being swiftly brought to justice.<br />

In Nigeria, meanwhile, those who<br />

pocketed multiples of Zuma’s corruption<br />

proceeds still walk free.<br />

Stuck in a rot<br />

The false foundations and procedural<br />

weaknesses in President<br />

Buhari’s anti-corruption war have<br />

been glaring from his first weeks<br />

in office. He started well by implementing<br />

the treasury single<br />

account initiative began by his<br />

predecessors. Buhari’s government<br />

then controversially introduced<br />

multiple windows for foreign exchange.<br />

This remains one of the<br />

biggest opportunities for unearned<br />

income and large-scale financial<br />

transfers ever seen in Nigeria. The<br />

damage is only being partly mitigated<br />

by the recently introduced<br />

and more transparent investors and<br />

exporters segment. In legislative<br />

terms, the idea of a special anticorruption<br />

court has been mooted<br />

but its lethargic consideration by<br />

our lawmakers contrasts sharply<br />

with their enthusiastic pursuit of<br />

the death sentence for kidnapping<br />

and hate speech crimes leading to<br />

the loss of victims’ lives.<br />

Evidence of the duplicity in<br />

Buhari’s anti-graft fight continues<br />

to mount. This includes cases such<br />

as that of Babachir Lawal, former<br />

scribe to the government, and his<br />

alleged diversion of N220 million<br />

intended for those displaced by<br />

Boko Haram in the northeast.<br />

Ambassador Ayo Oke, former<br />

head of the National Intelligence<br />

Agency, allegedly hid $43million<br />

of government’s fund in a Lagos<br />

apartment. The National Health<br />

Insurance Scheme’s boss, Professor<br />

Usman Yusuf, was reinstated<br />

despite being under investigation<br />

for fraud involving N919 million.<br />

Abdulrasheed Maina, who escaped<br />

being arrested for a N2.7 billion<br />

pension scam, was brazenly<br />

reinstated into the civil service<br />

with a promotion. Although directives<br />

have been given by President<br />

Buhari that all personalities<br />

involved in the cases should be<br />

investigated, the delayed action<br />

from the top came mostly after<br />

public pressure.<br />

For those seeking serious examples<br />

in prosecuting graft, the<br />

recent announcement of a partial<br />

and politicised list of so called<br />

treasury looters by Nigeria’s information<br />

minister is unlikely<br />

to inspire much confidence. By<br />

contrast, Ghana’s president set a<br />

good example in his surprising<br />

appointment of Martin Amidu, a<br />

respected and uncompromising<br />

anti-corruption crusader from<br />

the rank of the country’s opposition,<br />

to head his new anti-graft<br />

agency. With this appointment,<br />

Ghana’s president won the public<br />

over, sending out an unequivocal<br />

message about the genuineness<br />

of his effort. A few public figures<br />

once considered untouchable<br />

from both side of Ghana’s great<br />

political divide have since been<br />

hauled before the special courts<br />

for corruption.<br />

Ghana’s achievement here is<br />

not a one-off. The revelation in<br />

2015 by a brave investigator, Anas<br />

Aremeyaw Anas, who secretly<br />

filmed justices receiving bribes,<br />

led to the jailing and the premature<br />

termination of the career<br />

of several judicial functionaries.<br />

Nigeria, by contrast, was lethargic<br />

in dealing with revelation of<br />

justices stashing away corruptly<br />

obtained funds, including in a<br />

bathroom in one of the cases. The<br />

best that Nigerians got was obfuscation<br />

and a rare guard action<br />

of the sort that has effectively left<br />

disciplinary procedures for errant<br />

justices in the hand of the National<br />

Judicial Council. The body itself is<br />

perceived by many to be far from<br />

neutral and it can, in any case, only<br />

dismiss judicial officers. Its power<br />

does not extend to meting out<br />

sentences for wrong doers. What<br />

incentive patterns are being created<br />

when incidents of corruption<br />

involving judges cannot be prosecuted<br />

in normal courts presided<br />

over by one of their own peers but<br />

hushed away within disciplinary<br />

procedures?<br />

Try a new tack<br />

Nigeria continues to sustain<br />

serious economic damage owing<br />

to the unwillingness of those in<br />

government to launch a no-holdsbarred<br />

anti-corruption war. After<br />

clashing over the EFCC head,<br />

Ibrahim Magu, Nigeria’s presi-<br />

dent and lawmakers began a long<br />

standoff which prevented the Central<br />

Bank’s monetary policy committee<br />

from meeting for months<br />

as lawmakers refused to conduct<br />

confirmation hearings for nominees<br />

to a slew of public offices.<br />

Why didn’t the squabbling political<br />

actors save face by requesting<br />

the secondment of a suitably<br />

qualified anti-corruption technocrat<br />

from the UK to replace Magu?<br />

The UK’s Serious Fraud Office has<br />

been almost exclusively in charge<br />

of all the high corruption cases<br />

successfully pursued against Nigerian<br />

functionaries in the past two<br />

decades. British prosecutors led<br />

the prosecution of Nigerian politicians<br />

from Alameseigha to Dariye,<br />

through Ibori to Deizani Alison-<br />

Madueke. The latter’s case is still<br />

ongoing in London. A top level<br />

international hire to lead the EFCC<br />

will likely inspire the younger generation<br />

of Nigerian prosecutors to<br />

high professionalism. Exposure<br />

to a different managerial culture<br />

at the helm may encourage them<br />

to properly prioritise water-tight<br />

investigations before indictments<br />

are unsealed.<br />

Defects in the EFCC’s operational<br />

culture reflects the background<br />

of its headsto date. From<br />

Nuhu Ribadu to Farida Waziri all<br />

the way to Ibrahim Lamorde and<br />

Ibrahim Magu, each has been<br />

a career police officer. Leading<br />

the EFCC effectively requires<br />

skillsets beyond the core policing<br />

functions. Serious damages have<br />

been incurred as government unwisely<br />

side-steps the rule of law.<br />

Examples include the continuing<br />

detention of Sambo Dasuki, former<br />

National Security Advisor, in<br />

disregard of court orders. Nothing<br />

is more injurious to Nigeria’s bid<br />

to instil discipline, probity and<br />

accountability than a government<br />

which undermines the law in its<br />

ill-conceived and incompetent<br />

pursuit of justice.<br />

A foreign EFCC head will operate<br />

in the full glare of the international<br />

community, likely<br />

enhancing their immunity from<br />

political pressure, manipulation<br />

or even blackmail. This is not to<br />

suggest that Nigeria lacks suitably<br />

qualified citizens who can do the<br />

job or that a foreign recruit will<br />

approximate a saint. Rather, it is<br />

a call for the closing of the circle,<br />

to welcome direct and constructive<br />

inputs from better-equipped<br />

partners that have given Nigeria<br />

copious anti-corruption support<br />

in recent years. UK prosecutors<br />

are especially well-positioned<br />

with the unrivalled wealth of financial<br />

intelligence they possess<br />

on corrupt Nigerian individuals. If<br />

Buhari dared, he might have found<br />

in a foreign anti-corruption czar an<br />

invaluable ally and wise counsel<br />

that could boost his ostensible bid<br />

to save Nigeria from corruption.<br />

That might also strike fear into a<br />

few incorrigibly corrupt figures in<br />

high places.<br />

Send reactions to:<br />

comment@businessdayonline.com


12 BUSINESS DAY C002D5556 Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

Editorial<br />

PUBLISHER/CEO<br />

Frank Aigbogun<br />

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF<br />

Prof. Onwuchekwa Jemie<br />

EDITOR<br />

Anthony Osae-Brown<br />

DEPUTY EDITORS<br />

John Osadolor, Abuja<br />

Bill Okonedo<br />

NEWS EDITOR<br />

Patrick Atuanya<br />

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,<br />

SALES AND MARKETING<br />

Kola Garuba<br />

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, OPERATIONS<br />

Fabian Akagha<br />

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, DIGITAL SERVICES<br />

Oghenevwoke Ighure<br />

ADVERT MANAGER<br />

Adeola Ajewole<br />

MANAGER, SYSTEMS & CONTROL<br />

Emeka Ifeanyi<br />

HEAD OF SALES, CONFERENCES<br />

Rerhe Idonije<br />

SUBSCRIPTIONS MANAGER<br />

Patrick Ijegbai<br />

CIRCULATION MANAGER<br />

John Okpaire<br />

GM, BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT (North)<br />

Bashir Ibrahim Hassan<br />

GM, BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT (South)<br />

Ignatius Chukwu<br />

HEAD, HUMAN RESOURCES<br />

Adeola Obisesan<br />

Sexual predators as academics in Nigeria<br />

Last week, a voice recording<br />

allegedly suggesting<br />

that a professor<br />

of Management<br />

and Accounting at<br />

the Obafemi Awolowo University,<br />

Ile-Ife, Richard Akindele,<br />

was demanding sex in return<br />

for grade rocked the social as<br />

well as mainstream media. The<br />

academic who is also a reverend<br />

gentleman, was overhead in the<br />

tape demanding five rounds or<br />

five days of sex from the hapless<br />

lady, a final year student who<br />

failed his course, to upgrade her<br />

marks to a pass. Of course, the<br />

University has come out blazing,<br />

describing the alleged act as “totally<br />

and morally reprehensible.”<br />

It also set up a high-powered<br />

committee to investigate the<br />

allegation and submit its report<br />

within one week promising to<br />

deal decisively with anyone<br />

found culpable.<br />

The reaction is expected<br />

especially since the recording<br />

is now trending on social media<br />

and the image of the school is being<br />

smeared. But we must state<br />

that sexual harassment in our<br />

universities is more widespread<br />

than the authorities would admit<br />

and they have failed to tackle the<br />

problem or lay down stringent<br />

rules to prevent its occurrence.<br />

ASUU also, that has now made the<br />

organisation of strike actions to<br />

protest government underfunding<br />

of the universities as its main<br />

goal, has turned a blind eye to the<br />

vice of sexual harassment that is<br />

destroying our universities and<br />

turning them into a caricature of<br />

what a university should be.<br />

In 2012, a pilot ICPC/NUC<br />

University System Study and Review<br />

(USSR) of corruption in the<br />

university system was undertaken<br />

and the review identified a series of<br />

infractions including admissions<br />

racketeering, misapplication and<br />

embezzlement of funds, sale of<br />

examination questions, inducement<br />

to manipulate awards of<br />

degrees, direct cheating during<br />

examinations, deliberate delays<br />

in the release of results, victimization<br />

of students by officials, lack of<br />

commitment to work by lecturers,<br />

and above all, sexual harassment<br />

and exploitation of students by<br />

lecturers. At the presentation of<br />

the report in 2012, the ICPC Chairman,<br />

Mr Ekpo Nta, was quoted as<br />

saying: “we have uncovered many<br />

corrupt practices in our universities.<br />

Sexual harassment seems to<br />

rank extremely very high among<br />

corrupt practices in our universities.<br />

Our report is based on the<br />

quantum of petitions we have<br />

received on this corrupt practice.<br />

We’re emphasizing this because<br />

sexual harassment has to do with<br />

the immediate challenge we need<br />

to address.”<br />

In fact, the rampant cases of<br />

reported cases of sexual harassment<br />

in our tertiary institution<br />

forced the Senate in 20<strong>16</strong>, to propose<br />

a bill, known as the Sexual<br />

Harassment in Tertiary Education<br />

Institution Bill, which prescribes<br />

a 5 year jail term for lecturers and<br />

educators convicted of sexual<br />

harassment of either their male<br />

or female students and also ban<br />

lecturer-student relationships<br />

altogether.<br />

According to the sponsor of the<br />

Bill, Senator Ovie Omo-Agege,<br />

there was virtually no family in<br />

Nigeria that does not have someone<br />

who had been harassed or<br />

approached by a lecturer in an<br />

institution of higher learning in<br />

Nigeria. As he puts it: “Indeed<br />

there is no family in Nigeria<br />

where you don’t find a victim of<br />

sexual harassment...It is either<br />

your wife when she was younger<br />

or your daughter, your sister<br />

or even a niece who has gone<br />

through the tertiary education<br />

system at one point or the other...<br />

You will find out that they have<br />

had this brush with these lecturers<br />

who continue to see these<br />

young women as perquisite of<br />

their office as lecturers. We feel<br />

that is unacceptable. We have to<br />

put a stop to it.”<br />

At a time when progressive<br />

universities are outlawing any<br />

form of sexual or romantic relationships<br />

between students<br />

and teachers, our universities<br />

are being turned to centres of<br />

sexual harassment, rape and<br />

transactional sex. Pray, how<br />

can any meaningful knowledge<br />

be learnt and transmitted in<br />

such an environment? It is not<br />

surprising therefore that our<br />

universities are bereft of any serious<br />

academic endeavours and<br />

our so-called academics are lost<br />

in the conversations within their<br />

disciplines and have resorted to<br />

conversing among themselves in<br />

beer parlors and eateries at university<br />

staff clubs.<br />

This is a major problem in our<br />

universities and not just the underfunding<br />

because even when the<br />

universities are properly funded,<br />

we will be faced with a bigger problem<br />

– total lack of academics worth<br />

their salt but only sexual predators<br />

and lay-abouts pretending to be<br />

academics. ASUU needs to do a<br />

thorough introspection!<br />

EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD<br />

Dick Kramer - Chairman<br />

Imo Itsueli<br />

Mohammed Hayatudeen<br />

Albert Alos<br />

Funke Osibodu<br />

Afolabi Oladele<br />

Dayo Lawuyi<br />

Vincent Maduka<br />

Wole Obayomi<br />

Maneesh Garg<br />

Keith Richards<br />

Opeyemi Agbaje<br />

Amina Oyagbola<br />

Bolanle Onagoruwa<br />

Fola Laoye<br />

Chuka Mordi<br />

Sim Shagaya<br />

Mezuo Nwuneli<br />

Emeka Emuwa<br />

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Eyo Ekpo<br />

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Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

13


14 BUSINESS DAY C002D5556<br />

Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

In Association With<br />

A little hope in Sierra Leone<br />

Sierra Leone’s new president has made big promises<br />

But he may not have the money to keep them<br />

JULIUS MAADA BIO wasted<br />

no time before being sworn<br />

in as president of Sierra Leone.<br />

Just an hour and a half after<br />

his narrow election victory<br />

was announced on <strong>Apr</strong>il 4th,<br />

Mr Bio took the oath of office,<br />

forgoing the state house for a<br />

dimly lit room at the Radisson<br />

Blu hotel. The unusual circumstances<br />

were prompted by security<br />

concerns. During a long<br />

and tense campaign Mr Bio<br />

had accused the All People’s<br />

Congress (APC), the party of<br />

his opponent, Samura Kamara,<br />

of trying to assassinate him. Mr<br />

Kamara, for his part, said the<br />

vote was rigged.<br />

The election was Sierra Leone’s<br />

fourth since its civil war<br />

ended in 2002. Memories of<br />

the brutal 11-year conflict<br />

still linger. Tensions based on<br />

ethnic, political and regional<br />

divisions simmered throughout<br />

the campaign, then boiled<br />

over when the result was announced.<br />

Supporters of Mr<br />

Bio’s Sierra Leone People’s Party<br />

(SLPP) attacked followers of<br />

the APC, which previously held<br />

the presidency. Much of the<br />

violence has taken place in the<br />

SLPP’s southern strongholds.<br />

But more than 100 people have<br />

also fled Kono, a volatile swing<br />

state in the east.<br />

Mr Bio, a former general<br />

who participated in two coups<br />

in the 1990s, and who briefly<br />

took power himself in 1996,<br />

has tried to calm things down.<br />

“No Sierra Leonean should feel<br />

threatened by my ascension<br />

to power,” he has said, even<br />

promising to let APC supporters<br />

stay in their government<br />

jobs. He has called on Sierra<br />

Leone’s 7m people to reject<br />

tribalism and regionalism,<br />

which have poisoned the country’s<br />

politics. He has set a good<br />

example himself, reaching out<br />

to Mr Kamara (who still plans<br />

to challenge the result of the<br />

election). The president will<br />

need to work with the APC,<br />

which has a majority in parliament.<br />

Though it has huge mineral<br />

and diamond deposits, Sierra<br />

Leone faces big economic challenges.<br />

It is still recovering from<br />

an outbreak of Ebola in 2014,<br />

which killed 4,000 people and<br />

scared away investors. A slump<br />

in global commodity prices in<br />

2015 deepened its woes. And<br />

the APC did not help matters.<br />

During its decade-long hold<br />

on power, the party looted the<br />

country’s coffers. A government<br />

audit recently revealed<br />

that much of the money earmarked<br />

for fighting Ebola during<br />

the crisis is unaccounted<br />

for.<br />

To the delight of voters, Mr<br />

Bio pledged to tackle corruption<br />

by launching a commission<br />

to investigate past crimes<br />

and creating a special division<br />

in the country’s high court to<br />

focus on cases of graft. All<br />

government revenues will<br />

flow into a single pot, he says,<br />

making the country’s finances<br />

easier to audit.<br />

Education is another problem.<br />

Three out of five adults<br />

in Sierra Leone are unable to<br />

read or write. Though primary<br />

schools are free in theory,<br />

parents often cannot afford<br />

the books and uniforms. Mr<br />

Bio vows to provide all that,<br />

and free secondary education,<br />

with money saved by<br />

“reducing leakages”. That<br />

may be unrealistic, given the<br />

state of government finances.<br />

His transition team is taking<br />

stock of the situation. Rumours<br />

abound that the kitty<br />

is empty.<br />

So Mr Bio must convince<br />

foreign donors, such as the<br />

IMF, to trust him with their aid,<br />

much of which has been suspended<br />

or restricted because<br />

of the previous government’s<br />

failure to implement economic<br />

reforms. Funds from a $224m<br />

loan package negotiated last<br />

summer with the IMF were<br />

withheld over the APC’s failure<br />

to achieve stricter enforcement<br />

of import taxes and collection<br />

of market-rate royalties on<br />

mineral exports. Mr Bio has<br />

already made progress in both<br />

of these areas.<br />

Most Sierra Leoneans are<br />

hopeful that Mr Bio will make<br />

good on his campaign slogan,<br />

“Salone foh betteh” (Sierra<br />

Leone must improve), which<br />

continues to be heard on the<br />

streets of Freetown, the capital.<br />

If he can curb corruption a bit,<br />

then Sierra Leone may indeed<br />

get better.<br />

Mr Zuckerberg goes to Washington<br />

If Facebook will<br />

not fix itself, will<br />

Congress?<br />

The light grilling the company’s boss<br />

received on Capitol Hill suggests not<br />

“<br />

THEY ‘trust me’…dumb fucks,”<br />

Mark Zuckerberg, the boss of<br />

Facebook, wrote in an instant<br />

message to a friend in 2004, after<br />

boasting that he had personal data,<br />

including photos, e-mails and addresses,<br />

of some 4,000 of his social<br />

network’s users. He offered to share<br />

whatever information his friend<br />

wanted to see. Mr Zuckerberg may<br />

use less profane language today, but<br />

many feel he has not yet outgrown<br />

his wilful disregard for users’ privacy.<br />

On <strong>Apr</strong>il 11th he testified before testy<br />

politicians in Washington about the<br />

firm’s latest privacy controversy,<br />

first to a joint hearing of two Senate<br />

committees that lasted around four<br />

hours, and then again on <strong>Apr</strong>il 12th<br />

to a House of Representatives committee.<br />

Not since the 1990s, when<br />

Microsoft was taken to task for its<br />

monopolistic behaviour, has there<br />

been such “intense public scrutiny”<br />

of a technology firm in Washington,<br />

as Orrin Hatch, a Republican senator,<br />

informed Mr Zuckerberg.<br />

Some of his inquisitors appeared<br />

annoyed by Mr Zuckerberg’s rehearsed<br />

responses, but that did not<br />

stop many onlookers from being<br />

chuffed by his smooth, slightly robotic,<br />

performance. Facebook’s share<br />

price closed 5.7% higher after his two<br />

days on Capitol Hill. Investors may be<br />

betting that the worst of “Facegate”<br />

could be over, but it is too soon to<br />

count on it.<br />

The immediate scandal is the<br />

most acute and far-reaching crisis<br />

in Facebook’s 14-year history. Last<br />

month it was revealed by Britain’s<br />

Observer and the New York Times<br />

that a researcher from Cambridge<br />

University, Aleksandr Kogan, had<br />

obtained information about some<br />

300,000 Facebook users by encour-<br />

Continues on page 15


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

C002D5556<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

15<br />

In Association With<br />

Brittle Britain<br />

British productivity is rising at last<br />

On its current path, the country will remain a growth laggard<br />

LOW productivity growth<br />

has plagued Britain’s<br />

economy since the financial<br />

crisis. From 2010 to 20<strong>16</strong> output<br />

per hour grew, on average,<br />

by just 0.2% a year, down from<br />

2.5% between 1950 and 2007. In<br />

the G7 group of rich countries,<br />

only Italy has done worse. Productivity<br />

drives a country’s living<br />

standards in the long term. It is<br />

a relief, then, that the stagnation<br />

may at last be coming to an<br />

end. In the second half of 2017<br />

productivity grew at an annual<br />

rate of 3.4%, the fastest growth<br />

since 2005.<br />

Accelerating productivity is<br />

the latest, and most important,<br />

piece of good news on Britain’s<br />

economy. Capital spending is<br />

improving. As a share of GDP,<br />

total investment is a percentage<br />

point above its average since the<br />

crisis. Foreign firms are readily<br />

investing. A tenth of global mergers<br />

and acquisitions announced<br />

so far in <strong>2018</strong> have involved a<br />

British target. Wage growth is<br />

picking up in nominal terms<br />

and, with inflation falling, real<br />

wages may soon start to grow<br />

again.<br />

The strength of Britain’s labour<br />

market stands out. America<br />

may have a lower official unemployment<br />

rate, but nearly a fifth<br />

of people there aged between<br />

25 and 54 are not even looking<br />

for work, meaning they are not<br />

counted in the figures. Not so<br />

in Britain, where the employment<br />

rate for this age group is<br />

84%, among the highest of large<br />

economies.<br />

Inevitably in a country still<br />

riven by the referendum decision<br />

to leave the European Union,<br />

Britain’s economic performance<br />

is analysed through the prism of<br />

Brexit. Those in favour of leaving<br />

the EU gleefully recall predictions,<br />

made by the Treasury and<br />

others, of a collapse in confidence<br />

after the referendum, and then a<br />

recession. Not only have those<br />

forecasts proved wrong but, some<br />

Brexiteers say, Brexit may actually<br />

be helping the economy. On<br />

their view, productivity is rising<br />

because falling net migration<br />

from Europe has led to a tighter<br />

labour market, spurring firms to<br />

find ways to do more with less.<br />

Too soon to celebrate<br />

Not so fast. The reasons for<br />

the rise in productivity are not<br />

yet clear (see article). But there<br />

are two ways in which the recent<br />

economic news must be put into<br />

perspective.<br />

The first is that the aftermath<br />

of the referendum has coincided<br />

with a broad, sustained rise<br />

in global growth. Against that<br />

backdrop, it is not surprising<br />

that Britain’s economy has performed<br />

better than anticipated.<br />

It has nonetheless slowed. The<br />

economy grew by only 1.4% in<br />

the year to the end of 2017, down<br />

from 2% a year earlier. And it has<br />

slipped sharply relative to others.<br />

Not long ago Britain had the fastest<br />

growth in the G7 group of rich<br />

countries. Now it has the slowest.<br />

Comparing Britain’s growth with<br />

that of the world economy, one<br />

estimate puts the running cost of<br />

Brexit at 1.3% of GDP, or £300m<br />

($426m) a week. Had the global<br />

economic cycle not turned in<br />

2017, some of the more bloodcurdling<br />

forecasts made before<br />

the referendum might not have<br />

looked quite so silly.<br />

Second, the biggest downside<br />

to Brexit was never going to be<br />

immediate economic pain. If<br />

Britain leaves the single market<br />

and customs union in an<br />

orderly manner, the short-term<br />

shock should be manageable. But<br />

there is still the swingeing cost to<br />

longer-term growth from higher<br />

trade barriers. Firms selling to<br />

the continent will gradually cut<br />

Britain out of their supply chains.<br />

Britain’s workers and capital will<br />

have to be redirected to produce<br />

things that previously were imported<br />

more cheaply. Britain’s<br />

exports to Europe will cost more.<br />

With free movement curtailed, it<br />

will be harder for knowledge to<br />

flow across borders. The economy<br />

will be less efficient.<br />

Brexiteers retort that economists<br />

have been proved wrong<br />

once and will be proved wrong<br />

again. Yet the profession is much<br />

better at predicting trade flows<br />

than it is at guessing how investors<br />

will respond to events. Few<br />

economic models have had as<br />

much success in explaining the<br />

real world as the one saying that<br />

as distance between trading<br />

partners doubles, trade flows<br />

fall by roughly half. There is no<br />

replacement for frictionless trade<br />

with a single market of 450m<br />

people on Britain’s doorstep,<br />

whatever the government’s hopes<br />

for trade deals with countries, like<br />

America, that are oceans away.<br />

Reliable trade models predict<br />

long-term losses from Brexit of<br />

up to 10% of GDP, depending on<br />

how it is conducted. According to<br />

analysis by civil servants, even if<br />

Britain retained tariff-free access<br />

to the single market and maintained<br />

free movement of people,<br />

as Norway does, the eventual hit<br />

to GDP per person could be as<br />

high as 2.6%—enough to undo its<br />

growth during 2017 almost three<br />

times over.<br />

In theory, investment could<br />

boost productivity enough to<br />

outweigh the effect of lost trade.<br />

Policymakers are, slowly, getting<br />

some things right. Government<br />

investment, as a share of GDP,<br />

may soon reach its highest sustained<br />

level for 40 years. Philip<br />

Hammond, the chancellor of<br />

the exchequer, is saying some<br />

sensible things about solving<br />

Britain’s housing shortage.<br />

Yet the government is walking<br />

down a train that is speeding<br />

in the opposite direction. The<br />

effects of merely tinkering with<br />

policy will be of a different order<br />

of magnitude to those of upending<br />

Britain’s trading relationships<br />

with its neighbours. For productivity,<br />

as for so much else, how<br />

Brexit is conducted is the thing<br />

that matters most.<br />

If Facebook will not fix<br />

itself, will Congress?<br />

Continued from page 14<br />

aging them to download an app and<br />

take a survey in 2012. He then shared<br />

these data with Cambridge Analytica,<br />

a political consultancy, which reportedly<br />

made them available to others,<br />

including Donald Trump’s campaign.<br />

Some 87m Facebook users are affected,<br />

because Facebook’s policies<br />

at the time were so loose that people<br />

using a third-party’s app often shared<br />

details not only about themselves but<br />

also about their friends without their<br />

knowledge. Facebook changed its<br />

policies in 2014.<br />

These revelations are especially<br />

damning because Facebook first<br />

learned about this problem in 2015<br />

and did little to address it. In fact,<br />

instead of focusing on Cambridge<br />

Analytica’s bad behaviour, Facebook<br />

threatened to sue the Guardian Media<br />

Group, which owns the Observer,<br />

if it published the exposé. Only after<br />

a media backlash and public outcry<br />

did Facebook begin to take action. It<br />

has started making it easier for users<br />

to control their privacy settings,<br />

reduced the amount of data that are<br />

shared with third parties, and promised<br />

to audit suspicious third-party<br />

apps. But these are things that many<br />

of its users wrongly believed Facebook<br />

had long been doing anyway.<br />

Politicians and users want to<br />

know more about how Facebook will<br />

adequately safeguard people’s privacy<br />

and offer enough transparency<br />

about how it operates. While encouraging<br />

its users to overshare minutiae<br />

from their own lives, the firm has<br />

been guarded in the past about sharing<br />

details of how its extensive datacollection<br />

machine works and what it<br />

tracks beyond the data users provide<br />

directly. The company’s business<br />

depends on observing users’ online<br />

behaviour and selling their attention<br />

to advertisers, who pay money to<br />

reach specific groups of users based<br />

on minute details gleaned about their<br />

identities, their interests and where<br />

they are. This requires a delicate balancing<br />

act between catering to users,<br />

whose attention Facebook must keep,<br />

and advertisers, who pay the bills.<br />

To date the firm has mostly favoured<br />

growth over careful checks that its<br />

“community”, as it calls its 2.1bn users,<br />

is being properly protected.


<strong>16</strong> BUSINESS DAY C002D5556<br />

Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

In Association With<br />

“<br />

Escaping the maize<br />

African governments are having doubts about their staple crop<br />

Relying on maize for half one’s calories is risky—and makes for a boring diet<br />

IT’S what our forefathers<br />

used to eat,” says Kennedy<br />

Kapami, a Zambian<br />

phone salesman, rolling a<br />

ball of stiff maize porridge<br />

in his fingers. Maize is the staple<br />

food in eastern and southern<br />

Africa, where in some countries<br />

it provides over half of calories<br />

consumed. But Mr Kapami is<br />

wrong about his forefathers, or<br />

at least, his distant ones. Until<br />

the 20th century they mostly<br />

ate sorghum and millet. Maize<br />

came to Africa with the colonists.<br />

Governments now fret about its<br />

dominance.<br />

Portuguese slavers were the<br />

first to bring it to Africa. Sometimes<br />

the crop took roundabout<br />

routes. Swahili-speakers know it<br />

as mahindi (of India). Bambaraspeakers<br />

in Mali call it kaba, after<br />

the sacred site in Mecca, from<br />

where pilgrims returned with<br />

exotic foods.<br />

In southern Africa maize was<br />

grown on large estates by white<br />

settlers. After independence,<br />

governments doled out maize<br />

seed and fertiliser, even where<br />

soils were unsuitable. Towering<br />

maize stalks filled fields<br />

like Roman legions; in Zambia,<br />

the entrance to the farmers’<br />

union is held up by two columns<br />

sculpted into cobs.<br />

But using land to grow a<br />

single crop increases the risk<br />

from pests and weather. And a<br />

diverse diet is more nutritious.<br />

In February Edgar Lungu, the<br />

president of Zambia, asked<br />

“whether maize should be the<br />

ultimate crop for survival as a<br />

people”. Cultivating several different<br />

crops reduces stunting<br />

in children, says Rhoda Mofya-<br />

Mukuka of the Indaba Agricultural<br />

Policy Research Institute,<br />

a Zambian think-tank, although<br />

growing too many makes small<br />

farms inefficient.<br />

Zambia now gives farmers an<br />

electronic voucher to buy whatever<br />

farm inputs they choose.<br />

Meanwhile, in the gleaming labs<br />

of the Zambia Agricultural Research<br />

Institute, a government<br />

agency, researchers nurture<br />

shoots of disease-resistant cassava<br />

in test tubes. They have cultivated<br />

bitter-tasting sorghum,<br />

which birds don’t like but brewers<br />

do. And they have improved<br />

maize itself, developing orange<br />

varieties rich in vitamin A.<br />

The biggest push to diversify<br />

comes from climate change. In<br />

2010 researchers from Columbia<br />

and Stanford universities<br />

estimated that, by mid-century,<br />

global warming could reduce<br />

maize production in Africa by a<br />

fifth. Cassava copes better with<br />

drought and is shaking off its<br />

status as “a poor man’s crop”. But<br />

many Africans love maize, and<br />

tastes change slowly. Mr Kapami<br />

has never tried sorghum or millet.<br />

As they say in neighbouring<br />

Malawi, “Maize is life.”<br />

Shake it off<br />

The outlook for US government debt<br />

The bond-market doomsters are overstating their case<br />

THE bond market used to be<br />

the prime exhibit for those<br />

predicting low long-term<br />

economic growth. In the summer<br />

of 20<strong>16</strong> the ten-year Treasury<br />

yield briefly dipped below 1.5%, as<br />

expectations for growth and inflation<br />

sagged. Things have changed.<br />

Earlier this year the ten-year yield<br />

briefly went higher than 2.9%. Even<br />

after recent share-price gyrations, it<br />

remains around 2.8%, well up since<br />

the start of <strong>2018</strong>. The rebounding<br />

interest rate partly reflects higher<br />

confidence in global growth. Inevitably,<br />

a new set of pessimists<br />

now voice a fresh worry: that bond<br />

yields might go on rising for less<br />

welcome reasons.<br />

They point to three threats. The<br />

first is monetary policy. The Federal<br />

Reserve has raised short-term<br />

interest rates by 1.5 percentage<br />

points since December 2015. At<br />

their March meeting, rate-setters<br />

slightly upgraded forecasts of how<br />

far rates should eventually rise. Last<br />

October the Fed began shrinking its<br />

$4.5trn portfolio of assets, mostly<br />

government debt, amassed since<br />

the start of the financial crisis.<br />

Quantitative easing (QE) supposedly<br />

worked by depressing longterm<br />

interest rates. Unwinding it<br />

could push them back up.<br />

American policymakers are not<br />

the only ones tightening. Britain<br />

raised interest rates in November,<br />

and many investors expect the<br />

European Central Bank to end its<br />

QE programme this year. Economists<br />

increasingly think the “term<br />

premium”—the reward investors<br />

demand for locking their money<br />

away—is determined globally.<br />

The expectation of tighter money<br />

abroad could push American rates<br />

up, too.<br />

The second threat is fiscal policy.<br />

President Donald Trump’s tax<br />

cuts, which are expected to cost<br />

around $1trn over a decade, have<br />

deepened the hole in America’s<br />

public finances. A budget deal<br />

in March raises annual spending<br />

by at least $143bn (0.7% of GDP).<br />

Pension and health-care costs are<br />

rising. On <strong>Apr</strong>il 9th official budgetwatchers<br />

projected deficits greater<br />

than 4% of GDP every year for the<br />

next decade. Primary dealers—<br />

middlemen between governments<br />

and investors in the public-debt<br />

market—expect almost $1trn of<br />

net issuance of new debt in the 12<br />

months to September <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

The third threat comes from<br />

abroad. China and America have<br />

engaged in several rounds of setting<br />

or threatening tit-for-tat tariffs<br />

on each other’s exports. If a trade<br />

war erupts, one way China could<br />

retaliate might be to reduce its<br />

holdings of Treasuries, currently<br />

about $1.2trn.<br />

So there is much to worry the<br />

bond bears. But all three threats are<br />

somewhat overblown. Start with<br />

China. If it dumped dollar assets,<br />

it would push down the greenback,<br />

boosting American exports. That<br />

would be a strange move in a trade<br />

war. It has been reported that China<br />

could do the opposite—boost its<br />

exports by devaluing the yuan—<br />

though this too is improbable. A<br />

big devaluation would damage<br />

China’s authority around the world,<br />

and might trigger another round<br />

of capital outflows. The Chinese<br />

government has fought hard to stop<br />

these over the past two years.<br />

The Fed, meanwhile, signalled<br />

its plans to shrink its balance-sheet<br />

well in advance, so the effects of reversing<br />

QE should mostly be priced<br />

in. And the loose consensus among<br />

economists is that asset purchases<br />

brought down the ten-year yield by<br />

only about a percentage point. Not<br />

all think the effect on the way out<br />

will be as large.<br />

As for fiscal laxity, net new borrowing<br />

of nearly $1trn is relatively<br />

small compared with the gross<br />

amount of debt America regularly<br />

rolls over. (In the year to February,<br />

the Treasury issued securities<br />

worth over $9trn.) That interest<br />

rates remain low despite plentiful<br />

public borrowing indicates that<br />

safe assets are still in demand.<br />

Thank structural shifts in the world<br />

economy, such as rising life expectancy<br />

that causes more saving for<br />

retirement.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

17


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

18 BUSINESS DAY


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

COMPANIES<br />

& MARKETS<br />

Company news analysis and insight<br />

BUSINESS DAY 19<br />

Abbey Mortgage Bank<br />

recurring loss up N212.3<br />

million in FY 2017<br />

Pg. 20<br />

Wema bank records single digit<br />

profit growth in 2017​<br />

Dipo Oladehinde<br />

Why the early<br />

season results<br />

shows<br />

tier one sized<br />

banks are hitting<br />

double digits growth, tier<br />

two banks are hitting single<br />

digits as Wema Bank hits a<br />

single digit profit of N2.26 billion<br />

in full year 2017.<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> investigation<br />

showed Wema Bank recorded<br />

a drop in its profit before tax by<br />

7.38 percent to N3.01 billion<br />

in the period under review<br />

of 2017 from N3.25 billion in<br />

20<strong>16</strong>. Also, the profit after tax<br />

went down by 11.72 percent<br />

to N2.26 billion in 2017 from<br />

N2.56 billion in 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

“Despite the slow start to<br />

the year, 2017 recorded significant<br />

progress, highlighted by<br />

the introduction of the Investor<br />

& Exporters (I&E) window<br />

and recovery in oil prices,”<br />

Segun Oloketuyi, Managing<br />

Director and CEO of Wema<br />

Bank said.<br />

“Our target market is the<br />

upwardly mobile youth segment,<br />

the young entrepreneurs,<br />

the young professionals<br />

and the financially excluded,<br />

where we continue to leverage<br />

incremental innovation<br />

and integral capabilities,” the<br />

Wema Bank MD said.<br />

Analysts are concern if<br />

other midsized banks will<br />

continue in the single digit<br />

profit like Wema as another<br />

midsized bank First City Monument<br />

Bank (FCMB) recorded<br />

a single digit profit of N9.4 billion<br />

in its full financial year of<br />

2017 compare to N14.3 billion<br />

in 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

During the year under<br />

review, Wema Bank’s loan<br />

to deposit ratio was 84.82<br />

percent from 70.86 percent as<br />

at December 20<strong>16</strong>, while the<br />

Non-Performing Loans (NPL)<br />

Ratio closed at 3.52 percent in<br />

2017 against 5.07 percent as at<br />

December 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

Also, the NPL Coverage<br />

Ratio was 136.98 percent as at<br />

December 31, 2017 compared<br />

with 100 percent as at December<br />

20<strong>16</strong>, while the Capital<br />

Adequacy Ratio (CAR) stood<br />

at 14.32 percent in the period<br />

under review.<br />

Total assets depreciated<br />

by 8.46 percent to N388.15<br />

billion in 2017 from N424.04<br />

billion in 20<strong>16</strong> while customers’<br />

deposits declined by 10.18<br />

percent to N254.46 billion<br />

in 2017 from N283.30 billion<br />

in 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

The bank’s earnings<br />

from non-interest income<br />

remained strong, growing by<br />

24.44 percent from N9.80 billion<br />

in 20<strong>16</strong> to N12.19 billion<br />

in 2017; surpassing its 2017<br />

guidance of 19 percent growth<br />

rate. Also, shareholders’ funds<br />

increased in 2017 by 2.31 percent<br />

to N49.62 billion in 2017<br />

from N48.50 billion in 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

Interest income of the<br />

bank grew by 19.10 percent<br />

to N53.07 billion as against<br />

N44.56 billion reported in<br />

20<strong>16</strong>. Net Interest Income<br />

also increased from N18.65<br />

billion in 20<strong>16</strong> to N19.77 billion<br />

in 2017. Trading income<br />

for the reporting period grew<br />

by over 100 percent to N4.98<br />

billion as against N2.12 billion<br />

in 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

The innovative bank, which<br />

launched ALAT, Africa’s first<br />

fully digital bank, confirmed<br />

the growth of its gross earnings<br />

by 20.07 percent from N54.36<br />

billion in FY20<strong>16</strong> to N65.27<br />

billion in FY2017.<br />

The growth was supported<br />

by the launch of ALAT,<br />

enhancing Wema Bank’s<br />

already existing alternate<br />

platforms which recorded<br />

a combined growth rate of<br />

205.67 percent in transactions<br />

executed and with an<br />

estimated 30,000 accounts<br />

opened monthly.<br />

“We approached the money<br />

market in November 2017 to<br />

raise N25 billion in two series<br />

under a commercial paper<br />

program; series 1 N10 billion<br />

– 182-day tenor and series 2:<br />

N15 billion- 270-day tenor.<br />

Given the relative decline in<br />

interest rates and possible<br />

growth within the economy,<br />

the bank will be re-opening<br />

the 2nd series of its N50 billion<br />

debt issuance program. This<br />

should commence from the<br />

second quarter of the year,”<br />

Oloketuyi added.<br />

In recent times, there<br />

have been concerns raised<br />

about the status of midsized<br />

banks operating in Nigeria<br />

as foreign financial agencies<br />

and state owned Central<br />

Bank of Nigeria (CBN) are<br />

worried about the survival<br />

of small and mid-size banks<br />

in the country, they express<br />

concern about its over exposure<br />

to the oil industry,<br />

which is still recovering from<br />

the 2014 price crash and the<br />

recent recession.<br />

In its recent Credit Outlook,<br />

Moody’s said Nigeria’s midsize<br />

banks face greater risk of<br />

losing business to financial<br />

technology (fintech) companies<br />

because they tend to<br />

provide retail banking and<br />

payment services to individuals<br />

and small and midsize<br />

enterprises.<br />

According to Moody’s,<br />

these financial institutions’<br />

lower capital over the years<br />

constrain their ability to grow<br />

their business in key sectors of<br />

the nation’s economy.<br />

The report by Moody’s<br />

pointed out that mid-size<br />

banks in Nigeria were limiting<br />

their loss-absorption capacity<br />

against unexpected losses,<br />

and that this would restrain<br />

their asset growth and revenue<br />

generation.<br />

“These financial institutions’<br />

lower capital over the<br />

years constrains their ability<br />

to grow their business in<br />

key sectors of the nation’s<br />

economy,” Moody noted.<br />

Fitch Ratings in February<br />

this year disclosed a number<br />

of Nigeria’s tier-2 banks (banks<br />

with total assets less than N2<br />

trillion) will fall below the capital<br />

adequacy ratio of the CBN<br />

should the Naira depreciate to<br />

N450 per dollar.<br />

Also, International Monetary<br />

Fund (IMF) last month<br />

released its Nigeria country<br />

report, noting that tier-I<br />

banks’ capital adequacy ratio<br />

had declined to 10.8 per cent<br />

in September 2017 from <strong>16</strong>.3<br />

per cent in December 20<strong>16</strong><br />

and 17.1 per cent in 2013, and<br />

was now at its lowest level in<br />

the past five years.<br />

IMF has advised the CBN<br />

to carry an asset quality review<br />

of Nigerian banks to determine<br />

their potential capital<br />

need.<br />

Recall, the Washington<br />

DC-based agency had last<br />

year advised the Nigerian<br />

regulator to recapitalise the<br />

banking industry against the<br />

backdrop of the capital deterioration<br />

the industry had<br />

experienced as a result of the<br />

2015 fall in global oil prices and<br />

the recession.<br />

Also last Tuesday, the<br />

CBN released its bank stress<br />

test results, which showed<br />

the banking system’s capital<br />

vulnerability is driven by<br />

midsize banks’ weaker capital<br />

conditions.<br />

The CBN said the decline<br />

in the CARs was attributable<br />

to the challenges in the oil and<br />

gas sector coupled with the<br />

slow recovery in the domestic<br />

economy, which resulted to a<br />

rise in NPLs and capital deterioration.<br />

The Nigerian banking industry<br />

has about 30 per cent<br />

of loan portfolio in the oil and<br />

gas sector.<br />

NNPC to support local investors on advancement of technology<br />

HARRISON EDEH, Abuja<br />

The Group Managing<br />

Director of the Nigerian<br />

National Petroleum<br />

Corporation<br />

(NNPC), Maikanti Baru, has<br />

said that the corporation was<br />

committed to supporting local<br />

investors towards growing the<br />

engineering profession, even<br />

as he noted that this would<br />

in turn ensure technological<br />

advancement of the nation’s<br />

oil and gas industry.<br />

Baru disclosed this while<br />

speaking at the induction ceremony<br />

of the Group Managing<br />

Director of ARCO Group, Alfred<br />

Irabor Okoigun, with the Honourary<br />

Fellowship of the Nigerian<br />

Academy of Engineering<br />

(NAE), in Lagos, recently.<br />

“NNPC will continue to<br />

support ARCO Group and<br />

many other indigenous companies<br />

alike so that your story<br />

and the story of others will<br />

continue to be savoured by<br />

generations yet unborn,” Baru<br />

said in a statement.<br />

Okoigun established ARCO<br />

Petrochemical Engineering<br />

Company Ltd in 1980 after<br />

a two-year stint as a Material<br />

Management Officer with<br />

NNPC’s Warri Refinery and<br />

Petrochemical Company<br />

(WRPC).<br />

The company has since<br />

grown over the last three decades<br />

to become a conglomerate<br />

that not only deals in<br />

engineering and maintenance,<br />

but has also diversified into<br />

marine logistics, maritime<br />

security, pipelines & facilities<br />

inspection, property development<br />

and consumer power<br />

generation.<br />

Congratulating Alfred on<br />

his fellowship by the nation’s<br />

foremost engineering academy,<br />

Baru said he was a leading<br />

example in the development<br />

and promotion of engineering<br />

education in the country.<br />

“This fellowship is a testament<br />

of your distinguished<br />

leadership and contribution<br />

to the Engineering profession<br />

as well as your outstanding<br />

achievements and contributions<br />

towards the well-being<br />

of the society at large,” Baru<br />

added. He also commended<br />

the NAE for promoting policies<br />

that ensure the advancement of<br />

Science, Engineering, Technology<br />

and Innovation for a better<br />

economy and society.<br />

He said in the academy’s<br />

twenty-one years of existence,<br />

it has proven to be the national<br />

“Think Tank” for Engineering<br />

and Technology, adding that<br />

“we in the NNPC are proud to<br />

be associated with you.”<br />

Speaking earlier, the President<br />

of the Academy, J. O.<br />

Maduka described the fellowship<br />

conferred on Okoigun as<br />

well-deserved following his<br />

contributions to the development<br />

of Engineering education<br />

in Nigeria.<br />

She charged him to be a<br />

good ambassador of the Academy<br />

by striving to do more for<br />

the Engineering profession as<br />

several young engineers are<br />

looking up to him for his remarkable<br />

achievements.<br />

In his lecture at the occasion,<br />

former Vice Chancellor<br />

of University of Lagos, Oyewusi<br />

Ibidapo-Obe called on innovators<br />

in the Engineering profession<br />

to look towards providing<br />

solutions that would make the<br />

world a better place for all.


20<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

COMPANIES & MARKETS<br />

Abbey Mortgage Bank recurring loss<br />

up N212.3 million in FY 2017<br />

C002D5556<br />

Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

Endurance Okafor<br />

Abbey Mortgage Bank<br />

Plc, one of the listed<br />

firm in the Nigeria<br />

Stock Exchange<br />

(NSE) recorded loss<br />

for the Full Year ended December<br />

31, 2017. This is the second<br />

consecutive year the Mortgage<br />

Bank recorded a loss after it<br />

reported profit in 2015.<br />

It reported loss after tax expense<br />

of N212.3 million for the<br />

year 2017. This was 44.4 million<br />

or 26 percent increase of loss<br />

when compared to the reported<br />

loss of N<strong>16</strong>7.9 million recorded<br />

in the fiscal year 20<strong>16</strong>, as compiled<br />

from company’s financial<br />

statement.<br />

The Mortgage Bank’s recurring<br />

losses can be traced<br />

to its low operating income<br />

compared to a high operating<br />

expense.<br />

The Mortgage bank’s operating<br />

income for the year 2017 was<br />

up N919.2 million, an increase<br />

of about N44.7 million when<br />

compared toN874.5 million<br />

recorded in 20<strong>16</strong>, however, its<br />

operating expense was N929.1<br />

million in the year under review,<br />

compared to a lower operating<br />

expense in the previous year at<br />

N907.1 million.<br />

Analysis by <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

shows that the Mortgage bank’s<br />

low revenue could be as a result<br />

of low patronage from Nigerians,<br />

meaning not many people go<br />

to take mortgage loans from<br />

the bank. This is evident in the<br />

interest income.<br />

A breakdown of the financial<br />

report revealed a record of<br />

N1.2 billion as interest income<br />

in 2017 compared to its N960.8<br />

million recorded in the financial<br />

year 20<strong>16</strong>. Its interest expense<br />

for the year under review was<br />

N490.7 million compared to<br />

N344.4 million recorded in the<br />

previous year<br />

This brought the net interest<br />

income to N764.9 million in<br />

2017 as against N6<strong>16</strong>.4 million<br />

net interest incomes reported<br />

in comparable period of 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

Experts in the mortgage<br />

industry also linked the bank’s<br />

performance to lack of general<br />

liquidity, short term deposits<br />

for long term funds, and accumulated<br />

non-performing loans<br />

which are running into billions<br />

in the sector.<br />

Abbey Mortgage Bank however,<br />

recorded N 177.9 million<br />

losses before taxation in contrast<br />

to N134.4 million recorded<br />

in the previous year.<br />

Meanwhile, the bank acquired<br />

total assets worth N12.2<br />

billion. This is slightly below the<br />

N12.4billion assets it acquired<br />

in the previous year.<br />

Its total liabilities for the<br />

year remained almost the same<br />

as that of 20<strong>16</strong> at N6.0 billion.<br />

Experts in the sector stressed<br />

that the Nigeria Mortgage Refinance<br />

Company (NMRC)<br />

seems to have failed in its mandate<br />

to raise long-term funds<br />

from the domestic and foreign<br />

capital market, as it public<br />

purpose is in developing the<br />

primary and secondary mortgage<br />

markets.<br />

Although, the fact that the<br />

real estate sector was still in<br />

recession could not be ignored<br />

when <strong>BusinessDay</strong> spoke to<br />

analysts about the performance<br />

of the Mortgage Banks in the<br />

country.<br />

Growth in the Mortgage<br />

industry is seen to be at a slow<br />

pace. Aside the difficulty of low<br />

liquidity in the sector, the problem<br />

of Nigerians not earning<br />

enough income to qualify them<br />

to take up a mortgage is another<br />

setback witnessed in the sector.<br />

Analyst advised the inclusion<br />

of the informal sector into<br />

the mortgage industry in order<br />

for them to breakthrough, as the<br />

larger market are in the informal<br />

sector.<br />

Abbey Mortgage Bank is one<br />

of the seven national Primary<br />

Mortgage Banks (PMB) licensed<br />

by the Central Bank of Nigeria<br />

and Federal Mortgage Bank of<br />

Nigeria (FMBN). The recent<br />

recapitalization exercise saw the<br />

down size from 105 mortgage<br />

banks to only 34 now surviving.<br />

Abbey Mortgage Bank Plc<br />

focuses on providing economical<br />

housing units for interested<br />

home seekers, developers and<br />

cooperatives who desire a wellstructured<br />

mortgage offer.<br />

MTNF, Kaduna partner to tackle infant, maternal mortality<br />

Lanatu Shelton<br />

The Kaduna State government<br />

and the MTN<br />

Foundation, alongside<br />

other relevant healthcare<br />

agencies, recently pledged<br />

to work collaboratively to tackle<br />

the menace of infant and maternal<br />

mortality in the state.<br />

The partnership, announced<br />

at the MTNF Yellow Heart<br />

Health Forum in Kaduna, is a<br />

demonstration of MTNF’s commitment<br />

to reduce maternal and<br />

child mortality by increasing<br />

awareness of the phenomenon<br />

in Nigeria and aligning with<br />

global efforts to meet the health<br />

targets of Sustainable Development<br />

Goals (SDGs).<br />

Speaking on MTNF’s decision<br />

to support the Kaduna<br />

State on this initiative, Danladi<br />

Mohammed, director, MTNF,<br />

said, “The Foundation is indeed<br />

excited to go into a partnership<br />

that brightens the lives of<br />

people, especially within the<br />

community where it operates.<br />

“We take out time to identify<br />

with the plight of members of<br />

the community where we carry<br />

out our operations and we are<br />

sensitive to these plights. It is<br />

because of this that the Foundation<br />

created a mandate to<br />

spend towards improving the<br />

state of healthcare, education<br />

and economic empowerment.<br />

“Kaduna State is part of the<br />

six states selected for the MTNF<br />

Yellow Heart initiative, it is a<br />

laudable initiative and we are<br />

looking forward to a healthy<br />

collaboration with the Government<br />

and the good people of<br />

Kaduna state. We hope to use<br />

the Yellow Heart initiative to address<br />

predominant issues such<br />

as attitude and cultural practice<br />

that hinder women and children<br />

from accessing healthcare<br />

services in the society.”<br />

While appreciating the<br />

Foundation for the yellow heart<br />

initiative, Paul Dogo, commissioner<br />

for health, Kaduna<br />

State, said the state was happy<br />

to partner the Foundation on<br />

the initiative.<br />

The commissioner, represented<br />

by the permanent secretary,<br />

Kaduna State Ministry of<br />

Health, Shehu Usman, said the<br />

initiative aligned with what the<br />

state government was doing to<br />

improve healthcare.<br />

“For the first time in the history<br />

of the state, we have a government<br />

that is equipping and<br />

renovating 255 healthcare facilities<br />

across the state. When the<br />

government came on board the<br />

first bill that was passed was the<br />

bill to have primary health care<br />

under one roof, that is through<br />

an integrated approach. Since<br />

then, the state government has<br />

created specialised hospitals to<br />

cater to the varying healthcare<br />

needs of the people.<br />

“These are some of the initiatives<br />

of the state Government<br />

towards improving healthcare<br />

in the state and we are happy<br />

about the yellow heart initiative<br />

which we promise to give our<br />

best support,” he said.<br />

Commenting on what the<br />

partnership means for the state,<br />

wife of the deputy governor,<br />

Ladi Barnabas, said the initiative<br />

would immensely help to<br />

improve the health and survival<br />

rate of women and children in<br />

the state, while urging women to<br />

take full advantage of the intervention<br />

and come out en-masse<br />

for the health awareness walk.<br />

The Yellow heart launch<br />

in Kaduna featured a workshop<br />

where experts encouraged<br />

mothers and expectant mothers<br />

to exclusively breastfeed<br />

their newborns and ensure<br />

adequate routine immunisation<br />

for them to protect them<br />

from preventable childhood<br />

diseases, distribution of delivery<br />

kits to pregnant women, as well<br />

as an awareness walk tagged<br />

“Walk for Life.”


Monday 09 <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

COMPANIES & MARKETS<br />

BUSINESS DAY 21<br />

Business Event<br />

L-R: Leke Pitan; MD, Bank of Industry , Gloria Elemo, DG/CEO, Federal Institute of Industrial<br />

Research, Oshodi, Dele Oyeku, director, extension & linkage, FIIRO, Lanre Shonekan, MD/CEO,<br />

Lashone Link Communications,. Okeowo Oderinde, director, finance & accounts, FIIRO, during<br />

a courtesy visit to BoI recently in Lagos.<br />

L-R: Olufunwa Akinmade, group head, retail and SME; Titilayo Abraham, group head, corporate<br />

planning and strategy; Bonaventure Okhaimo, general manager,product and channels directorate,<br />

and Ebenezer kolawole, executive director, finance and operations all of Unity Bank during the official<br />

launch of ’’Unifi’’ by the bank in Lagos.<br />

Pic by Pius Okeosisi<br />

L-R:Samuel Ikhuoriah, manager, personal lending, Page Financials; Olajumoke Olusoga, head of<br />

strategy and corporate transformation, Page Financials; Sorinmade Adebayo, MD/CEO, Blue Bond<br />

Projects and Services; Segun Akintemi, chief executive officer, Page Financials, and Samuel Zion,<br />

manager, Kedi Healthcare, at the official unveiling of Page Financials Branch Office and launch<br />

of Page Credit Card In Opebi, Lagos.<br />

L-R: Aniete Ichie, head, sponsorship, HR Expo Africa; Dayo Olomu, Vice chairman, Chartered<br />

Institute of Personnel & Development, South London; Kunbi Adeoti, divisional director, human<br />

resources, Leadway Assurance, and Taiwo Ajayi, member, steering committee, HR Expo Africa,<br />

at the opening day of the HR Expo Africa, at Landmark Event Centre in Lagos.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

22 BUSINESS DAY<br />

Live @ the Stock exchange<br />

Prices for Securities Traded as of Friday 13 <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

Company<br />

Company<br />

Market cap(nm) Price (N) Change Trades Volume Market cap(nm) Price (N) Change Trades Volume<br />

PRICES FOR MAIN BOARD SECURITIES (Equities)


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

23


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

24 BUSINESS DAY<br />

Access Bank Rateswatch<br />

KEY MACROECONOMIC INDICATORS<br />

Indicators Current Figures Comments<br />

GDP Growth (%) 1.92 Q4 2017 — higher by 0.52% compared to 1.40% in Q3 2017<br />

Broad Money Supply (M2) (N’ trillion) 24.02 Increased by 0.79% in Feb’ <strong>2018</strong> from N23.83 trillion in Jan <strong>2018</strong><br />

Credit to Private Sector (N’ trillion) 22.62 Increased by 2.88% in Feb’ <strong>2018</strong> from N21.99 trillion in Jan <strong>2018</strong><br />

Currency in Circulation (N’ trillion) 1.94 Decreased by 0.42% in Feb’ <strong>2018</strong> from N1.95 trillion in Jan <strong>2018</strong><br />

Inflation rate (%) (y-o-y) 13.34 Declined to 13.34% in Mar’ <strong>2018</strong> from 14.33% in Feb’<strong>2018</strong><br />

Monetary Policy Rate (%) 14 Raised to 14% in July ’20<strong>16</strong> from 12%<br />

Interest Rate (Asymmetrical Corridor) 14 (+2/-5) Lending rate changed to <strong>16</strong>% & Deposit rate 9%<br />

External Reserves (US$ million) 46.75 <strong>Apr</strong>il 9, <strong>2018</strong> figure — an increase of 0.52% from <strong>Apr</strong>il start<br />

Oil Price (US$/Barrel) 68.14 <strong>Apr</strong>il 13, <strong>2018</strong> figure - a decrease of 1.30% from the prior week<br />

Oil Production mbpd (OPEC) 1.81 Mar’ <strong>2018</strong> figure — an increase of 1.12% from Feb’<strong>2018</strong> figure<br />

STOCK MARKET<br />

Indicators Friday Friday Change(%)<br />

13/04/18 6/04/18<br />

NSE ASI 40,928.70 40,841.14 0.21<br />

Market Cap(N’tr) 14.78 14.75 0.21<br />

Volume (bn) 0.17 0.50 (66.70)<br />

Value (N’bn) 2.04 5.85 (65.11)<br />

MONEY MARKET<br />

NIBOR<br />

Tenor Friday Rate Friday Rate Change<br />

(%) (%) (Basis Point)<br />

13/04/18 6/04/18<br />

OBB 2.33 3.67 (134)<br />

O/N 2.92 4.00 (108)<br />

CALL 4.94 8.94<br />

(400)<br />

30 Days 14.43 14.90 (47)<br />

90 Days 15.27 15.68 (41)<br />

FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKET<br />

Market Friday Friday<br />

1 Month<br />

BOND MARKET<br />

AVERAGE YIELDS<br />

Tenor Friday Friday<br />

Change<br />

(%) (%) (Basis Point)<br />

13/04/18 6/04/18<br />

3-Year 0.00 0.00 0<br />

5-Year 13.33 13.56 (23)<br />

7-Year 12.95 13.72 (77)<br />

10-Year 13.35 13.62 (28)<br />

20-Year 13.42 13.65 (23)<br />

Disclaimer<br />

This report is based on information obtained from various sources believed to be<br />

reliable and no representation is made that it is accurate or complete. Reasonable care<br />

has been taken in preparing this document. Access Bank Plc shall not take responsibility<br />

or liability for errors or fact or for any opinion expressed herein .This document is for<br />

information purposes and private circulation only and may not be reproduced,<br />

distributed or published by any recipient for any purpose without prior express consent<br />

of Access Bank Plc.<br />

Sources: CBN, Financial Market Dealers Association of Nigeria, NSE and<br />

Access Bank Economic Intelligence Group computation.<br />

NIGERIAN INTERBANK TREASURY BILLS TRUE YIELDS<br />

Tenor Friday Friday Change<br />

(%) (%) (Basis Point)<br />

13/04/18 6/04/18<br />

1 Mnth 12.91 13.90 (99)<br />

3 Mnths 13.12 13.20 (9)<br />

6 Mnths 13.76 14.67 (91)<br />

9 Mnths 14.32 14.59 (27)<br />

(N/$) (N/$) Rate (N/$) 12 Mnths 14.86 14.90 (3)<br />

13/04/18 6/04/18 13/03/18<br />

Official (N) 305.55 305.60 305.75<br />

Inter-Bank (N) 337.27 336.48 335.37<br />

BDC (N) 360.00 359.81 360.00<br />

Parallel (N) 363.00 362.00 362.00<br />

COMMODITIES MARKET<br />

Indicators 13/04/18 1-week YTD<br />

Change Change<br />

(%) (%)<br />

Energy<br />

Crude Oil $/bbl) 68.14 (1.30)<br />

5.71<br />

Natural Gas ($/MMBtu) 2.70 0.00 (11.65)<br />

Agriculture<br />

Cocoa ($/MT) 2,555.00 4.20 31.97<br />

Coffee ($/lb.) 120.00 2.17 (7.83)<br />

Cotton ($/lb.) 83.45 1.11 7.68<br />

Sugar ($/lb.) 12.20<br />

(1.53) (20.42)<br />

Wheat ($/bu.) 491.50 5.02 13.38<br />

Metals<br />

Gold ($/t oz.) 1,337.39 0.37 1.51<br />

Silver ($/t oz.) <strong>16</strong>.53 0.92 (3.84)<br />

Copper ($/lb.) 305.55 (0.02) (6.79)<br />

ACCESS BANK NIGERIAN GOV’T BOND INDEX<br />

Indicators Friday Friday Change<br />

(%) (%) (Basis Point)<br />

13/04/18 6/04/18<br />

Index 2,644.27 2,623.02 0.81<br />

Mkt Cap Gross (N'tr) 8.88 8.81 0.79<br />

Mkt Cap Net (N'tr) 5.81 5.75 1.03<br />

YTD return (%) 7.65 6.78 0.87<br />

YTD return (%)(US $) -47.46 -48.35 0.89<br />

TREASURY BILLS (MATURITIES)<br />

Tenor Amount Rate (%) Date<br />

(N' million)<br />

91 Day 9,520 11.75 4-<strong>Apr</strong>-<strong>2018</strong><br />

182 Day 17,601 12.7 4-<strong>Apr</strong>-<strong>2018</strong><br />

364 Day 68,080 13.04 4-<strong>Apr</strong>-<strong>2018</strong><br />

Market Analysis and Outlook: <strong>Apr</strong>il 13 - <strong>Apr</strong>il 20, <strong>2018</strong><br />

Global Economy<br />

In the Eurozone, the trade surplus with the rest of<br />

the world widened in February as imports saw a<br />

faster decline than exports. According to the<br />

European Union's statistics agency (Eurostat),<br />

exports of goods from the single currency area fell<br />

2.3% from January, the second straight month of<br />

decline. However, imports of goods fell more<br />

rapidly - by 3.1% - leaving the Eurozone with a<br />

surplus of 21.0 billion euros ($25.9 billion), up from<br />

20.2 billion euros in January. In a separate<br />

development, Japanese business sentiment<br />

worsened for the first time in two years in the first<br />

quarter. The Bank of Japan's Tankan report - a<br />

quarterly survey of about 10,000 companies -<br />

s h o w e d a r e a d i n g o f 2 4 a m o n g m a j o r<br />

manufacturers in its March survey against 26 in<br />

the December report. Confidence fell among<br />

chemicals, electrical machinery makers and other<br />

exporters, likely due to the Yen’s recent<br />

appreciation. In another development, India’s<br />

consumer inflation eased to the lowest level in five<br />

months in March as food and fuel prices cooled,<br />

government data showed. The consumer-price<br />

index rose 4.28% from a year earlier, slowing from<br />

February’s 4.44% increase. Food prices climbed<br />

2.81% from a year earlier, decelerating from a<br />

3.26% rise in February while fuel prices rose<br />

5.73%, slower than February’s 6.8% increase.<br />

Despite the decline, the current level of inflation<br />

remains higher than the Reserve Bank of India's<br />

(RBI) 4% medium-term target. Elsewhere,<br />

Moody's rating agency affirmed Brazil's 'Ba2'<br />

credit rating and raised the country's outlook to<br />

'stable' from 'negative. In a statement, Moody's<br />

said it made the revision mainly because of the<br />

higher-than-expected short and medium-term<br />

economic growth prospects in the country as well<br />

as the expectation that the winner of this year's<br />

election in October will approve fiscal reforms to<br />

cut government spending.<br />

Local Economy<br />

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) which measures<br />

inflation rose by 13.34% year-on-year in the<br />

month of March <strong>2018</strong>, which is 0.99% points less<br />

than the 14.33% recorded in February <strong>2018</strong>. This<br />

represents the fourteenth consecutive month of<br />

decline in the rate of inflation since January 2017.<br />

The food index rose by <strong>16</strong>.08% (year-on-year) in<br />

March, slightly lower than 17.59% recorded in<br />

February, thus indicating declining pressure in the<br />

prices of food items. The core sub-index, which<br />

excludes prices of farm produce increased by<br />

11.2%, 0.5% points lower than 11.7% in February.<br />

During the month, the highest increases were<br />

recorded in prices of clothing materials, garments<br />

and other articles of clothing and clothing<br />

accessories, vehicle spare parts, fuel and<br />

lubricants for personal transport equipment,<br />

actual and imputed rentals for housing, passenger<br />

transport by road, hairdressing salons and<br />

personal grooming establishments, shoe and<br />

other footwear, maintenance and repair of<br />

personal transport equipment and paramedical<br />

services. In a separate development, the monthly<br />

business expectations survey report by CBN<br />

showed that optimism by firms for the month of<br />

March was higher compared to the previous<br />

month. The business outlook index improved to<br />

2 4 . 5 f r o m 1 4 . 5 r e c o r d e d i n F e b r u a r y .<br />

R e s p o n d e n t s f r o m s e r v i c e s , i n d u s t r i a l ,<br />

wholesale/retail trade and construction sectors<br />

expressed optimism on own operations in the<br />

current month with indices of 3.4, 2.2, 1.2 and 0.5,<br />

respectively when compared with 1.9, 2.5, -0.3<br />

and -0.5 in February <strong>2018</strong>, respectively. The<br />

outlook on the volume of total order, business<br />

activity and financial conditions (working capital)<br />

stood at <strong>16</strong>.0, 13.3, and 7.6 index points<br />

respectively, indicating an improvement in<br />

relation to its outlook in February <strong>2018</strong> which was<br />

2.2, 7.1, and 3.8 respectively. Insufficient power<br />

supply, high interest rate, unfavourable economic<br />

climate, unclear economic laws, financial<br />

problems, insufficient demand and unfavourable<br />

political climate were identified as the major<br />

factors constraining business activity in the<br />

current month. The exchange rate is also<br />

expected to appreciate in the current and next<br />

months, borrowing rates to rise while inflation is<br />

expected to fall.<br />

Stock Market<br />

Trading activities at the local bourse improved<br />

marginally in the week ended <strong>Apr</strong>il 13, <strong>2018</strong>. The All<br />

Share Index (ASI) gained marginally by 0.2% or<br />

87.56 points to close at 40,928.70 points from<br />

40,841.14 points the previous week. Similarly,<br />

market capitalization rose by 0.2% to close at<br />

N14.78 trillion from N14.75 trillion the previous<br />

week. The positive performance in the market was<br />

aided by stocks in the industrial goods, banking<br />

and oil & gas sectors. This week we expect bargain<br />

hunting to continue as attractive entry<br />

opportunities remain in the market.<br />

Money Market<br />

Money market rates moderated for the third<br />

consecutive week due to inflow from retail<br />

Secondary Market Intervention Sales (SMIS)<br />

refund of about N100 billion. Short-dated<br />

placements such as Open Buy Back (OBB) and<br />

Over Night (O/N) rates further declined to<br />

2.33% and 2.92% from 3.67% and 4%<br />

respectively the previous week. Longer dated<br />

placements also trended downwards. The 30-<br />

day and 90-day NIBOR closed lower at 14.43%<br />

and 15.27% from 14.90% and 15.68% the prior<br />

week. This week, rates may trend upwards due<br />

to expected Open Market Operation (OMO)<br />

auction.<br />

Foreign Exchange Market<br />

The naira-dollar exchange rate at the interbank<br />

window depreciated marginally by 79kobo to close<br />

at N337.27/$ from N336.48/$ the previous week.<br />

At the parallel market, the local currency also<br />

depreciated marginally by N1 to N363/$ from the<br />

previous week’s rate of N362/$. The naira<br />

however appreciated slightly at the official market<br />

to N305.55/$ from N305.60/$ the previous week.<br />

The relative stability of the naira to the dollar may<br />

be attributed to the sustained intervention of the<br />

apex bank. This week, we expect the naira will<br />

remain around prevailing levels.<br />

Bond Market<br />

Bond yields trended downwards for the second<br />

consecutive week due to increase in demand and<br />

sustained moderation in inflation. Yields on the<br />

five-, seven-, ten- and twenty- year debt papers<br />

settled at 13.33%, 12.95%, 13.35% and 13.42%<br />

from 13.56%, 13.72%, 13.62% and 13.65%<br />

respectively the previous week. The Access Bank<br />

Bond index rose by 21.24 points or 0.81% to close<br />

at 2,644.27 points from 2,623.02 points the<br />

previous week. This week, the direction of yields<br />

would likely be determined by the new bond<br />

auction calendar.<br />

Commodities Market<br />

Oil prices climbed last week as rising tensions in<br />

the Middle East continued to stoke concerns over<br />

potential supply disruptions in the region. The<br />

price of the Organization of the Petroleum<br />

Exporting Countries (OPEC) basket of crudes<br />

added $3.55, or 5.45%, to $68.73 a barrel, settling<br />

th<br />

at its highest since January 25 , <strong>2018</strong>. In a similar<br />

vein, precious commodities prices surged as<br />

escalating geopolitical risks saw investors seeking<br />

safe haven assets. Gold prices ascended by $4.93<br />

to $1,337.39 an ounce, while silver price grew by<br />

15 cents to $<strong>16</strong>.53. This week we anticipate oil<br />

prices will remain close to prevailing levels amidst<br />

rising tensions over military escalation in Syria. For<br />

precious metals, a combination of concerns over<br />

ongoing trade tensions between the U.S. and<br />

China and the prospect of a U.S. military strike in<br />

Syria will sustain safe haven demand and push<br />

prices higher.<br />

MONTHLY MACRO ECONOMIC FORECASTS<br />

Variables <strong>Apr</strong>’18 May’18 June’18<br />

Exchange Rate<br />

(Official) (N/$) 336.72 337.38 337.90<br />

Inflation Rate (%) 12.67 11.89 11.5<br />

Crude Oil Price<br />

(US$/Barrel) 68 67 67<br />

For enquiries, contact: Rotimi Peters (Team Lead, Economic Intelligence) (01) 2712123 rotimi.peters@accessbankplc.com


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

25


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

26 BUSINESS DAY


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

C002D5556<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

27


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

28 BUSINESS DAY<br />

This is M NEY<br />

A daily guide to your Personal Finance<br />

• Savings<br />

• Travel<br />

• Debt & Borrowing<br />

• Utilities<br />

• Managing your Tax<br />

Reasons why you should<br />

have health insurance<br />

As important<br />

and beneficial<br />

as health insurance<br />

is, it is sad<br />

to find that the<br />

level of penetration in Nigeria<br />

is still less than 5 percent.<br />

It appears that the major<br />

reason for this is ignorance.<br />

Many Nigerians have never<br />

heard about health insurance,<br />

have no idea how it<br />

works – let alone its benefits<br />

– and therefore have<br />

not made any attempt to<br />

purchase it for themselves<br />

or their families.<br />

Here are the top seven<br />

reasons why you should<br />

have health insurance:<br />

You’re Protected When<br />

You Need Urgent and Unexpected<br />

Medical Attention<br />

Sickness and injuries do<br />

not always give advance<br />

notice. With a health insurance<br />

policy in place it is<br />

comforting to know that<br />

you can have access to good<br />

quality medical care when<br />

you fall ill unexpectedly,<br />

or when you’re injured in<br />

an accident and require<br />

urgent medical attention.<br />

Especially if this happens<br />

at a time when you’re not<br />

financially buoyant or in a<br />

position to be able to pay<br />

your hospital bill from your<br />

pocket.<br />

You Have Access To Better<br />

Quality Health Service<br />

With a health insurance<br />

policy in place, you are<br />

exposed to a wide range<br />

of options of care providers<br />

(medical facilities) to<br />

choose from. You can decide<br />

to choose an upscale provider<br />

(depending on your<br />

particular plan) which you<br />

might ordinarily not be able<br />

to afford on a pay-as-you-go<br />

basis.<br />

It Helps In Your Personal<br />

Financial Planning<br />

Your personal financial<br />

planning is made much<br />

easier when you are able to<br />

budget in advance for (at<br />

least a significant portion)<br />

of your healthcare expenditure.<br />

Health insurance gives<br />

you this advantage.<br />

It Is Cheaper For You On<br />

The Long Run<br />

A health insurance policy<br />

tends to be aggregately<br />

cheaper than a pay-as-yougo<br />

arrangement, especially<br />

when you have a tendency<br />

to fall ill often, as might<br />

sometimes happen. A oneoff<br />

premium payment covers<br />

you for the full period<br />

of the policy. You also have<br />

an opportunity to choose a<br />

plan to cover more serious<br />

medical procedures like<br />

minor surgeries and caesarian<br />

sections, which would<br />

otherwise be very expensive<br />

if you had to pay for them<br />

from your pocket.<br />

You Can Present It As A<br />

Gift Or Employee Benefit<br />

For employers of labour,<br />

health insurance is one of<br />

the most valuable employee<br />

benefits you can give to your<br />

employees. It does a great<br />

deal for employee moral<br />

when they know that the<br />

burden of healthcare costs<br />

is off their family budgets.<br />

You can also purchase<br />

a health insurance policy<br />

and present as a gift to your<br />

friends, parents and other<br />

loved ones. That’s certainly<br />

something to think about!<br />

It Will Help Develop<br />

The Health And Medical<br />

A good, effective and<br />

affordable health insurance<br />

system helps the society to<br />

move closer to universal access<br />

to healthcare, which is one<br />

of the ways to aggregately<br />

raise the quality of life of the<br />

citizens irrespective of their<br />

income group<br />

Sector<br />

As the demand for health<br />

insurance grows and more<br />

people get signed up, this<br />

will stimulate growth for<br />

the health sector in general<br />

as investors and medical<br />

entrepreneurs will be encouraged<br />

to build more hospitals,<br />

health facilities and<br />

diagnostic centres, more<br />

doctors and medical workers<br />

will need to be trained.<br />

Not only will the standard<br />

and quality of medical services<br />

for the citizens improve,<br />

it will become more<br />

accessible to many more<br />

people.<br />

It Allows Equitable Distribution<br />

of Health Costs<br />

Across Different Income<br />

Groups<br />

Health insurance serves<br />

as one of the ways of re-distributing<br />

wealth within the<br />

society. It helps in reducing<br />

the gap in the quality of life<br />

between the rich and the<br />

poor, because it enables<br />

the poor to also have access<br />

to a reasonably good<br />

and affordable quality of<br />

healthcare.<br />

A good, effective and affordable<br />

health insurance<br />

system helps the society to<br />

move closer to universal<br />

access to healthcare, which<br />

is one of the ways to aggregately<br />

raise the quality of life<br />

of the citizens irrespective of<br />

their income group.If you do<br />

not already have a health<br />

insurance policy, what are<br />

you waiting for?<br />

Unclaimed money recovery: Is it a scam or an opportunity?<br />

Have you been personally<br />

targeted<br />

by ads offering<br />

to help you find<br />

“unclaimed” money? If you<br />

immediately wrote them<br />

off as scams, you were wise<br />

— but that doesn’t mean<br />

unclaimed money itself is a<br />

scam. The US government<br />

estimates that billions of dollars<br />

each year go unclaimed,<br />

just as the advertisements<br />

say — and your name could<br />

be on some of it.<br />

No one says no to money<br />

that belongs to them. This<br />

is the reason unclaimed<br />

money scams are so widespread.<br />

Even if there’s only<br />

a slim chance you’ve inherited<br />

a fortune, you may be<br />

entitled to anything from<br />

a few dollars to a few hundred<br />

dollars — money that<br />

could go toward a savings<br />

goal, paying off debt, or just<br />

enjoying a nice dinner out.<br />

If you’re interested in reconnecting<br />

with your longlost<br />

dollars, it’s important<br />

to know how to recognize<br />

the scams and find legitimate<br />

sources. But, first, let’s<br />

discuss where all this unclaimed<br />

money comes from.<br />

Sometimes, people deposit<br />

a small sum in a savings<br />

account and forget<br />

about it, overpay a utility<br />

bill, or qualify for an unexpected<br />

tax refund. If they<br />

move and fail to leave a<br />

forwarding address, it can<br />

be impossible for the issuing<br />

party to locate them<br />

— especially if they move<br />

out of state. After a year,<br />

unclaimed property laws<br />

usually dictate that this<br />

money is returned to the<br />

state, where the sum is held<br />

until it can be returned to its<br />

rightful owner


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

This is M NEY<br />

A daily guide to your Personal Finance<br />

C002D5556<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

• Savings<br />

• Travel<br />

• Debt & Borrowing<br />

• Utilities<br />

• Managing your Tax<br />

29<br />

Worried about bank charges,<br />

here is how to reduce them<br />

Kenneth Doghudge<br />

Are bank charges<br />

causing you<br />

to have sleepless<br />

nights?<br />

Are you wondering<br />

why you must pay<br />

every time you perform a<br />

transaction? Seeing your<br />

bank charges add up to<br />

substantial sums can be irritating<br />

and annoying. The<br />

bank might provide poor<br />

service, or worse still refuse<br />

to support you. “And I still<br />

have to pay bank charges?”<br />

might be the question on<br />

your mind.<br />

So can we totally eliminate<br />

these charges? No.<br />

Banks provide financial<br />

services to the public. They<br />

are expected to charge customers<br />

and make a profit<br />

in return. Bank charges<br />

therefore represents compensation<br />

for services rendered.<br />

Alas without it no<br />

bank would be able to survive,<br />

let alone thrive.<br />

Bank charges may differ<br />

from country to country.<br />

There are certain climes<br />

where the government collects<br />

stamp duty, a type of<br />

tax on banking transactions<br />

in addition. Bank<br />

charges, like death and<br />

taxes have now become a<br />

fact of life. You can hardly<br />

fight or refuse to pay them.<br />

Banks take the money out<br />

of your account monthly.<br />

In fact, the more transactions<br />

you undertake the<br />

greater your bank charges.<br />

While bank charges are<br />

here to stay certain steps<br />

can be taken to reduce<br />

them to the barest minimum.<br />

You need to do the<br />

following:<br />

Acquaint thyself with<br />

your current exposure to<br />

bank charges<br />

Come to terms with<br />

your bank charges by making<br />

a detailed study of your<br />

statement. Request your<br />

statement from the bank<br />

and check, on a line by line<br />

basis transactions done<br />

in the month. Also check<br />

what your total charges<br />

amount to. You could be<br />

in for a rude awakening. I<br />

recently did, and it wasn’t<br />

a pleasant experience. I<br />

didn’t have a clue that I<br />

was spending so much<br />

on charges. You can only<br />

make changes when you<br />

understand the magnitude<br />

of the problem. Determine<br />

to reduce them<br />

Acquaint thyself with<br />

the number of transactions<br />

you initiate regularly<br />

How many bank transactions<br />

do you make in a<br />

day? Did you know that<br />

each time you use the<br />

ATM, POS machines, mobile<br />

and internet banking<br />

is one banking transaction?<br />

Each usage may have<br />

fees attached. Electronic<br />

deposits into your account<br />

also attract charges.<br />

Scan your bank statement<br />

to identify why so many<br />

transactions. Try to understand<br />

the reason behind<br />

each transaction to see if it<br />

could be stopped in subsequent<br />

periods.<br />

Paying recurring bills<br />

in cash<br />

It’s advisable to keep<br />

some loose cash to pay<br />

smaller and regular bills.<br />

At the beginning of the<br />

week withdraw certain<br />

amounts to cover all your<br />

recurring expenses. Petrol,<br />

Transport, Lunch,<br />

Telephone etc should be<br />

planned for. This will cause<br />

you to avoid whipping out<br />

your card to pay for these<br />

items thus causing your<br />

bank charges to skyrocket.<br />

Leave plastic cards at<br />

home whenever possible.<br />

Carrying your plastic<br />

cards everywhere you go is<br />

not a good idea. You should<br />

leave them at home from<br />

time to time. Planning what<br />

you want to spend on in advance<br />

can help minimise<br />

spending. You could then<br />

carry only the money for<br />

your planned spending on<br />

you. Try to make it a little<br />

bit harder to access your<br />

money wherever you go.<br />

Earmark several days<br />

as “no spending days”<br />

Plan and mark several<br />

days in your calendar as<br />

days where you won’t be<br />

spending any money. Start<br />

out with marking one day<br />

a week which could grow<br />

to several days a week.<br />

No spending amounts to<br />

no charges. So challenge<br />

yourself not to spend.<br />

You’re not going to die if<br />

you don’t spend I can assure.<br />

Having no spend<br />

days will help you manage<br />

your money better.<br />

Seek and use accounts<br />

with lower bank charges<br />

Currently there is a<br />

wide variety of bank account<br />

products. In the<br />

past it used to be only current<br />

and savings accounts.<br />

There are accounts for<br />

small and big businesses,<br />

children, students, retired<br />

people, high net worth individuals<br />

and so on. In addition<br />

there are accounts<br />

for investments, fixed deposits,<br />

mutual funds etc.<br />

Please research and weigh<br />

the pros and cons before<br />

you sign up for any account.<br />

Be constantly on<br />

the lookout for accounts<br />

with lower fees that best<br />

matches your requirements<br />

such as lower bank<br />

charges.<br />

Use debt wisely<br />

Be careful when you use<br />

debt. Especially when it is<br />

not for purposes that will<br />

bring more money into<br />

your pocket. For instance<br />

when you use your credit<br />

card to pay for items. If<br />

you don’t pay back within<br />

the time limit the bank will<br />

charge interest on the debt<br />

plus several fees for using<br />

the card. The same occurs<br />

when you have a loan facility.<br />

Interest rates and bank<br />

charges usually change<br />

in favor of the lender, not<br />

the lendee. Taking on debt<br />

usually causes your bank<br />

charges to increase significantly.<br />

Trim down the number<br />

of accounts you have<br />

The more accounts you<br />

operate/keep the more<br />

bank charges you pay out,<br />

pure and simple. Most<br />

people keep plenty of accounts.<br />

Some might have<br />

even gone dormant. I’m<br />

sure when you calculate<br />

your total bank charges<br />

in one year you might realise<br />

the level of wastage<br />

you have been exposed<br />

to. It’s time to streamline<br />

the number of accounts<br />

you have. There are several<br />

debates on how many accounts<br />

someone should<br />

have. I urge you to be<br />

mindful and not duplicate<br />

similar accounts unnecessarily.<br />

Permit me to re-emphasize<br />

that immediately<br />

after reading this you<br />

should get all your account<br />

statements. Work out how<br />

much you have been paying<br />

as bank charges in the<br />

last 1 year. Take time to<br />

implement all 8 key points<br />

listed above to reduce fees<br />

paid going forward. This<br />

is guaranteed to save you<br />

thousands yearly. Now<br />

who wouldn’t be happy<br />

with that?<br />

Kenneth promotes<br />

Moneytalk, a knowledge<br />

based organization committed<br />

to dispensing financial<br />

intelligence that leads<br />

to financial freedom.<br />

You can reach him with<br />

your feedback on money@<br />

moneytalkng.com or 070<br />

6337 3391 if you would like<br />

him to facilitate Money<br />

talks and lessons at your<br />

events, seminars or conferences<br />

over the weekend<br />

in the Lagos area.<br />

You can also visit www.<br />

moneytalkng.com for additional<br />

resources on financial<br />

intelligence.<br />

Taking firm decision about your retirement planning<br />

Pension and retirement<br />

funds<br />

are crucial to<br />

everybody. But<br />

unfortunately it<br />

is one of the least financial<br />

planning we think about.<br />

Eventually everybody has<br />

to stop working. After years<br />

of hard work you should be<br />

able to put your feet up and<br />

enjoy some peace.<br />

That is not the time to<br />

be worrying about your<br />

bills and other things that<br />

you need money to accomplish.<br />

So what happens to<br />

your expenses? They don’t<br />

go away. In fact, your essential<br />

expenditures may<br />

become more expensive if<br />

you factor in inflation. It is<br />

time to take action and if<br />

you have just started working,<br />

you can start early.<br />

Early planning is best<br />

for pension savings. A<br />

regular amount put away<br />

yields a lump sum amount<br />

through the years. There<br />

are many examples where<br />

a disciplined investment<br />

started early has proved<br />

to be more beneficial than<br />

chaotic lumps at irregular<br />

intervals. So start early.<br />

Subsequently is regarding<br />

the amount to be saved<br />

each month. How much is<br />

sufficient? Well, that depends<br />

on your ability to<br />

pay. Try to put away a fixed<br />

amount. As it is always said<br />

pay yourself first when you<br />

receive your salary or income<br />

each month.<br />

If you are employed try<br />

to save in work linked pen-<br />

sion plans in which your<br />

employer contributes some<br />

amount. This is beneficial<br />

as these pension schemes<br />

are invested in government<br />

bonds and offer good returns<br />

with stability.<br />

Many things have to be<br />

considered when picking<br />

a pension plan. Find out<br />

how much of your pension<br />

is taxable and at what<br />

percentage. It pays to take<br />

the advice of your personal<br />

financial planners or legal<br />

adviser who has experience<br />

and knowledge in<br />

pension and retirement<br />

program. They are not part<br />

of any one organization<br />

pushing those plans. They<br />

will work individually with<br />

you to provide the best plan<br />

exclusively based on your<br />

needs.<br />

Find out if the pensions<br />

or at least a part of it will go<br />

to your spouse or dependents.<br />

So not blindly trust<br />

that it will automatically go<br />

to them. Read the fine print!<br />

Take charge and do not be<br />

a passive participant.<br />

Usually pension money<br />

is retained with the employer<br />

till a worker retires.<br />

It is good to know whether<br />

this money is safe and in<br />

the event of employer declaring<br />

bankruptcy or going<br />

out of business what<br />

happens to the money.<br />

Always ask relevant questions<br />

and never assume<br />

things. The stakes are simply<br />

too high.<br />

You should also start<br />

investing in bonds and<br />

share market early on in<br />

your career.


30 BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

SMART MONEY with Arese<br />

What is killing Nigeria’s earning potential?<br />

During his visit<br />

to Nigeria, Bill<br />

Gates made<br />

some remarks<br />

to Nigerian<br />

leaders about the economy.<br />

The central message was:<br />

invest in human capital to<br />

achieve sustained prosperity,<br />

which should be a no<br />

brainer; a skilled labor force<br />

has a significant impact on<br />

growth because skilled workers<br />

are more productive.<br />

However, it got me thinking<br />

about a more specific problem<br />

with the Nigerian education<br />

system and its effect on<br />

our ability to earn.<br />

When it comes to education,<br />

the emphasis is usually<br />

on giving more people access<br />

at different levels of schooling.<br />

However, the greater<br />

reality we have to face is that,<br />

the quality of the students we<br />

are churning out, especially<br />

at the tertiary stage is subpar<br />

and this has a monumental<br />

effect on our economy.<br />

An under qualified labor<br />

force can’t solve complex<br />

problems and ironically,<br />

the no 1-finance question<br />

millennials ask is how can<br />

I make more money? However,<br />

one’s earning power is<br />

directly linked to the complexity<br />

of the problem they<br />

are able to solve. There in lies<br />

the problem because three<br />

things seem to be missing.<br />

1. The Adoption of Critical<br />

thinking<br />

When I was in secondary<br />

school, I was a top three<br />

student in subjects like economics<br />

and government.<br />

I loved these subjects; so<br />

naturally, in my mind I was<br />

a superstar! I attended Igbinedion<br />

Education Centre,<br />

which was considered one<br />

of the best private schools in<br />

the 90s but Imagine my surprise<br />

when I subsequently<br />

went to The British School of<br />

Lome and discovered that in<br />

actual fact, I knew nothing! I<br />

was shocked and confused.<br />

You see in Nigerian<br />

schools, we learn to cram<br />

theory and regurgitate definitions,<br />

so we can pass ex-<br />

Arese Ugwu<br />

ams but we don’t learn to<br />

truly understand, analyze<br />

and apply. So even though<br />

I knew the definitions of<br />

demand and supply, my<br />

teachers in BSL were not<br />

impressed. They didn’t care<br />

about the fact that I could<br />

recite the definitions of several<br />

economic terms exactly<br />

as they were in the textbooks;<br />

they were more concerned<br />

with my inability to understand<br />

the concepts and apply<br />

them to real world scenarios.<br />

My thoughts on how a war in<br />

Bottom line we<br />

need more vocational<br />

schools!<br />

Lets stop pushing<br />

people into professions<br />

they can<br />

never thrive in<br />

Iraq would impact Nigeria’s<br />

income were more relevant<br />

to them than definitions.<br />

Another shocking concept<br />

for me in this journey of critical<br />

thinking was the fact that<br />

we could actually challenge<br />

our teachers! What a wawuu!<br />

Dr Sindall actually expected<br />

us to question the validity<br />

of his answers because according<br />

to him there were<br />

no wrong responses to his<br />

questions, just different perspectives<br />

and proper justifications<br />

for the assumptions<br />

that we made.<br />

Meanwhile in Nigeria,<br />

our teachers were always<br />

right and in most cases any<br />

variation from the teacher’s<br />

prescribed answer was classified<br />

as wrong, which left little<br />

room for original thought.<br />

Nothing highlights the folly<br />

in this teaching style and<br />

its unfortunate impact on<br />

the productivity of Nigerian<br />

youths like the phrase ‘This<br />

is how we do it here’.<br />

When I first moved back<br />

to Nigeria, nothing frustrated<br />

me more than this<br />

phrase! Let me explain! It is<br />

extremely important to put<br />

processes in place so that<br />

there is structure in a business<br />

but it must never be at<br />

the expense of encouraging<br />

people to use their initiative.<br />

Most staff are taught 1+1 =2<br />

so when they see that sum,<br />

they are clear on how to solve<br />

the problem. However, if they<br />

encounter the same problem<br />

with different elements to the<br />

sum i.e. 6 minus 4 equals 2,<br />

they are thrown for a loop<br />

because in their minds, only<br />

1 +1 can equal 2.<br />

If we really want to increase<br />

the productivity of<br />

businesses and subsequently<br />

the economy, critical thinking<br />

must be employed to<br />

boost our ability to solve<br />

problems and understand<br />

logical connections between<br />

ideas.<br />

2. Leverage social media<br />

and technology as tools<br />

for teaching<br />

Social media gets a bad rep,<br />

especially in corporate Nigeria.<br />

There’s the perception<br />

that millennials are so<br />

preoccupied with things like<br />

Big Brother Naija and other<br />

frivolities on social media,<br />

which is true. However, I<br />

think it’s more important<br />

to convert that engagement<br />

and preoccupation into gold<br />

by using it as a medium to<br />

educate. Instead of being<br />

so focused on highlighting<br />

the dangers of social media,<br />

companies need to be leveraging<br />

it as a medium to re<br />

educate their staff and educate<br />

their customers about<br />

their products and services.<br />

Technology has made the<br />

world a smaller place, so<br />

education is basically at your<br />

fingertips and there’s access<br />

to the best practices from all<br />

over the globe. But are we<br />

using it effectively?<br />

3. Can we get over our obsession<br />

with certificates?<br />

When all is said and done<br />

we like book in this country<br />

sha! No one is cockier than a<br />

Nigerian that is armed with<br />

several degrees and qualifications.<br />

It has become an obsession<br />

with us! But what do<br />

these degrees really mean?<br />

When the people who are<br />

chasing them are not seeking<br />

a deeper understanding<br />

or application of the knowledge<br />

but are caught up in<br />

the chase of what these certificates<br />

could mean for their<br />

job prospects. At this point<br />

the degrees become hollow.<br />

It’s a pretty regular occurrence<br />

to find people who<br />

went to university, to pursue<br />

a degree they despised, because<br />

their parents wanted<br />

them to. However, what has<br />

become even sadder is meeting<br />

people who are pursuing<br />

professional qualifications of<br />

their own volition, in fields<br />

they have zero interest in,<br />

because it might improve<br />

their job prospects. I’m all<br />

for continued learning because<br />

no matter how intelligent<br />

you are, constantly<br />

improving your expertise<br />

and sharpening your skills<br />

is key to success but can I<br />

ask a question? Why are so<br />

many people studying for<br />

ACCA and ICAN when they<br />

have no interest in becoming<br />

accountants? It is counter<br />

productive! Why not spend<br />

time on something you are<br />

actually passionate about<br />

and are in the best position to<br />

get good at instead becoming<br />

mediocre at something you<br />

have zero interest in.<br />

Now I haven’t figured out<br />

whom to blame for this phenomenon,<br />

the employers?<br />

Who demand these excessive<br />

qualifications that have<br />

no bearing on the job in<br />

question or the labor force?<br />

Who haven’t figured out that<br />

there’s little point in chasing<br />

hollow qualifications they<br />

have no passion for and<br />

that most people who thrive<br />

and become successful, put<br />

themselves in situations<br />

where they have matched<br />

their interests with their skill<br />

set and focus on being the<br />

best at it.<br />

Bottom line we need more<br />

vocational schools! Lets stop<br />

pushing people into professions<br />

they can never thrive in!


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

31<br />

CITYFile<br />

A scene of an accident at Maryland in Lagos on Friday.<br />

Lagos pays N36bn pension<br />

to retirees in 3 years<br />

JOSHUA BASSEY<br />

Lagos State Government says about<br />

N35.9 billion has been remitted to<br />

the Retirement Saving Accounts<br />

(RSAs) of 8,731 retirees, deceased<br />

and withdrawn staff of the state<br />

public service between August 2015 and date.<br />

However, in the last one year, May 2017<br />

to March <strong>2018</strong>, the state paid N9.3 billion<br />

pension to 2,466 retirees.<br />

Akintola Oke, the commissioner for<br />

establishment, training and pensions, who<br />

released the figures during a session with<br />

media to mark the present administration’s<br />

three years in office, said the sums were paid<br />

to the beneficiaries through Lagos State Pension<br />

Commission (LASPEC).<br />

He said there has been continued significant<br />

reduction in outstanding backlog of terminal<br />

entitlements of retired public servants.<br />

Offa robbery: Kwara to acquire additional APCs<br />

To beef up security in Offa and strategic<br />

locations across Kwara, the state<br />

governor, Abdulfatah Ahmed, says<br />

his government will procure additional<br />

Armoured Personnel Carriers (APCs),<br />

and as well build a new police station for Offa<br />

within the next 45 days.<br />

The governor however, urged well-meaning<br />

citizens of the state to resist attempt by<br />

anyone to use the unfortunate Offa robbery<br />

attack for political purposes.<br />

Ahmed, who stated this during the<br />

swearing-in of a new Khadi of the state<br />

Shariah Court of Appeal, Mas’ud Adebayo<br />

Oniye, frowned at utterances made to score<br />

political gain.<br />

According to the governor, “those utterances<br />

do not reflect our values as Kwarans<br />

and should stop, out of respect for the dead<br />

According to the commissioner, the<br />

current administration commenced and<br />

maintained the trend of paying terminal<br />

entitlements of retired employees monthly,<br />

since August 2015.<br />

“The ministry will continue to sensitise<br />

retirees on activities of pension fraudsters so<br />

that they will get their entitlements without<br />

hitch,” he said, adding that about 8,000 pensioners<br />

aged above 70 have been identified<br />

to receive packages from the state government<br />

this year.<br />

On the payment of death benefit, he said<br />

that 80 beneficiaries of deceased employees<br />

in the state were paid N220.7 million within<br />

the period.<br />

The commissioner said that the state’s<br />

Public Service Staff Development Centre<br />

trained 3, 737 officers in the last one year.<br />

The training, he said provided solutions<br />

to problems on human capacity through<br />

learning and development initiatives, using<br />

... as ACF urges FG to equip Nigeria Police<br />

SIKIRAT SHEHU, Ilorin<br />

and the injured”.<br />

Ahmed assured Kwarans that government<br />

will do everything within its power to<br />

ensure that the people of Offa and Kwara<br />

State never experience such a tragedy again.<br />

“For the avoidance of doubt, let me<br />

reassure Kwarans that the culprits will be<br />

apprehended and brought to justice swiftly.<br />

“Presently, the police and other security<br />

agencies in the country have begun a vigorous<br />

manhunt for the perpetrators of the<br />

dastardly and horrid attack on the peaceful<br />

and industrious people of Offa,” he said<br />

Ahmed advised that “our people must<br />

be vigilant and security conscious as part<br />

of community involvement in effective<br />

policing”.<br />

“Those who perpetrated this evil have<br />

saddened and inflicted pain on us but they<br />

cannot break our spirit. I assure you that<br />

those behind this wicked act will soon be<br />

NAN<br />

technology-driven resources.<br />

“The essence is not only for self-development,<br />

but for the skills and knowledge<br />

acquired to be deployed on the job for impactful<br />

service delivery to teeming populace<br />

of Lagos State,” he said.<br />

The commissioner, who commended the<br />

17 labour unions in the state public service,<br />

said “it is historic to note that in the last three<br />

years, this administration has not witnessed<br />

any form of crisis, protests or agitations by<br />

labour unions.”<br />

He said the unions’ National Joint Negotiating<br />

Council (NJNC) met and interacted<br />

with government four times yearly to take<br />

decisions on issues pertaining to workers’<br />

welfare and promote industrial harmony.<br />

He assured that government would intensify<br />

efforts towards motivating and training<br />

the civil servants for better service delivery<br />

and protection of interest of residents of<br />

the state.<br />

apprehended and brought to justice swiftly”,<br />

he added.<br />

Meanwhile, the Arewa Consultative<br />

Forum (ACF) has called on the Federal Government<br />

to properly equip the Nigeria Police<br />

Force to enable it to effectively discharge its<br />

responsibilities.<br />

Mohammed Ibrahim, the national publicity<br />

secretary of the Forum, in a statement<br />

in Kaduna, weekend, that the group was<br />

shocked by the attacks on some banks in<br />

Offa which left about 30 people and several<br />

others injured.<br />

“It was most unfortunate that innocent<br />

persons and security personnel were killed<br />

by the armed robbers while some persons<br />

sustained injuries.<br />

“We are, however, heartened by the<br />

prompt action of the Inspector General of<br />

Police (IGP) in deploying units of Mobile<br />

Police which led to arrest of some of the<br />

perpetrators of this heinous crime and the<br />

restoration of normalcy in Offa town.<br />

8 Boko Haram kingpins<br />

arrested in Borno<br />

The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence<br />

Corps (NSCDC) said it has<br />

arrested 8 Boko Haram kingpins<br />

who fled Borno.<br />

The Corps also said last weekend in<br />

Abuja that over 100 suspected vandals of<br />

critical infrastructure also apprehended<br />

between January and March, are presently<br />

facing prosecution.<br />

Abdullahi Gana, the commandantgeneral<br />

of the Corps, disclosed this<br />

when he received participants of course<br />

40/<strong>2018</strong> of the National Institute for Policy<br />

and Strategic Studies (NIPSS) Kuru, led by<br />

Humphrey Okpala<br />

Gana explained that the successes<br />

recorded by the NSCDC were as a result<br />

of the collaborative efforts of the Civilian<br />

Joint Task Force which he said had proved<br />

to be one of the useful tools for community<br />

policing.<br />

He said the corps was not in rivalry<br />

with sister agencies, but “rather cherishes<br />

and always works in synergy with<br />

other agencies in combating crimes in<br />

the country.”<br />

“This synergy has worked in the North-<br />

East where the Corps’ personnel arrested<br />

Boko Haram members and handed them<br />

over to the army.<br />

“In states like Taraba, Plateau and<br />

Jigawa, armed robbers and rapists were<br />

arrested recently, and were handed over<br />

to the police,” he said.<br />

AVM Okpala told the NSCDC boss that<br />

the visit was to find out the Corps’ position<br />

on the ongoing research directed by<br />

the Federal Government to strengthen the<br />

nation’s internal security framework and<br />

community policing.<br />

“The institute was mandated to carry<br />

out the research in order to come up with<br />

strategy to tackle burning issues through<br />

interaction with stakeholders with a view<br />

to reporting back to the President accordingly,”<br />

he said.<br />

Malaria: CRS adopts Edo<br />

style of net distribution<br />

The Country Representative, Catholic<br />

Relief Services (CRS), Rebecca Hallam,<br />

says the organisation has adopted the<br />

Edo Government model of distribution of insecticidal<br />

nets for other states in the country.<br />

Hallam said in Benin when she visited<br />

the Edo deputy governor, Philip Shaibu, in<br />

Benin.<br />

“We have learnt some new formula in the<br />

course of the assignment which we will use<br />

in other states. I commend Edo government<br />

for her swift response in addressing challenges<br />

encountered during the exercise and<br />

call on other states to emulate Edo,’’ she said.<br />

Responding, Shaibu said the state government’s<br />

commitment was part of her<br />

resolve to reposition primary healthcare and<br />

strengthening the health sector.<br />

Shaibu acknowledged that the net distribution<br />

was an avenue for both parties<br />

to share ideas, as the state team also learnt<br />

some models from the CRS team.<br />

“The exercise is also a means for the state<br />

government to obtain data to implement<br />

other programmes in the primary healthcare<br />

sector. The remaining nets from the exercise<br />

will be distributed to areas not covered during<br />

the exercise, after proper data analysis of<br />

the previous exercise to cover the remaining<br />

12 per cent,’’ Shuaibu said.<br />

The deputy governor called on other state<br />

governments to learn from Edo where chief<br />

executives personally monitor the distribution<br />

to ensure its success. NAN


32<br />

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Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong>


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

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Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

34 BUSINESS DAY


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

C002D5556<br />

BUSINESS DAY 35<br />

Stocks Currencies Commodities Rates + Bonds Economics Funds Week Ahead Watchlist P.E<br />

Yield curve flattens on Fiscal and<br />

monetary policy synchronisation<br />

FSDH sees Nigeria inflation slowing for<br />

fourteen successive months to 13.49%<br />

Page 36 Page 36<br />

ECONOMY<br />

Dangote Cement, CCNN beat industry<br />

average as Lafarge gets red flag<br />

BALA AUGIE<br />

Dangote Cement,<br />

CCNN beat industry<br />

average<br />

as Lafarge gets<br />

red flag BALA<br />

AUGIE percent, according<br />

to data compiled by <strong>BusinessDay</strong>.<br />

However, Lafarge<br />

Africa’s <strong>16</strong>.<strong>16</strong> gross margins<br />

were below the above average<br />

as the company continues<br />

to grapple with rising cost<br />

of production brought on by<br />

spiraling variable costs and<br />

costs incurred on evacuation<br />

at UNICEM. Dangote Cement<br />

and CCNN have a better<br />

energy mix as they were<br />

able to develop coal fire plant.<br />

That explains why they have<br />

spent less in producing each<br />

unit of product. While Dangote<br />

Cement and CCNN’s<br />

net margin of 25.35 percent<br />

and <strong>16</strong>.45 percent were above<br />

the industry average of 10.08<br />

percent, Lafarge’s huge loss<br />

of 34.01 billion validates its<br />

negative retained earnings<br />

of 11.45 percent. Lafarge is<br />

highly indebted or highly<br />

geared as its debt to equity<br />

ratio of <strong>16</strong>3.25 percent is<br />

the highest in the industry.<br />

Lafarge (WAPCO) Plc had a<br />

Year-To-Date (YTD) return<br />

at the negative trajectory at<br />

-0.87 percent. This is way<br />

below the NSE ASI of 7.02<br />

percent as market close for<br />

the week, Friday, <strong>Apr</strong>il 13,<br />

<strong>2018</strong>. Dangote Cement Plc<br />

gained 13.04 percent on YTD<br />

return basis, 6.02 percentage<br />

point higher than the NSE<br />

ASI of 7.02 percent.<br />

CCNN Plc was the best<br />

performing stock with the<br />

highest return YTD on the Nigerian<br />

Stock Exchange (NSE).<br />

It has gained 105.43per cent<br />

alone so far this year. CCNN<br />

The Cement Company of<br />

Northern Nigeria (CCNN)<br />

Plc’s profit after tax stood at<br />

N3.22 billion as at December<br />

2017, representing a 106.50<br />

percent surge from the N1.56<br />

billion recorded five years<br />

ago. Revenue followed the<br />

same growth trajectory, hitting<br />

N19.58 billion in December<br />

2017. This represented a<br />

29.83 percent increase from<br />

the N15.31 billion recorded in<br />

December 2013. The company’s<br />

shares have gained 71.31<br />

percent since January 2, 2015,<br />

to close at N17.80 at close of<br />

trading day on Wednesday<br />

<strong>Apr</strong>il 6, <strong>2018</strong>. The relative<br />

peace in the northern part<br />

of the country and low competition<br />

where the company<br />

supplies cement were major<br />

drivers of utilisation rates for<br />

the company.<br />

The cement maker is efficient<br />

in deploying shareholders’<br />

resources in generating<br />

higher profit as net profit<br />

margins hit <strong>16</strong>.25 percent<br />

in the period under review,<br />

a 0.60 point increase from<br />

10.23 percent recorded five<br />

years ago.<br />

Lafarge<br />

Lafarge Africa Plc is grappling<br />

with spiralling cost of<br />

production as rising interest<br />

on borrowing wiped out all of<br />

earnings, leaving the cement<br />

maker in a loss position. For<br />

the year ended December<br />

2017, Lafarge Africa posted<br />

a loss after tax of N34.60<br />

billon from a profit position<br />

of N<strong>16</strong>.89 billion the previous<br />

year, the worst results in<br />

five years since <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

started compiling data. A<br />

N43.02 billion finance costs<br />

or interest expense in the<br />

income statement in the<br />

period under review swallowed<br />

all of operating profit<br />

of N7.88 billion, which inevitably<br />

resulted in the loss. It is<br />

glaring that Lafarge Africa is<br />

exposed to financial risk as<br />

its debt pile has resulted in<br />

increased interest payment<br />

hence suppressing bottom<br />

line (profit). Consequently,<br />

risk of stockholders return<br />

is increased. Times interest<br />

coverage is 0.18 times operating<br />

profit in the period<br />

under review, which means<br />

the cement maker’s ability to<br />

meet interest expenses are<br />

questionable.<br />

Dangote Cement<br />

A breakdown of the combined<br />

profit in the period<br />

under review showed Dangote<br />

Cement Plc, the largest<br />

producer of the building<br />

material recorded a net income<br />

of N204.24 billion, from<br />

N159.50 billion recorded in<br />

2013. The largest producer<br />

of the building material in<br />

Africa’s largest economy has<br />

utilized each unit of sales<br />

in generating higher profit<br />

as margins improved. This<br />

means it is efficient amid<br />

a tough and unpredictable<br />

macroeconomic environment.<br />

Earnings before interest<br />

and tax (EBIT) margin<br />

increased to 37.76 percent<br />

in December 2017 as against<br />

29.66 percent as at December<br />

20<strong>16</strong>. Gross profit margins<br />

moved to 56.39 percent in<br />

the period under review as<br />

against 47.35 percent the<br />

previous year. Net margin<br />

increased to 25.35 percent<br />

in the period under review<br />

as against 23.22 percent as<br />

at December 20<strong>16</strong>. Cost of<br />

sales ratio fell to 43.66 percent<br />

in the period under review<br />

from 52.64 percent the previous<br />

year as the company<br />

switched to coal, a cheap<br />

source of energy to power<br />

plant at the factory. Dangote<br />

Cement’s sales grew<br />

by 30.96 percent to N805.58<br />

Continues on page 36<br />

SHORT TAKES<br />

25 kobo<br />

Nigerian Aviation Handling<br />

proposes final dividend of<br />

25 kobo per ordinary share<br />

for period ended December<br />

31, 2017.<br />

34 percent<br />

Nigeria’s state oil<br />

company NNPC’s<br />

engineering subsidiary<br />

on Friday<br />

reported a 34 percent<br />

fall in 2017<br />

profit before tax to<br />

N3.26 billion ($10.4<br />

million) compared<br />

with the previous<br />

year.<br />

Foreign exchange<br />

gains of 56 percent<br />

before tax in 20<strong>16</strong><br />

fell to 4.8 percent<br />

in 2017, NNPC<br />

spokesman Ndu<br />

Ughamadu said in<br />

a statement.<br />

N237.8 MILLION<br />

Guinea Insurance posts<br />

rise in full year December<br />

2017 profit before taxation<br />

of N237.8 million versus<br />

N176.2 million a year ago.<br />

It recorded full year net<br />

premium income of N747<br />

million naira versus N649.5<br />

million a year ago<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> MARKETS INTELLIGENCE (Team lead: BALA AUGIE - Analyst: DIPO OLADEHINDE, ENDURANCE OKAFOR, BUNMI BAILEY Graphics: DAVID OGAR )<br />

BMI provides in-depth analysis and data on industries, companies, stocks, currencies, fixed income/credit, economics, regulation and factors that influence investor’s decision-making<br />

Email the BMI team patrick.atuanya@businessdayonline.com


36 BUSINESS DAY C002D5556 Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

ECONOMY<br />

ENDURANCE OKAFOR<br />

Source: NSE,<strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

port Group Plc with a market<br />

capitalisation of N8.879<br />

billion, traded at N 2.65 per<br />

share in the NSE and recorded<br />

105.43percent gain as<br />

it YTD return. Making it the<br />

third best performing stock<br />

in the nation’s bourse.<br />

NPF Microfinance Bank<br />

Plc made the list of Business-<br />

Day’s best five performing<br />

stock YTD as it gained some<br />

61.60 percent as at the close<br />

of market Friday, <strong>Apr</strong>il 13,<br />

<strong>2018</strong>.<br />

Markets Intelligence<br />

These stocks made money<br />

for investors last week<br />

The stocks of Cement<br />

CO. of North<br />

Nig. Plc, Caverton<br />

Offshore Support<br />

Group Plc, Unity<br />

Bank Plc, NPF Microfinance<br />

Bank Plc, and Wema Bank<br />

Plc were the best performing<br />

stocks on a year-to-date<br />

(YTD) basis, as they had the<br />

highest return at market close<br />

Friday, <strong>Apr</strong>il 13, <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

Cement CO. of North Nig.<br />

Plc was the best performing<br />

stock with the highest return<br />

YTD on the Nigerian Stock<br />

Exchange (NSE). It gained<br />

112.63 percent alone so far<br />

this year and it close the market<br />

with N20.20 per share and<br />

has a market capitalisation of<br />

N25.385 billion.<br />

Unity Bank Plc is one of the<br />

best stocks so far for this year<br />

among lenders. Shares gained<br />

109.43 per cent to date.<br />

The bank which provides<br />

a range of financial products<br />

and services to personal<br />

and business customers has<br />

a market capitalization of<br />

N12.975 billion and traded<br />

N1.11 per share, as at market<br />

close for the week.<br />

Caverton Offshore Sup-<br />

Dangote Cement, CCNN beat<br />

industry average...<br />

Five states hardest hit by rising inflation amid potential food shortage in March<br />

DIPO OLADEHINDE<br />

Nasarawa, Ebonyi,<br />

Bauchi, Kaduna and<br />

Gombe states are the<br />

top five states in March <strong>2018</strong><br />

that have recorded the highest<br />

level of inflation rates compared<br />

to the previous month of February,<br />

data from Nigeria Bureau of<br />

Statistics (NBS) showed.<br />

According to the NBS data,<br />

the state with the highest inflation<br />

rate Month on Month was<br />

Nasarawa State with inflation<br />

rate of 2.20 percent, followed<br />

closely by Ebonyi State with an<br />

inflation rate of 2.10 per cent,<br />

while Bauchi, Kaduna and<br />

Gombe states had 1.87 percent,<br />

1.76 percent, and 1.57 percent<br />

inflation rate respectively to<br />

complete list of top five states<br />

with the highest level of inflation<br />

in March <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

Dolapo Ashiru, CEO of<br />

Mega Capital Financial services<br />

Limited said the high cost of<br />

doing business in these states<br />

is the reason for the high level<br />

of inflation and further tasked<br />

the government to do more in<br />

increasing investment.<br />

“Basically, it has to do with<br />

government driving investment<br />

in infrastructure, power, technology<br />

and other important<br />

amenities with the purpose of<br />

bringing down the cost of doing<br />

business in these states,”<br />

Dolapo told <strong>BusinessDay</strong> by<br />

Phone.<br />

Speaking on how states<br />

can generate more revenue,<br />

Ashiru added,” State government<br />

should drive their IGR<br />

and implement policies that<br />

will drive investment in area<br />

of specialization or strength,<br />

also Government need to cut<br />

wastage and reduce recurrent<br />

expenditure.”<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong>’s investigations<br />

showed food inflation<br />

Month on Month was highest in<br />

Nasarawa State at 3.22 percent<br />

followed closely by Ebonyi state<br />

with 2.97 percent, while Jigawa<br />

state had 2.37 percent respectively<br />

to make up the top three<br />

states with highest food inflation<br />

rate among the 36 states in<br />

Nigeria while Kebbi, Imo. Niger,<br />

Kwara, Lagos, Rivers and Yobe<br />

states all recorded food price<br />

The microfinance Bank<br />

which provides a wide range<br />

of banking products and<br />

services to consumers traded<br />

at N2.20 per share in the NSE<br />

and it has a market capitalization<br />

of N4.619billion.<br />

Wema Bank Plc was one of<br />

the lenders that made the list<br />

also as the bank gained 76.92<br />

percent as it YTD return. The<br />

bank with a market capitalization<br />

of N 35.489 billion,<br />

traded at N 0.92, as compiled<br />

from the Bloomberg data.<br />

deflation or negative inflation<br />

which is the general decrease in<br />

the general price level of goods<br />

and services or a negative inflation<br />

rate in March <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

Food security is an aspect<br />

of government that no nation<br />

that is worth its salt can afford to<br />

take for granted. It is defined by<br />

the United Nations’ Committee<br />

on World Food Security, as the<br />

condition in which all people,<br />

at all times, have physical, social<br />

and economic access to sufficient<br />

safe and nutritious food<br />

that meets their dietary needs<br />

and food preferences for an<br />

active and healthy life.<br />

Benue State, the famed Food<br />

Basket of Nigeria, for instance<br />

has in recent times suffered<br />

unimaginable setbacks oc-<br />

The Nigerian Stock Exchange<br />

All Share Index (NSE<br />

ASI) appreciated Friday, <strong>Apr</strong>il<br />

13, <strong>2018</strong>, as it recorded a gain<br />

of 0.29 percent to close at<br />

40,928.70 points<br />

Similarly, the Market<br />

Capitalization appreciated<br />

by 0.29 percent to close at<br />

N14.78trn, compared with<br />

the marginal depreciation<br />

of 0.09 percent recorded the<br />

previous day. Week-on-week,<br />

the NSE ASI appreciated by<br />

0.21 percent.<br />

casioned by frequent farmers<br />

and herders’ clashes, so much<br />

that fears have been expressed<br />

that if not checked, we might be<br />

running a serious risk of famine<br />

in the near future.<br />

The National Economic<br />

Council (NEC) at one of its<br />

meetings had said that there will<br />

be food crisis in Nigeria unless<br />

the displacement of farmers resulting<br />

from incessant conflicts<br />

between them and pastoralists<br />

is immediately addressed.<br />

The Council after a closed<br />

door meeting at the Presidential<br />

Villa reportedly said it was worried<br />

about the displacement of<br />

farmers and felt that unless it was<br />

immediately addressed, there<br />

would be shortage of food in the<br />

entire country in the near future.<br />

Continued from page 35<br />

billon in December 2017<br />

from N615.10 billion as at December<br />

20<strong>16</strong>. A breakdown<br />

of sales by region shows the<br />

Nigerian business make up<br />

68.59 percent (N552.36 billion<br />

) of total revenue while<br />

Pan Africa make up 32.08<br />

percent (N258.44 billion).<br />

The company’s cement<br />

volume stood at 21.22 million<br />

metric tonnes as at December<br />

2017, which represents<br />

5.81 percent drop from 22.53<br />

million metric tonnes for last<br />

year. Cement production<br />

capacity increased slightly by<br />

2.35 percent to 43.55 million<br />

metric tonnes in the period<br />

under review from 42.55 million<br />

metric tonnes.<br />

Dangote Cement<br />

A breakdown of the combined<br />

profit in the period<br />

under review showed Dangote<br />

Cement Plc, the largest<br />

producer of the building<br />

material recorded a net income<br />

of N204.24 billion, from<br />

N159.50 billion recorded in<br />

2013. The largest producer<br />

of the building material in<br />

Africa’s largest economy has<br />

utilized each unit of sales<br />

in generating higher profit<br />

as margins improved. This<br />

means it is efficient amid<br />

a tough and unpredictable<br />

macroeconomic environment.<br />

Earnings before interest<br />

and tax (EBIT) margin<br />

For the 14th consecutive<br />

time since January 2017, inflation<br />

rate inched closer to the<br />

single digits target set by both<br />

monetary and fiscal authorities<br />

for the economy.<br />

Latest figures released on<br />

Thursday by NBS showed Consumer<br />

Price Index (CPI), which<br />

measures inflation level in the<br />

economy, increased by 13.34<br />

per cent between March 2017<br />

and March <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

The statistics agency said<br />

the new figure was about 0.99<br />

per cent points less than the<br />

14.33 per cent rate recorded in<br />

February <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

During the last Monetary<br />

Policy Committee (MPC) meeting<br />

last week in Abuja, the Central<br />

Bank of Nigeria (CBN)<br />

Governor, Godwin Emefiele,<br />

said members resolved to retain<br />

all controlling policy rates at<br />

prevailing levels until inflation<br />

rate dropped to the single digits<br />

zone.<br />

Apart from Monetary Policy<br />

Rate (MPR), also known as<br />

lending rate, which was retained<br />

at 14 per cent, liquidity<br />

rate was maintained at 30 per<br />

cent.<br />

Also, cash reserve requirement,<br />

the amount of cash the<br />

banks are allowed to keep in<br />

their reserves, was kept at 22.5<br />

per cent.<br />

The Asymmetric corridor<br />

was left at +200 and -500 basis<br />

points around the MPR as it was<br />

during the previous meeting in<br />

November 2017.<br />

increased to 37.76 percent<br />

in December 2017 as against<br />

29.66 percent as at December<br />

20<strong>16</strong>. Gross profit margins<br />

moved to 56.39 percent in<br />

the period under review as<br />

against 47.35 percent the<br />

previous year. Net margin<br />

increased to 25.35 percent<br />

in the period under review<br />

as against 23.22 percent<br />

as at December 20<strong>16</strong>. Cost<br />

of sales ratio fell to 43.66<br />

percent in the period under<br />

review from 52.64 percent<br />

the previous year as the<br />

company switched to coal,<br />

a cheap source of energy to<br />

power plant at the factory.<br />

Dangote Cement’s sales<br />

grew by 30.96 percent to<br />

N805.58 billon in December<br />

2017 from N615.10 billion<br />

as at December 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

A breakdown of sales by<br />

region shows the Nigerian<br />

business make up 68.59<br />

percent (N552.36 billion )<br />

of total revenue while Pan<br />

Africa make up 32.08 percent<br />

(N258.44 billion).<br />

The company’s cement<br />

volume stood at 21.22 million<br />

metric tonnes as at December<br />

2017, which represents<br />

5.81 percent drop from 22.53<br />

million metric tonnes for last<br />

year. Cement production<br />

capacity increased slightly by<br />

2.35 percent to 43.55 million<br />

metric tonnes in the period<br />

under review from 42.55 million<br />

metric tonnes.<br />

In the NBS report, composite<br />

food index, which highlights<br />

the average of some food items,<br />

majorly staple foods, rose by<br />

<strong>16</strong>.08 per cent (year on<br />

year) in March <strong>2018</strong>, down<br />

from the 17.59 per cent rate<br />

recorded in February.<br />

The Federal Government,<br />

which represents the fiscal<br />

authorities, had equally set the<br />

target of single digits inflation<br />

rate.<br />

This is just as it continues<br />

the pursuit of policies and programmes<br />

to strengthen the economic<br />

recovery which analysts<br />

say remains fragile since the<br />

recent exit from recession.<br />

Nigeria’s Purchasing Managers’<br />

Index (PMI), rose strongly<br />

in March from 54.7 percent<br />

to 59.4 percent, the production<br />

level index for the manufacturing<br />

sector grew for the<br />

thirteenth consecutive month<br />

in March <strong>2018</strong>.The index indicated<br />

a faster growth and expansion<br />

in the current month,<br />

when compared to its level in<br />

the preceding month.<br />

The Naira remained stable<br />

in the period under review at<br />

the CBN official rate of N305 to<br />

the dollar.<br />

Looking ahead, dynamics<br />

in the oil sector will be vital to<br />

encouraging a faster recovery<br />

and higher oil prices should fuel<br />

stronger growth in <strong>2018</strong>. However,<br />

still-high inflation, a weak<br />

business climate and security<br />

risks continue to cast a shadow<br />

over the country’s prospects.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

Start-Up Digest<br />

In<br />

association with<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

37<br />

Oluwatoyin Onigbanjo: From<br />

journalism to food processing<br />

Stories by ODINAKA ANUDU<br />

Oluwatoyin Onigbanjo<br />

is a journalist, but her<br />

enterprise poses a big<br />

challenge to men and<br />

women of the pen profession.<br />

The thinking of the majority of<br />

people is that journalists are only<br />

spectators and reporters of events,<br />

but Oluwatoyin and a few others are<br />

proving this notion to be false.<br />

She is today the founder and head<br />

cook of August Secrets, which produces<br />

baby foods such as Veggie<br />

Beans, Nutty Meal, Fish Powder and<br />

Crayfish Powder. She is also exporting<br />

these packaged baby foods to Ghana;<br />

New York and Atlanta in the United<br />

States, and other countries.<br />

Like all entrepreneurs, Oluwatoyin’s<br />

story is unique. After having a<br />

baby abroad, she returned to Nigeria<br />

only to notice that the child was reluctant<br />

to eat the available food. She<br />

started sharing her experience with<br />

neighbours and church members<br />

who offered different pieces of advice.<br />

A matron in one of the hospitals suggested<br />

two local foods she could give<br />

the child, and this worked.<br />

“At the end of the day, I realised<br />

that there was a lot of gap,” she tells<br />

Start-Up Digest.<br />

“I said to myself, ‘Why not package<br />

all of these foods and give them<br />

to Nigerian children?’ In the process<br />

of doing that, I realised that a lot of<br />

Austin Okere, the serial entrepreneur,<br />

has launched<br />

the long-awaited Ausso<br />

Leadership Academy<br />

(ALA) in Lekki, Lagos.<br />

ALA is an experiential entrepreneurship<br />

academy, which<br />

mentors and takes care of senior<br />

executives in large enterprises,<br />

multinationals and conglomerates<br />

as well as founders of big<br />

businesses.<br />

Speaking at the launch of the<br />

academy in Lagos last Thursday,<br />

Austin Okere, CEO of ALA, said<br />

many of the champions (established<br />

entrepreneurs) he had<br />

spoken to agreed that they wanted<br />

to have an opportunity to mentor<br />

people of that calibre all along but<br />

had no medium to do so.<br />

Okere said he had three reasons<br />

for setting up the leadership<br />

and entrepreneurship academy.<br />

“I wanted to advise others the<br />

same way I would have advised<br />

my younger self. If I had that<br />

kind of advice at the time I was<br />

starting my business, I would<br />

probably have avoided some of<br />

my mistakes.<br />

“The second inspiration was<br />

that I wanted to be for others, the<br />

Oluwatoyin Onigbanjo<br />

ing the next set of raw materials and<br />

setting up the factory. Fewer than<br />

two years down the line, this revenue<br />

of this firm (in the last 12 months) is<br />

about $100,000.<br />

“We are selling in about 24 Nigerian<br />

cities and states of the country now. We<br />

sell in Ghana; we sell in Atlanta, and<br />

we sell in New York. We sell outside<br />

Nigeria. It is amazing that we now take<br />

our foods to places where we bring in<br />

mothers also had the same problem.<br />

A lot of them wanted foods that were<br />

natural and from the African soil.<br />

That was a lot of motivation for me,”<br />

she explains.<br />

The entrepreneur started this<br />

business officially in July 20<strong>16</strong> and<br />

has had a very good experience. The<br />

first raw materials she bought cost<br />

her N20, 000. She then spent between<br />

N200, 000 and N500, 000 on purchasour<br />

foods from,” she says.<br />

Oluwatoyin has 24 direct and indirect<br />

staff members and 24 distributors<br />

across the country.<br />

“We decided to fill in the gap when<br />

we realised that about 90 percent of<br />

what the Nigerian children ate were<br />

imported and were foreign goods. We<br />

are producing Nigerian foods, nutritious<br />

foods that are attractive and also<br />

nourish the Nigerian children across<br />

Africa,” she states.<br />

The entrepreneur has always been<br />

a good cook and loves children. In<br />

fact, before Oluwatoyin set up the<br />

food processing factory, she had<br />

established a kids’ store.<br />

“The interesting part for me is that<br />

I love coking and I love food. This is<br />

something I am passionate about,<br />

and right from time, I have always run<br />

a kids’ store. Even as a journalist, I run<br />

a children’s store for children that are<br />

malnourished. It is one thing to have<br />

a passion and another thing to do the<br />

right thing,” she explains.<br />

It was not completely easy for her<br />

when she started. She had to wade<br />

through the challenge of getting<br />

necessary certifications such as the<br />

National Agency for Food and Drug<br />

Administration and Control (NAF-<br />

DAC0 approval. Setting up the factory<br />

and office were no child’s play.<br />

The entrepreneur believes that<br />

there are more grounds to cover.<br />

According to her, a lot of produce<br />

from farmers are wasting away and<br />

need off-takers and people who will<br />

market them.<br />

Austin Okere launches Ausso Leadership Academy<br />

mentor I wish I had.<br />

“The third reason, which is<br />

personal, is to mentor entrepreneurs<br />

to scale their businesses<br />

geometrically. We need to create<br />

something that will bring back<br />

our children from abroad. If we<br />

all put our hands together, there<br />

will be jobs for our children to<br />

come back to,” he said.<br />

He said many Nigerians had<br />

contacted him, asking to attend<br />

the academy free. However, doing<br />

this would make people take<br />

ALA for granted and the academy<br />

would be unsustainable, he said.<br />

Okere is the founder Computer<br />

Warehouse Group (CWG),<br />

which is today the largest computer<br />

security firm in the Nigerian<br />

Stock Exchange.<br />

According to him, there was a<br />

need for Nigerian entrepreneurs<br />

to invest more in human capital<br />

as noted by Bill Gates.<br />

Okere said ALA was not a<br />

business school but a practical<br />

and experiential complement<br />

from experiences in business<br />

schools.<br />

“A billionaire is not necessarily<br />

someone who has amassed<br />

a billion dollars, but someone<br />

Austin Okere<br />

who has touched a billion lives,”<br />

he stated. Ernest Ndukwe, former<br />

executive vice chairman<br />

of the Nigeria Communication<br />

“The link between the farmers and<br />

the market is very weak. There are still<br />

a lot of issues in logistics. We also<br />

have a lot of market gap, and there is<br />

a gap in warehousing.<br />

Being a journalist, Oluwatoyin<br />

believes in the power of the digital<br />

media. Through various platforms<br />

made available by technology, she<br />

reaches 100,000 mothers at the moment.<br />

She is a strong believer in the<br />

made-in-Nigeria brands and wants<br />

the citizens to appreciate and buy<br />

locally made goods.<br />

“We are taking advantage of the<br />

digital media and it has really helped<br />

us. We are able to reach more people.<br />

Without digital media, we can hardly<br />

reach Ghana and other places.” Being<br />

a married woman, the entrepreneur<br />

appreciates the role played by her<br />

family and says a big ‘thank you’ to<br />

them.<br />

She says cost of production is high,<br />

but her firm has adopted a strategy<br />

to cut it.<br />

“It has really been tough. What<br />

we try to do is to watch when there is<br />

power and we quickly run our production,”<br />

she discloses.<br />

Oluwatoyin says moving from<br />

journalism to manufacturing was<br />

not easy and adds that she needs assistance<br />

in terms of technology and<br />

machinery. “We are looking to get<br />

support in terms of machines and the<br />

technology we need for production,”<br />

she tells Start-Up Digest.<br />

She has some pieces of advice for<br />

the upcoming entrepreneurs.<br />

“I was not cut out to be an entrepreneur.<br />

I would rather be in my<br />

house and string stories together as<br />

a journalist. But I realised that people<br />

needed my services. If you know how<br />

to cook, cook it, put it together and<br />

give it those who need it. Don’t just<br />

stay in your house. If anybody told me<br />

that I would be going out to speak in<br />

conferences and talk to people about<br />

entrepreneurship, I would not believe<br />

that,” she advises.<br />

Commission (NCC), who was<br />

chairman of the event, pointed<br />

out that there was a general<br />

agreement that business execution<br />

could be taught.<br />

Ndukwe said mentoring was<br />

a process, rather than a day’s affair,<br />

urging mentors or champions<br />

at ALA to make themselves<br />

available for the prospective<br />

mentees.<br />

He said he was now involved<br />

in raising a crop of leaders who<br />

would understood the intricacies<br />

of governance and global<br />

issues in a digital economy.<br />

Leo Stan Eke, chairman of<br />

Zinox Technologies Limited,<br />

said what made someone a billionaire<br />

was not the billions he<br />

or she acquired but legacies.<br />

Eke said this was time for<br />

old entrepreneurs to go back to<br />

entrepreneurship schools and<br />

gain knowledge of the modern<br />

system.<br />

Tosin Runsewe, chief operating<br />

officer of AXA Mansard Insurance<br />

Plc, said as Nigeria’s population<br />

kept growing, challenges<br />

also continued rising. Runsewe<br />

said the population could be a<br />

gift if properly harnessed, adding<br />

that the launch of the ALA<br />

would go a long way in enhancing<br />

the quality of manpower in<br />

the country.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

38 BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Start-Up Digest<br />

‘Nigerian start-ups need grants<br />

to scale through hurdles’<br />

Elizabeth Anuoluwapo Dike is the executive director of Lizanu Indelible Needles, a firm that<br />

designs clothes for clients and helps them get the kind of designs they want. Elizabeth holds<br />

Bachelor of Science (Bsc) degree in Social Studies from Tai Solarin University of Education,<br />

Ogun State, Nigeria. In this interview with BUNMI BAILEY, the young entrepreneur talks about<br />

her business, challenges and how government can help young entrepreneurs like herself.<br />

Tell me about your<br />

business, when you<br />

started and your<br />

background.<br />

My name is Elizabeth<br />

Anuoluwapo Dike. I am a fashion<br />

entrepreneur and my business<br />

name is Lizanu Indelible Needles.<br />

What I do is to help clients bring<br />

their designs to reality. There are<br />

people who prefer to have their<br />

own designs instead of having<br />

something common. So, what I<br />

do is to help them have the kind of<br />

design they want for themselves.<br />

I also create designs for clients.<br />

I started this business properly<br />

in the 20<strong>16</strong>. I have actually been<br />

doing it for a while, but I got to<br />

understand the business side of<br />

it properly in the year 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

What inspired you to set up<br />

the business?<br />

I learnt how to make clothes<br />

as a teenager. The experience was<br />

what inspired this business. I was<br />

also helped by my mum. Initially<br />

I thought it was all about making<br />

clothes, but then I started seeing<br />

that there was more to it than<br />

just making clothes. I decided to<br />

design since I could be creative,<br />

moderately.<br />

What was your initial start-up<br />

capital?<br />

The United States Consulate<br />

General Lagos in collaboration<br />

with Field of Skills and<br />

Dreams VTE Academy has<br />

trained 121 budding entrepreneurs<br />

in Port Harcourt, Rivers State. It was<br />

the second edition of the Conference<br />

for Emerging Entrepreneurs<br />

and it took place last Wednesday.<br />

The up-and-coming entrepreneurs,<br />

selected from across Nigeria,<br />

learned how to transform their<br />

ideas into practical business plans,<br />

Elizabeth Anuoluwapo Dike<br />

U.S. Consulate, FSD Academy train 121<br />

emerging entrepreneurs in Port Harcourt<br />

ODINAKA ANUDU<br />

manage business risks, navigate<br />

difficult moments, seek capital, and<br />

develop partnerships to help their<br />

businesses grow.<br />

F. John Bray, United States consul<br />

general, declared the workshop<br />

open and was joined by Ipalibo<br />

Harry Banigo, Rivers State deputy<br />

governor, and Ndowa Lale, vicechancellor<br />

of the University of Port<br />

Harcourt.<br />

In his welcoming remarks, F.<br />

John Bray explained that one of<br />

U.S. Mission Nigeria’s primary goals<br />

was to support Nigeria’s economic<br />

development. According to him,<br />

the U.S. Department of State always<br />

supported entrepreneurs all over the<br />

world through training and mentoring,<br />

while working with governments<br />

to create enabling environments and<br />

entrepreneurial cultures.<br />

“There is growing evidence that<br />

entrepreneurs the world over are<br />

the drivers of job growth. The United<br />

States government is firmly convinced<br />

that in addition to creating<br />

jobs and expanding economic<br />

opportunities, entrepreneurship<br />

contributes to political stability<br />

and a vibrant civil society,” Consul<br />

General Bray said.<br />

Leading business leaders including<br />

Tonye Cole, Sahara Group<br />

co-founder; Stella Okoli, Emzor<br />

Pharmaceutical CEO; Iyin Aboyeji,<br />

Andela co-founder; a Zizi Cardow,<br />

award-winning designer, and senior<br />

executives of prominent commercial<br />

banks mentored and trained the<br />

participating young entrepreneurs.<br />

The Conference was organised<br />

with a view to equipping the entrepreneurs<br />

with the requisite skills<br />

and entrepreneurial know-how to<br />

enhance their success in the business<br />

world. The first edition was<br />

held in Lagos in March 2017.<br />

I cannot give a specific amount<br />

because it was a gradual process<br />

for me. I got my tools and other<br />

things little by little. Like I mentioned<br />

earlier, patience was key.<br />

How would you say your business<br />

has grown since starting?<br />

I will say it is still growing. It<br />

has not grown to the kind of level<br />

I want, but there has been some<br />

improvement. So I will say that<br />

it is still growing because even<br />

growth does not just happen. It is<br />

The government<br />

can help<br />

by encouraging<br />

young entrepreneurs<br />

with<br />

grants. If I am<br />

able to get a<br />

grant, I could<br />

help others as<br />

I had always<br />

wanted to<br />

a gradual process. I have a bigger<br />

picture of where I want my business<br />

to be and I hope to achieve<br />

that soon.<br />

You have over a year experience<br />

in entrepreneurship. Why<br />

do you think most start-ups fail<br />

after five years of being birthed?<br />

Most start-ups need some<br />

years to actually make headway or<br />

have a breakthrough in businesses.<br />

So, if in about five years the<br />

business is tired or the person in<br />

charge is not patient, determined,<br />

zealous or even strong enough<br />

to hold his/her ground, then the<br />

business would simply not fly.<br />

Lack of patience, determination,<br />

focus and strength could cause a<br />

five-year-old start-up to fail.<br />

What are the challenges confronting<br />

your business?<br />

One of the challenges facing<br />

my business is lack of funds.<br />

Another is time and distance. If<br />

I have a trainee and the person’s<br />

location is really far from mine,<br />

it slows business and training<br />

down.<br />

How can these challenges be<br />

addressed?<br />

The government can help by<br />

encouraging young entrepreneurs<br />

with grants. If I am able to<br />

get a grant, I could help others<br />

as I had always wanted to. But if<br />

I do not have enough resources<br />

to even teach people, those who<br />

want to learn most times do not<br />

even have enough to pay to learn.<br />

So, if I have resources and can<br />

teach for free, that will be a whole<br />

lot of help, not just for me but for<br />

the people I wish to help too.<br />

What would you tell your<br />

younger self?<br />

I would tell my younger self<br />

to keep going, do not stop moving;<br />

be creative; be energetic; be<br />

focused and always be ready. Opportunities<br />

will not wait for you<br />

to get ready. So always be ready.<br />

Tech4Dev, Microsoft collaborate to train<br />

500,000 youth on digital skills<br />

JOSEPHINE OKOJIE<br />

Tech4dev and Microsoft<br />

have partnered to train over<br />

500,000 youths on digital<br />

skills through its Basic<br />

Digital Education Initiative (BDEI).<br />

In a statement made available<br />

to <strong>BusinessDay</strong>, Joel Ogunsola,<br />

executive director, Tech4Dev said<br />

that the initiative is an experimental<br />

learning program that is supported<br />

by Microsoft Nigeria to train young<br />

individuals in primary, secondary<br />

and tertiary institutions on foundational<br />

digital skills.<br />

Ogunsola noted that the move<br />

have become imperative in order<br />

to equip young minds with the<br />

requisite skills for the 21st century.<br />

“We are making ample investment<br />

in digital skills education<br />

over the decade through support<br />

from Microsoft Philanthropy to<br />

train the next generation of young<br />

individuals looking to be part of<br />

the fourth industrial revolution as<br />

well as adults who very much need<br />

the skills to fully benefit from new<br />

opportunities being presented by<br />

the fourth industrial revolution,”<br />

he said.<br />

He noted that the initiative was a<br />

result of Tech4Dev and Microsoft’s<br />

mission to solve the world’s biggest<br />

problems through technology.<br />

Also speaking during the training<br />

event, Akin Banuso, general<br />

manager, Microsoft Nigeria said,<br />

“in a world where digital skills are<br />

fundamental to success in so many<br />

environments, leaving people in the<br />

dark about this major part of their<br />

world amounts to an unacceptable<br />

gap in their education. We believe<br />

technology should be an equalising<br />

force in the world—inclusive,<br />

not divisive.”<br />

“So, we are investing our greatest<br />

assets—our technology, grants,<br />

people, and voice—to advance a<br />

more equitable world where the<br />

benefits of technology are accessible<br />

to everyone,” Banuso said.<br />

In his key note speech, Olusegun<br />

Mimiko, former governor of Ondo<br />

State encouraged the younger<br />

generation to join the advocacy<br />

and push for democratization of<br />

education at all levels. He further<br />

advocated for more female participation<br />

in tech fields.<br />

“It’s a time of intellectual domination.<br />

Women have begun to<br />

dominate, and they should get more<br />

involved,” Mimiko said.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

Olawumi Ogunbode<br />

How Olawumi Ogunbode<br />

makes money from<br />

soaps, shea butter, honey<br />

Angel James<br />

dients such as egg white<br />

and lemon. In 2013, she<br />

commercialised her<br />

products and created<br />

awareness on them. Ever<br />

since then, her sales<br />

have gone beyond her<br />

expectation. She is<br />

happy to have attracted<br />

many Nigerians to her<br />

Nigerians<br />

do not<br />

appreciate<br />

their<br />

own locally<br />

made<br />

products<br />

because<br />

we do not<br />

believe in<br />

each other<br />

products.<br />

The young entrepreneur<br />

did not stop there.<br />

She committed time and<br />

resources to learning<br />

about black soap and<br />

she now has her own<br />

recipe, which is different<br />

from others.<br />

“I started my business<br />

with less than N5,<br />

000, which I used to<br />

buy materials. My black<br />

soap business alone is<br />

worth over N100, 000.<br />

I have two employees<br />

and source materials<br />

from factories where<br />

they are produced in the<br />

country. My black soaps<br />

are unique because I<br />

check the skin texture<br />

and complexion coupled<br />

with other requirements<br />

before production,” she<br />

says.<br />

The entrepreneur<br />

believes that time will<br />

come when she will go<br />

into mass production<br />

and will have general<br />

products for oily skin<br />

and dry skin, among<br />

others.<br />

Olawumi has been<br />

able to create awareness<br />

through word of mouth,<br />

social media, her website<br />

and referrals.<br />

She says the business<br />

is lucrative as women<br />

will always want their<br />

skins to glow without<br />

wearing makeup, adding<br />

that men also patronise<br />

her because of the quality<br />

of the products.<br />

The entrepreneur has<br />

long-term customers<br />

and says that Nigerians<br />

have not learnt to believe<br />

in their own products.<br />

“I do not really have<br />

problem with the shea<br />

butter and other products<br />

I make, but my major<br />

concern which is<br />

the black soap. I notice<br />

that people prefer to buy<br />

soaps from Ghana and<br />

the UK, but my soap is<br />

as original as those ones<br />

from abroad,” she states.<br />

The young entrepreneur<br />

is planning to expand<br />

across the country<br />

and ensure that every<br />

household uses her<br />

products.<br />

“My long-term plan is<br />

to run the business and<br />

be the leading brand.<br />

Nigerians do not appreciate<br />

their own locally<br />

made products because<br />

we do not believe in<br />

each other. We do not<br />

know the efficacy and<br />

worth of our local made<br />

products,” she notes.<br />

She urges the government<br />

to empower<br />

local entrepreneurs to<br />

produce more, while<br />

calling for a better business<br />

environment for<br />

entrepreneurs.<br />

Josephine Okojie<br />

Kenechukwu Chibuikem<br />

Okafor is<br />

a Mechanical Engineering<br />

graduate<br />

of Landmark University. He is<br />

the founder and CEO of Ezra<br />

Footwear, a start-up shoe<br />

manufacturing business.<br />

Kenechukwu was inspired<br />

to establish his business by<br />

his parents and his love<br />

for leather products. The<br />

achievements of his parents<br />

motivated him on a daily<br />

basis and in 20<strong>16</strong>, he established<br />

Ezra Footwear. He<br />

is also the founder of Ezra<br />

farms.<br />

The young engineer<br />

started the business with his<br />

entire savings. According to<br />

Kenechukwu, his business<br />

has grown since starting and<br />

demand for his products is<br />

also rising.<br />

He tells Start-Up Digest<br />

that he sources his raw materials<br />

from local markets<br />

across the country and also<br />

imports some of them.<br />

“We source for most of our<br />

materials from local markets<br />

and also import from Indonesia,”<br />

the footwear maker says.<br />

Kenechukwu recently won<br />

the Entrepreneurs Organisation’s<br />

Global Students Entrepreneurship<br />

Awards (EOG-<br />

SEA) (Nigeria chapter) and<br />

represented the country at<br />

the global finals in Germany.<br />

Kenechukwu states that<br />

the footwear industry has<br />

Start-Up Digest<br />

Ol awumi<br />

Ogunbode<br />

is the CEO<br />

of Jarah, a<br />

subsidiary<br />

of Shadonai Resources<br />

Limited that produces<br />

skin products such as<br />

soap, honey, carrot oil,<br />

coconut oil and shea<br />

butter, popularly known<br />

as ‘Ori’. A graduate of<br />

English from Olabisi<br />

Onabanjo University,<br />

Ago Iwoye, Ogun State,<br />

Olawumi started her<br />

business while a student.<br />

Her desire has always<br />

been to be part<br />

of the made-in-Nigeria<br />

project.<br />

“I started my business<br />

in 2013 with the desire to<br />

change the type of soaps<br />

in the market, which often<br />

contain harsh chemicals<br />

that could cause<br />

skin irritation. I noticed<br />

that most of the bathing<br />

soaps in the market were<br />

produced using chemicals<br />

that were harsh on<br />

the skin. I decided not<br />

use any soap that I did<br />

not know how it was<br />

produced. Then I started<br />

working on my skin and<br />

people started coming<br />

to me for advice,” she<br />

explains.<br />

The young entrepreneur<br />

had been using<br />

black soap since 2001<br />

until she decided to incorporate<br />

natural ingrethe<br />

potential to diversify the<br />

country’s economy away<br />

from oil and earn huge foreign<br />

exchange for Nigeria,<br />

adding that what is required<br />

is the support from government.<br />

The young entrepreneur<br />

assures that the country has<br />

what it takes in terms of raw<br />

materials and the needed<br />

skills to be footwear manufacturing<br />

hub in Africa.<br />

When asked about his<br />

expansion plans, he says, “I<br />

have scheduled a lot of expansion<br />

plans which I have<br />

already started working on<br />

through the help of my parents<br />

who has been supporting<br />

me from the beginning.<br />

Currently I am making efforts<br />

in securing more machines<br />

for production and also expand<br />

the factory space.”<br />

“I also intend to start<br />

training other youths on<br />

footwear manufacturing. I<br />

am saving towards achieving<br />

all this within the shortest<br />

possible time,” says<br />

Ekenechukwu.<br />

Answering questions on<br />

the challenges the business<br />

is facing, Kenechukwu replies<br />

that rising cost of raw<br />

materials remains the major<br />

issue. He adds that prices of<br />

every material needed for<br />

production of footwear has<br />

risen in recent times.<br />

This has increased his<br />

production cost at a point<br />

when customers are reluctant<br />

to pay more. Also, he<br />

stresses that his inability<br />

to meet up with the huge<br />

demand for his product is a<br />

challenge.<br />

The young entrepreneur<br />

wants the government to<br />

improve on the ease of doing<br />

business so that cost of<br />

production can decline and<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

39<br />

‘Start-ups need to be<br />

competitive to increase survival’<br />

We source<br />

for most of<br />

our materials<br />

from local<br />

markets<br />

and also<br />

import from<br />

Indonesia,”<br />

the footwear<br />

maker<br />

the country’s products will<br />

become more competitive.<br />

He states that the issue of<br />

competitiveness has been<br />

a major factor hindering<br />

the growth of the country’s<br />

footwear industry as a lot of<br />

foreign shoes are cheaper<br />

than locally produce ones.<br />

The engineer-turnedentrepreneur<br />

said when<br />

production cost is cheaper,<br />

Nigeria’s shoes will compete<br />

favourably with the<br />

imported ones.<br />

Kenechukwu also urges<br />

the government to assist<br />

start-ups with finance. “A<br />

lot of Nigerian youths have<br />

wonderful business ideas<br />

but the finance to bring them<br />

to bear is what is lacking,<br />

forcing many to never establish<br />

their businesses.<br />

But if government can start<br />

supporting start-ups with<br />

finance, many of them will<br />

establish their business,”<br />

he says.<br />

He states that government<br />

has not given enough<br />

support to the leather sector,<br />

stressing that a lot of footwear<br />

makers in the country<br />

have shut down due to harsh<br />

operating environment and<br />

lack of government support.<br />

“A lot of people started<br />

footwear production line<br />

and were forced to close<br />

down because they could<br />

not cope with the economic<br />

situation. The footwear industry<br />

can be a good source<br />

of export for Nigeria with<br />

much support from the government,”<br />

he says.<br />

On advice to other entrepreneurs,<br />

he says, “We<br />

all go through bad days. I<br />

have been through a lot of<br />

bad times, but what matters<br />

is not how hard you fell but<br />

how you got back up.”


40 BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556 Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

MondayMorning<br />

In association with<br />

Harvard<br />

Business<br />

Review<br />

Becoming more conscientious<br />

STEFANO TASSELLI,<br />

MARTIN KILDUFF AND<br />

BLAINE LANDIS<br />

Ma n y<br />

people,<br />

including<br />

some<br />

experts,<br />

see personality as relatively<br />

stable over time.<br />

In other words, you are<br />

who you are, and while<br />

you may evolve a little,<br />

once you become an<br />

adult your major traits —<br />

your extraversion, agreeableness,<br />

neuroticism,<br />

openness and, yes, conscientiousness<br />

— won’t<br />

change much.<br />

But this widespread<br />

belief in the immutability<br />

of personality is<br />

misplaced. People can<br />

positively change their<br />

personalities by increasing<br />

their engagement in<br />

Welcoming an employee back from medical leave<br />

ANNE SUGAR<br />

Employees take leaves<br />

of absence for all sorts<br />

of reasons, from dealing<br />

with a cancer diagnosis to<br />

caring for a sick child. Here are<br />

some specific actions that will<br />

help ensure a smooth transition<br />

for your employee and<br />

you.<br />

REMEMBER TO CHECK IN.<br />

Plan to check in periodically<br />

with your team member on<br />

leave. A good starting point is<br />

checking in on a monthly basis,<br />

but of course this depends<br />

on the length of the leave.<br />

Keeping up even occasional<br />

communication will help your<br />

team member feel valued and<br />

engaged when they are out of<br />

the office, and it demonstrates<br />

your confidence in and support<br />

of their work.<br />

activities that fit three<br />

criteria: They feel important,<br />

are enjoyable and<br />

accord with their values.<br />

With this in mind,<br />

think about why you<br />

may struggle to act conscientiously.<br />

See if you<br />

You can talk with your employee<br />

to find the method<br />

of communication that best<br />

suits them, whether it’s quick<br />

emails, phone calls, or perhaps<br />

an occasional face-to-face<br />

meetup if they’re on extended<br />

leave and their situation allows<br />

for it.<br />

REACH OUT RIGHT BE-<br />

FORE THEIR RETURN. Even<br />

more important than a brief<br />

check-in is the communication<br />

right before the staff<br />

member returns to the office. It<br />

is important to ask about how<br />

they would like their return<br />

announced. Sometimes the<br />

employee might want to return<br />

without a lot of fanfare. It is<br />

important to honor privacy in<br />

terms of what the staff member<br />

wants to divulge, so prepare for<br />

a brief conversation.<br />

THINK THROUGH THE<br />

can identify what is getting<br />

in your way, and<br />

discuss it with your boss.<br />

She may be able to explain<br />

why a task that<br />

seems unimportant to<br />

you is important to the<br />

success of the business,<br />

DETAILS. As a first step, consider<br />

how you can create<br />

meaningful touchpoints that<br />

create a welcoming experience.<br />

For instance, you might<br />

meet the employee at the door<br />

when they arrive at the office,<br />

or have flowers or some other<br />

welcoming item waiting for<br />

them at their desk. End the<br />

first day early so that your employee<br />

can ease back into the<br />

workflow.<br />

PROVIDE A PHASED<br />

TRANSITION. Recognize that<br />

because of medical appointments<br />

or fatigue, your employee’s<br />

schedule might need to<br />

be different than before. With<br />

these parameters in mind, focus<br />

on some small, quick-win<br />

projects to jump-start the employee’s<br />

work in a meaningful<br />

manner.<br />

CHECK IN FREQUENTLY.<br />

or willing to assign you<br />

to tasks that are a better<br />

fit for your abilities.<br />

If you can’t change the<br />

tasks you’re assigned, try<br />

to change how you think<br />

about them. For example,<br />

if you can remind<br />

With your returning employee,<br />

think about providing additional<br />

attention, as if you had<br />

a new employee joining the<br />

team. The most important<br />

meeting to facilitate is with the<br />

yourself that timeliness<br />

is part of high-quality<br />

work, you may find it<br />

easier to let go when the<br />

deadline approaches.<br />

Do you value collaboration<br />

and helpfulness?<br />

Building relationships?<br />

Teamwork? If you learn<br />

to see a task in a way that<br />

matches your values,<br />

you will have an easier<br />

time completing it well.<br />

You can also enhance<br />

your conscientiousness<br />

by enhancing your interactions<br />

with co-workers,<br />

inside or outside the<br />

workplace. Research<br />

shows that investment<br />

in activities with colleagues<br />

is associated<br />

with an increase in a<br />

person’s conscientiousness.<br />

Even recreational<br />

activities can help you<br />

become more detail-oriented<br />

by boosting your<br />

team member who took over<br />

the employee’s work while<br />

they were out.<br />

Remember that transition<br />

scheduling should be fluid<br />

since each employee has a<br />

sense of belonging and<br />

obligation to your work<br />

community.<br />

Importantly, showing<br />

your willingness to become<br />

conscientious may<br />

be just as important as<br />

actually doing it. From<br />

an organizational perspective,<br />

leaders should<br />

evaluate their employees<br />

not only on their<br />

current behavior and<br />

performance but also<br />

on how adaptable those<br />

employees are.<br />

(Stefano Tasselli is an<br />

assistant professor at<br />

the Rotterdam School<br />

of Management, Erasmus<br />

University. Martin<br />

Kilduff is a professor at<br />

the UCL School of Management.<br />

Blaine Landis<br />

is an assistant professor<br />

at University College<br />

London.)<br />

unique experience and situation<br />

returning to the workplace.<br />

(Anne Sugar is an executive<br />

coach and speaker.)<br />

(C) (2017) Harvard Business Review. Distributed by New York Times Syndicate


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

C002D5556<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

41<br />

Harvard<br />

Business<br />

Review<br />

MondayMorning<br />

In association with<br />

Presenting in English when you’re not a native speaker<br />

DEBORAH GRAYSON RIEGEL<br />

Being compelled<br />

to speak in your<br />

non-native language<br />

can lead to feelings<br />

of frustration pressure,<br />

and insecurity.<br />

Add to that the burden<br />

of making formal business<br />

presentations in<br />

front of superiors, decision-makers<br />

and key<br />

stakeholders in your<br />

non-native language,<br />

and the anxiety is significantly<br />

greater.<br />

My co-author Ellen<br />

Dowling and I interviewed<br />

many leaders<br />

in this situation, and<br />

asked them to share<br />

their experiences. Here<br />

are three strategies nonnative<br />

English speakers<br />

can employ to help<br />

them feel more confident<br />

before, during and<br />

after a presentation:<br />

SPEND SIGNIFI-<br />

CANTLY MORE TIME<br />

PRACTICING YOUR<br />

DELIVERY THAN PER-<br />

FECTING YOUR DECK.<br />

The goal here is “overlearning”<br />

your presentation<br />

— pushing on<br />

with practice even when<br />

it seems like you’ve<br />

done enough. This will<br />

help your presentation<br />

to become embedded<br />

in your long-term memory<br />

and therefore less<br />

susceptible to the effects<br />

of stress. It will also<br />

help you speak spontaneously.<br />

DON’T AGONIZE<br />

ABOUT YOUR AC-<br />

CENT, BUT DO SLOW<br />

YOUR SPEAKING<br />

SPEED. An unfamiliar<br />

accent is particularly<br />

problematic in the first<br />

minute or two of your<br />

presentation when<br />

your audience must<br />

initially strain to understand<br />

you. Choose your<br />

opening words deliberately<br />

and pronounce<br />

them carefully. The au-<br />

dience will slowly develop<br />

an ear for your<br />

accent and find it easier<br />

to understand what you<br />

are saying.<br />

PAUSE EARLY AND<br />

OFTEN. Understanding<br />

accented speech requires<br />

listeners to draw<br />

on additional cognitive<br />

resources, not only to<br />

understand and remember<br />

what has been<br />

said but also to manage<br />

other information or<br />

tasks while listening to<br />

accented speech.<br />

For both native and<br />

non-native English<br />

speakers, perfection<br />

is overrated. But with<br />

some extra attention,<br />

effort and commitment,<br />

non-native English<br />

speakers can present<br />

with confidence,<br />

competence and cultural<br />

comfort.<br />

(Deborah Grayson<br />

Riegel is a principal at<br />

The Boda Group.)<br />

Why email is so stressful<br />

DORIE CLARK<br />

It’s easy to feel overwhelmed<br />

with the<br />

crush of email. In fact,<br />

one study showed the average<br />

professional spends<br />

4.1 hours per day responding<br />

to work messages.<br />

I undertook an experiment.<br />

For two weeks, I<br />

tracked, recorded and<br />

categorized every email<br />

I received, splitting them<br />

into categories like “client<br />

communication” and<br />

“networking or event invitation.”<br />

Everything that<br />

made it directly into my<br />

inbox was tallied — 1,<strong>16</strong>1<br />

messages over a two-week<br />

period.<br />

Here are three important<br />

lessons I learned from<br />

the process, which may<br />

be valuable as you think<br />

about how to make the<br />

time you spend on email<br />

more efficient, as well.<br />

EACH “YES” LEADS TO<br />

MORE WORK. Saying no<br />

is a challenge for any professional:<br />

You don’t want<br />

to disappoint people, and<br />

any given opportunity may<br />

lead to positive outcomes.<br />

But analyzing the emails I<br />

received taught me an important<br />

lesson about why<br />

it’s essential to exercise<br />

stringent judgment: Each<br />

“yes” leads to a cascade<br />

of (typically unforeseen)<br />

work. Recognizing the<br />

downstream consequences<br />

and impact on one’s<br />

time is essential when<br />

evaluating your decision.<br />

IT’S EASIER TO SAY<br />

“NO” WHEN YOU REAL-<br />

IZE HOW MANY PEOPLE<br />

ARE ASKING. It was stunning<br />

to me how many<br />

messages I received — a<br />

full 12% of my overall<br />

emails — that were people<br />

asking me to do things. In<br />

some cases, it was easy to<br />

say no. But many requests<br />

were harder to navigate,<br />

including 75 messages<br />

from colleagues asking for<br />

favors, whether it was a<br />

book endorsement, an introduction<br />

to someone, or<br />

a request to connect me to<br />

a contact of theirs.<br />

In total, I received 69<br />

requests per week, or<br />

nearly 10 per day. It takes<br />

extreme willpower to say<br />

no, but it became easier<br />

when taking the aggregate<br />

numbers into account. As<br />

the old saying goes, “Your<br />

inbox is someone else’s<br />

to-do list for you.” When I<br />

thought about how much<br />

energy I’d be spending<br />

doing 69 people’s bidding<br />

per week, it helped<br />

me refocus and recognize<br />

that I could only make an<br />

impact if I focused on my<br />

own priorities.<br />

I’ll suggest that the truly<br />

essential emails were<br />

client communication<br />

and inquiries about potential<br />

new engagements.<br />

Using that metric, only<br />

10.5% of the messages I received<br />

over the two-week<br />

period qualified.<br />

Spending more time<br />

fielding messages, time<br />

spent away from our own<br />

priorities, isn’t a sustainable<br />

answer. And asking<br />

people to take you off of<br />

mailing lists or leave you<br />

off of “reply all” threads is<br />

a losing battle. (Just save<br />

your time and don’t respond.)<br />

Instead, by understanding<br />

the signal-to-noise<br />

ratio of our inboxes, and<br />

recognizing how easy it is<br />

for others to make (often<br />

onerous) requests for our<br />

time, we can make smarter<br />

choices about where to focus<br />

our attention.<br />

(Dorie Clark is a marketing<br />

strategist and professional<br />

speaker who<br />

teaches at Duke University’s<br />

Fuqua School of<br />

Business.)<br />

Brought to you courtesy of First Bank Nigeria


42 BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556 Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

REAL SECTOR WATCH<br />

Understanding Nigeria’s industrial strategy<br />

ODINAKA ANUDU<br />

One of the barely<br />

discussed concepts<br />

in modern development<br />

economics<br />

today is industrial<br />

strategy or blueprint. But it is hard<br />

to identify any upper middleincome<br />

or advanced economy<br />

that did not propel its growth or<br />

development through a clear-cut<br />

industrial strategy.<br />

China, for instance, is exportoriented.<br />

It is the largest exporter<br />

of steel, shipping 73.3 million<br />

metric tonnes to the world in<br />

2017. The country is also world’s<br />

largest exporter of textiles and a<br />

number of other products. Even<br />

the ‘Go-Out Policy’ introduced by<br />

the country in 2009 is a reflection<br />

of its outwardly looking industrial<br />

strategy, targeted at exporting finished<br />

products to the world and<br />

investing overseas.<br />

India is following the same<br />

development pattern.<br />

Import-substitution, on the<br />

other hand, was adopted by Latin<br />

American countries, including<br />

Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and<br />

Venezuela, in the 1930s up to<br />

1980s. It was hugely successful in<br />

these countries.<br />

It is a strategy in which local<br />

industries are established with<br />

a view to producing goods that<br />

replace imported ones. It means,<br />

for instance, encouraging the formation<br />

or establishment of fruit<br />

juice manufacturing companies<br />

in Nigeria to ensure that fruit juice<br />

is no longer imported. It is more<br />

inward-looking than outward.<br />

It requires imposition of tariffs,<br />

quotas and exchange controls to<br />

protect local industries from foreign<br />

competitors and make foreign<br />

goods expensive.<br />

Export- oriented or substitution<br />

industrialisation, on the other<br />

hand, is a strategy of exporting<br />

goods for which a country has<br />

a comparative advantage. This<br />

strategy has worked miracles for<br />

the Asian Tigers.<br />

Some countries have also adopted<br />

foreign private investment<br />

strategy, whereby incentives are<br />

put in place to attract multinationals<br />

and foreign direct investors. A<br />

typical example of a country with<br />

this policy is Ethiopia, even though<br />

it may be argued that the East African<br />

country is export-oriented or a<br />

mix of export-orientation and foreign<br />

private investment strategies.<br />

Some analysts argue that Nigeria<br />

does not have a specific industrial<br />

strategy and needs any of the<br />

three discussed above.<br />

Speaking at this year’s Manufacturing<br />

& Equipment Expo<br />

organised by MAN and Clarion<br />

Event West Africa, Aliyu Suleiman<br />

of the Dangote Group said the an<br />

industrial strategy had become<br />

important for Nigeria as new<br />

governments spent half of their<br />

tenures devising plans, with little<br />

room for implementation.<br />

“Last year, the United Kingdom<br />

produced a revised manufacturing<br />

strategy— a definitive roadmap. We<br />

can do that in Nigeria and MAN is<br />

in the best position to do this,” he<br />

stated.<br />

According to him, the industrial<br />

strategy should include the aspiration<br />

of industry in terms of how<br />

much GDP contribution targeted;<br />

where to play, with regard to areas<br />

of priority, and how to win, in terms<br />

of becoming competitive.<br />

Others have also pointed out<br />

that the country’s industrial strategy<br />

is vague, if it ever exists.<br />

There is another school of<br />

thought that believes that the country<br />

has never had any well-defined<br />

industrial strategy over the years.<br />

But a close look at Nigeria’s<br />

industrial history shows that the<br />

country adopted import-substitution<br />

strategy between 1960 and<br />

1985. However, the objectives were<br />

never realised.<br />

According to Udo N. Ekpo of the<br />

Department of Economics, Akwa<br />

Ibom State University, inputs such<br />

as raw materials, machines, spare<br />

parts and the skilled manpower<br />

used in the local industries were<br />

imported. As a result of this, rather<br />

than cut imports, external dependence<br />

or save foreign exchange<br />

as expected, the policy hiked<br />

imports, perpetuated external<br />

dependency of industrial sector,<br />

and drained foreign exchange.<br />

More so, the envisaged transfer<br />

of technical skill and technology,<br />

which could have resulted in technological<br />

development in Nigeria<br />

and consequently boost industrial<br />

development, did not materialise<br />

because strategic technical position<br />

in existing manufactured<br />

firms were manned by foreigners,<br />

he added.<br />

At various times in the past,<br />

Nigeria made efforts to attract<br />

foreign manufacturers and multinationals<br />

to create jobs and utilise<br />

local raw materials.<br />

Olusegun Obasanjo and<br />

Goodluck Jonathan’s eras saw<br />

Like in the importsubstitution<br />

era in<br />

Nigeria, many of<br />

the raw materials<br />

are still imported<br />

today, even though<br />

local input sourcing<br />

is already over<br />

50 percent<br />

ministers doing road shows outside<br />

the country to woo investors.<br />

There were also controversial<br />

waivers and incentives which<br />

several foreign companies got,<br />

especially during the Jonathan’s<br />

administration, targeted at promoting<br />

foreign investments.<br />

Currently, many government<br />

officials have used the expression<br />

‘import-substitution’ many<br />

times, pushing analysts to wonder<br />

whether this is the country’s current<br />

strategy.<br />

However, the crash in Nigeria’s<br />

biggest foreign exchange<br />

earner—crude oil— in 2015 and<br />

20<strong>16</strong> pushed public officials into<br />

campaigning for export of Nigerian<br />

agro and finished products. The<br />

reason was not far-fetched: Oil<br />

price was low and consequently<br />

dollar inflows could not meet the<br />

demands of manufacturers who<br />

needed to import inputs; fuel<br />

importers who wanted to bring in<br />

refined fuel, among others.<br />

Like in the import-substitution<br />

era in Nigeria, many of the raw<br />

materials are still imported today,<br />

even though local input sourcing is<br />

already over 50 percent. This is why<br />

many think that Nigeria’s industrial<br />

strategy is either non-existent or it<br />

is import-substitution.<br />

However, checks show that<br />

there has been a new industrial<br />

policy in the country since 2014. In<br />

the Nigeria Industrial Revolution<br />

Plan prepared by the Goodluck<br />

Jonathan administration, adopted<br />

by the present government, the<br />

country’s strategy is what is called<br />

‘resource-based industrialisation’.<br />

This means the use of locally<br />

available resources, such as raw<br />

materials, man power and natural<br />

resources, to grow domestic<br />

production. This has seen some<br />

success with local input sourcing<br />

ranging between 52 and 60 percent<br />

since the second half of 20<strong>16</strong>,<br />

according to numbers from MAN.<br />

However, the craze for export<br />

to earn foreign exchange and the<br />

constant use of ‘import substitution’<br />

in the industrial circles are<br />

blurring this vision. Nigeria’s nonoil<br />

export today is still dominated<br />

by cocoa, rubber, sesame seeds,<br />

shea nuts, animal skins/leather<br />

and vegetables, which ordinarily<br />

should feed local industries.<br />

Frank Udemba Jacobs, president<br />

of MAN, believes on the focus<br />

is on import-substitution, exportorientation<br />

and resource-based industrialisation.<br />

Jacobs said export<br />

was important because of the need<br />

for foreign exchange in the country,<br />

adding that export would create<br />

more demand locally.<br />

“Our industrial strategy is clear.<br />

It is resource-based industrialisation.<br />

But all others are important.<br />

What we do not want is exporting<br />

commodities without adding<br />

value,” he said.<br />

Jacobs said the prices of Nigerian<br />

products were not low owing<br />

to high cost of inputs and power.<br />

Muda Yusuf, director-general of<br />

the Lagos Chamber of Commerce<br />

and Industry (LCCI), pointed out<br />

most industries focused on both<br />

the local and export markets because<br />

the latter was bigger.<br />

Yusuf said import- substitution<br />

and export promotion could<br />

go together. He explained that<br />

resource-based industrial was<br />

more competitive because local<br />

resources were utilised, citing an<br />

example with the bright performance<br />

of food and beverage subsector<br />

which got most of its inputs<br />

locally as a case study.<br />

Oladapo Abiodun, chairman<br />

of LCCI SME Group, noted that<br />

import-substitution and export<br />

promotion could not be separated<br />

as one depended on the other for<br />

success.<br />

“The whole world is a global<br />

market. For you to enjoy economies<br />

of scale, you need to produce<br />

at an optimal level, satisfy<br />

the local market and export,”<br />

Abiodun said.<br />

He said a clear industrial<br />

strategy could only be noticed<br />

when the environment was good<br />

enough for businesses.<br />

Experts say what Nigeria<br />

needs is to further develop essential<br />

raw materials for industries<br />

by bringing back petrochemical<br />

industries, rejigging Ajaokuta<br />

Steel and attracting deep-pocket<br />

investors to the solid minerals<br />

sector. They say unless efforts are<br />

made in these directions, input<br />

importation will continue and<br />

resource-based industrialisation<br />

will become a will-o-the-wisp.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 43<br />

REAL SECTOR WATCH<br />

Steel firms expand capacity, tap<br />

export opportunity to earn FX<br />

Stories by ODINAKA ANUDU<br />

Nigerian steel<br />

firms are expanding<br />

capacity<br />

and tapping<br />

into export opportunity<br />

in the neighbouring<br />

markets to earn foreign<br />

exchange.<br />

Aarti Steel Nigeria Limited,<br />

which recently completed<br />

a 120,000- tonnes capacity<br />

cold-rolled mill in Ota, Ogun<br />

State, exports steel to Togo<br />

and Mali and plans to expand<br />

to Central Africa, Ivory Coast<br />

and Benin to boost capacity,<br />

earn more foreign exchange<br />

and tap the growth potential<br />

in the continent’s market.<br />

Aniket Singal, Aarti’s vice<br />

chairman, told <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

that the company was looking<br />

at expanding its export<br />

footprints, but said there<br />

was a need for a policy that<br />

would keep substandard roofing<br />

sheets at bay. African<br />

Industries, in October 20<strong>16</strong>,<br />

exported finished steel products<br />

to Morocco, Ghana and<br />

other parts of Africa for the<br />

first time.<br />

The company said its export<br />

of finished steel products<br />

would save the country over<br />

$650 million yearly. Alok<br />

Gupta, group managing director,<br />

African Industries<br />

Group, said that the quality<br />

of steel products of African Industries<br />

was at par with steel<br />

from Ukraine, if not better,<br />

adding that the company had<br />

become internationally competitive<br />

in exporting products<br />

Nigerian Breweries expanding local input sourcing operations, says MD<br />

The Nigerian<br />

Breweries (NB)<br />

says it is committed<br />

to raising<br />

its current<br />

50 percent local raw materials<br />

sourcing to 60 percent<br />

before 2020.<br />

Speaking at the annual<br />

general meeting held last<br />

Wednesday in Lagos, Jordi<br />

Borrut Bel, managing<br />

director of NB, said the<br />

brewer would continue<br />

to improve on its value<br />

extraction from local raw<br />

materials, including cassava<br />

and sorghum.<br />

Bel stated that the company<br />

was determined to<br />

improve the sorghum value<br />

chain in the country.<br />

The brewer’s profit after<br />

tax (PAT) on the financial<br />

year ended December 31,<br />

2017, surged to N33 billion,<br />

from N28.4 billion reported<br />

in the correspond-<br />

A cross section of participants trained by Nigerian-American Chamber of Commerce (NACC) on “Customer Relationship<br />

Management” in Lagos recently<br />

ers.<br />

He said the firm had<br />

cut water consumption for<br />

production by 28 percent<br />

in the last 10 years, sourcing<br />

100 percent of its packfrom<br />

Nigeria.<br />

He called for Export Expansion<br />

Grant to enable the<br />

company to sustain its exports.<br />

He added that freight<br />

cost from Ukraine to Ghana<br />

was $40 per metric tonne<br />

(MT) while that of Nigeria to<br />

Ghana is $65/MT, which was<br />

expensive.<br />

Uche Iwuamadi, executive<br />

director of the group, said the<br />

company’s operational capacity<br />

was below 70 percent,<br />

stating that there would likely<br />

be excess steel in the country<br />

when African Industries<br />

reached 100 percent capacity.<br />

African Industries has 12<br />

subsidiaries, including six big<br />

ing period of 2017, representing<br />

a <strong>16</strong> percent rise.<br />

Revenue for the period was<br />

N344 billion, as against<br />

N313 billion recorded in<br />

the previous year, representing<br />

approximately 10<br />

percent increase.<br />

Bel said the board of<br />

directors of NB recommended<br />

dividend of N33<br />

billion to shareholders,<br />

which was highest in the<br />

company’s history.<br />

The recommendation<br />

amounts to a total dividend<br />

of N4.13 per share<br />

for the 2017 operating year.<br />

Bell explained that the<br />

brewer gave out 100 per<br />

cent dividend as part of its<br />

dividend policy, consistent<br />

in its robust balance sheet.<br />

He explained that the<br />

company’s stable growth<br />

amid economic headwinds<br />

was a result of the company’s<br />

ability to cut cost.<br />

steel plants such as African<br />

Steel Mills, Ikorodu Steel Mills,<br />

African Foundries, and Abuja<br />

Steel Mills.<br />

“We produce one million<br />

tonnes of steel per year and<br />

our target is to export between<br />

200,000MT and 400,000 MT<br />

this year. You can see we are<br />

earning foreign exchange<br />

when others are demanding<br />

it from the government,” Uche<br />

Iwuamadi, group executive<br />

director, African Industries,<br />

told <strong>BusinessDay</strong>.<br />

Standard Metallurgical<br />

Company Limited (SMC) is<br />

planning to launch a billet mill<br />

to produce standard wire rods<br />

in Nigeria for the local and<br />

ECOWAS market.<br />

Mohammed Saade, managing<br />

director, SMC, said was<br />

producing 300,000 tonnes of<br />

wire rods per year.<br />

“With phase two, we would<br />

produce 260,000 tons of billets<br />

in Nigeria. Nigeria today<br />

is a big market and we are<br />

committed to meeting local<br />

demands and the surplus can<br />

go to the ECOWAS market,”<br />

Saade said.<br />

Nigeria, Africa’s biggest<br />

economy, spends about $3.3<br />

billion on steel imports every<br />

year. Eighteen of the 30 steel<br />

manufacturers in Nigeria produce<br />

about 2.2 million tons a<br />

year with scraps and billets<br />

Bel explained that the<br />

foreign exchange situation<br />

improved last year, but<br />

pointed out that double<br />

digit inflation impacted<br />

businesses and consum-<br />

imported mainly from China.<br />

An average of steel products<br />

such as standard plates,<br />

hot-rolled coil, cold-rolled<br />

coil and rebar is $464.7 using<br />

Chinese prices, which means<br />

Nigeria imports roughly 7.1<br />

million metric tonnes of steel<br />

annually. Many of the exports<br />

are still scraps, billets, and<br />

nails .<br />

The publicly-owned Ajaokuta<br />

Steel Complex is in<br />

disrepair after government<br />

sinking over $5 billion into the<br />

plant. The government has<br />

been slow in handing over<br />

the behemoth to a private investor<br />

despite interests from<br />

foreigners.<br />

aging materials locally.<br />

Bell noted that development<br />

of employees was<br />

important for sustainable<br />

company performance,<br />

adding that early signs<br />

of improvement in the<br />

macro-economic condition<br />

were yet to reflect on<br />

consumer confidence.<br />

He said the firm remained<br />

committed to the<br />

market in the long term as<br />

the fundamentals of the<br />

beer market were strong<br />

and attractive in the both<br />

medium and long term.<br />

He pointed out that<br />

firm was well positioned<br />

to trade through difficult<br />

times by leveraging its<br />

innovative brands across<br />

different market segments.<br />

NB sources its sorghum<br />

through a company known<br />

as Psaltry International<br />

Limited, located at Alayide<br />

village, Ado Awaiye near<br />

Iseyin, Oyo State,<br />

Initiate policies to<br />

revive moribund<br />

textile mills,<br />

NTGTEA tells FG<br />

The Nigeria Textile,<br />

Garment and Tailoring<br />

Employers<br />

Association (NT-<br />

GTEA) has urged the Federal<br />

Government to initiate<br />

steps to revive moribund<br />

textile mills in Nigeria.<br />

By 1985, Nigeria had over<br />

180 textile mills employing<br />

more than one million<br />

Nigerians. Some of the<br />

mills were United Nigerian<br />

Textile Limited (UNTL),<br />

Aswani Textile, Afprint,<br />

Asaba Textile Mills, and Edo<br />

Textile Mills, among others,<br />

but there are fewer than<br />

three full-fledged healthy<br />

textile mills in Africa’s biggest<br />

economy and most<br />

populous country today.<br />

Speaking in a telephone<br />

interview, Hamma Kwajaffa,<br />

director-general of NTG-<br />

TEA, said unbridled importation<br />

of cheaper but substandard<br />

textile products<br />

killed local firms, stating<br />

that 95 percent of the textile<br />

market in the country today<br />

is dominated by China.<br />

Kwajaffa said the very<br />

few surviving textile firms<br />

are struggling and cannot<br />

compete with China and India,<br />

whose production costs<br />

in their home countries are<br />

much lower than Nigeria’s.<br />

“Energy costs four cents<br />

per kilowatt in other African<br />

countries but 20 cents per<br />

kilowatt in Nigeria. So how<br />

can a struggling textile firm<br />

compete? We need government<br />

intervention to be<br />

able to compete,” he asked.<br />

The textile industry in<br />

Nigeria is currently made<br />

up of fabrics makers, cotton<br />

producers, rug and carpet<br />

manufacturers as well as<br />

fashion and designers.<br />

“We can produce military<br />

uniforms. We have bed<br />

sheets, blankets, towels<br />

and handkerchiefs. We can<br />

make good products, but<br />

there is a need for incentives<br />

for the industry,” he<br />

said.<br />

In the first quarter of<br />

20<strong>16</strong>, Aisha Abubakar,<br />

minister of state for industry,<br />

trade and investment,<br />

toured three textile firms,<br />

which include Lucky Fibres<br />

Nigeria Plc, Spintex Mills<br />

and Nichemtex Plc in Lagos<br />

and Ogun states, promising<br />

to draw government attention<br />

to the challenges in the<br />

industry.<br />

However, smuggling,<br />

high production cost, poor<br />

patronage and lack of quality<br />

control on imports, which<br />

are age-old problems in<br />

the industry, continue with<br />

little or minimal government<br />

response.


44<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

ABUJACITYBUSINESS<br />

COMPREHENSIVE COVERAGE OF NATION’S CAPITAL<br />

PenCom sensitizes prospective<br />

retirees on ease of accessing benefits<br />

HARRISON EDEH, Abuja<br />

National Pension<br />

Commission<br />

(Pen-<br />

Com) has<br />

carried out<br />

sensitisation awareness to<br />

prospective retirees on ease<br />

of accessing their retirement<br />

benefits from the Contributory<br />

Pension Scheme (CPS)<br />

under the Pension Reform<br />

Act, 2014.<br />

Prior to the reform, Public<br />

Sector operated Defined<br />

Benefit (DB) Scheme which<br />

was unfunded to the tune of<br />

N2.3 trillion pension liability<br />

as at 2004; marred by weak,<br />

inefficient and poor administration,<br />

prone to fraud and<br />

riddled with endless and<br />

painful annual physical verification<br />

of pensioners.<br />

On the other hand, the<br />

L-R: Ye Shuijin,<br />

president, China<br />

Chamber of Commerce<br />

in Nigeria<br />

(CCC); Chiedu<br />

Osakwe, chief<br />

trade negotiator/dg<br />

Nigerian Office for<br />

Trade Negotiations<br />

(NOTN), and Zhang<br />

Wenfeng, md/ceo,<br />

China Harbour Engineering<br />

Company<br />

Limited, during the<br />

presentation of Office<br />

Equipment/Items by<br />

the CCC to NOTN in<br />

Abuja.<br />

Pic by Tunde Adeniyi<br />

Private Sector pension was<br />

characterized by low coverage<br />

as most employers did<br />

not have pension arrangements<br />

and Retirement benefit<br />

under the NPF/NSITF<br />

scheme were very low.<br />

Section 4 of the Pension<br />

Reform Act 2014, stipulates<br />

the minimum rates of contributions<br />

of 10% and 8% for<br />

employers and employees<br />

respectively in both public<br />

and private sectors; monthly<br />

pension contributions in the<br />

core civil service are centrally<br />

deducted by the Office of the<br />

Accountant General of the<br />

Federation (OAGF) as advised<br />

by the Budget Office of the<br />

Federation based on budgeted<br />

total personnel costs<br />

with effect from July 2004.<br />

At a recent sensitisation<br />

meeting held in Kaduna, the<br />

officials of the National Pension<br />

Commission explained<br />

in a presentation made<br />

available to <strong>BusinessDay</strong>,<br />

requisite steps as well as the<br />

benefits of the contributory<br />

Pension scheme.<br />

According to the Commission,<br />

“Contributory<br />

Pension Scheme seeks to,<br />

amongst others, ensure that<br />

every worker receives his<br />

retirement benefits as and<br />

when due.”<br />

Also, retirement benefits<br />

administration is the last<br />

phase of the process/activities<br />

put place to achieve the<br />

above objectives of the Pension<br />

reform.<br />

The two models of withdrawal<br />

under the Contributory<br />

Pension scheme are:<br />

‘Programmed withdrawal’<br />

and the ‘Purchase of retiree<br />

life annuity. Besides, there are<br />

also benefits for the beneficiaries<br />

of a deceased contributor.<br />

Through the Programmed<br />

Withdrawal,<br />

beneficiaries are entitled to<br />

monthly pension of at least<br />

50% of terminal monthly<br />

emolument subject to lumpsum<br />

taken and RSA balance<br />

may be enhanced at regular<br />

intervals subject to returns<br />

on investment; balance in<br />

RSA is re-invested by PFA<br />

for maximum growth and<br />

bequeaths inheritance if<br />

death occurs at any time.<br />

In the same vein, Retiree<br />

Life Annuity provides opportunity<br />

for retirees, access<br />

to a financial product offered<br />

by Insurance companies<br />

for a regular income in<br />

consideration for payment<br />

of premium from a retiree;<br />

regular pension payments<br />

for life so long as the retiree<br />

is alive.<br />

FCT Minister seeks National Assembly<br />

approval for N40.3bn priority budget<br />

LAIDE AKINBOADE-ORIERE<br />

Federal Capital Territory<br />

Administration<br />

(FCTA) has defended<br />

its <strong>2018</strong> National<br />

Priority Budget proposal<br />

of N40,297,122,872<br />

before the Senate.<br />

Muhammad Bello, FCT<br />

Minister who presented the<br />

budget to the Senate Committee<br />

on Federal Capital<br />

Territory (FCT), at the National<br />

Assembly in Abuja,<br />

explained that the proposal<br />

was in accordance with<br />

the N40.3 billion envelope<br />

given to the FCT as its National<br />

Priority Budget by the<br />

Federal Ministry of Budget<br />

and National Planning.<br />

According to Bello,<br />

27 critical infrastructure<br />

projects totalling<br />

N40,297,122.27 have been<br />

prioritized for action under<br />

the proposal.<br />

These include the B6,<br />

B12 and Circle roads traversing<br />

the National Stadium,<br />

Villa and back to<br />

the Stadium; the Greater<br />

Abuja Water Works project<br />

as well as the Extension of<br />

Inner Southern Expressway<br />

(ISEX) from the Central<br />

Bank/National Christian<br />

Centre to Galadimawa<br />

Roundabout.<br />

Provisions totalling N1.2<br />

billion were also made for in<br />

infrastructure development<br />

at major satellite towns of<br />

Kubwa, Karshi and Bwari<br />

to help stave off the weight<br />

of expansion being witnessed<br />

in the city. In addition,<br />

major utilities and<br />

social services covering<br />

education, water supply as<br />

well as security at the UN<br />

building have been effectively<br />

provided for.<br />

The Minister disclosed<br />

that the N40.3 billion FCT<br />

<strong>2018</strong> Budget, is an improvement<br />

on the N30.4 billion<br />

that was allocated to the FCT<br />

for capital projects in 2017.<br />

H e s a i d<br />

N12,198,561,434.40 representing<br />

40.1 percent of the<br />

total sum has so far been<br />

released and expended.<br />

He expressed his appreciation<br />

to the National Assembly<br />

for extending the window<br />

of expenditure for the 2017<br />

Budget and stated that it will<br />

allow for more releases to be<br />

made to offset some critical<br />

infrastructural bills in the FCT.<br />

Bello disclosed that the<br />

FCTA is working to overcome<br />

the budget shortfall<br />

through its recently reconstituted<br />

FCT Internal Revenue<br />

Service.<br />

Speaking earlier, Dino<br />

Melaye, chairman, Senate<br />

Committee on FCT,<br />

lamented that the FCT National<br />

Priority Budget has<br />

declined from N109 billion<br />

in the recent past to N30.4<br />

in 2017 and N40.3 billion<br />

in <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

C002D5556<br />

KEHINDE AKINTOLA, HARRISON<br />

EDEH & CYNTHIA EGBOBOH, Abuja<br />

The Organised Private<br />

Sector (OPS),<br />

Nigerian Labour<br />

Congress (NLC)<br />

and other key economic<br />

stakeholders want the Federal<br />

Government to prioritize<br />

enforcement of rules of<br />

Origin in the African Continental<br />

Free Trade Area<br />

Agreement (CFTA) saying<br />

that this is the only way the<br />

Nigerian economy could<br />

harvest the full benefit in<br />

the deal.<br />

They also tasked African<br />

Heads of States and Government<br />

on the need to<br />

fast-track provision of requisite<br />

infrastructure such as<br />

road, rail infrastructure that<br />

will aid interconnectivity<br />

of member states; protect<br />

local market and ensure<br />

that CFTA strictly include<br />

goods produced within the<br />

region as part of measures<br />

aimed at turning Africa into<br />

dumping ground.<br />

Speaking to Business-<br />

Day exclusively, Frank<br />

Jacobs, President of the<br />

Manufacturers Association<br />

of Nigeria (MAN) affirmed<br />

that the consultation initiated<br />

by Federal Government<br />

has been fruitful and<br />

took note of various concerns<br />

including enforcement<br />

of the rules of Origin<br />

and Market Access.<br />

“We hope that the committee<br />

that would harmonise<br />

the reports would reflect<br />

our submissions accordingly,”<br />

Jacobs noted.<br />

On his part, Tony Ejinkonye,<br />

Vice President of<br />

National Association of<br />

Commerce, Industry Mines<br />

and Agriculture (NACI-<br />

MA), told <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

that: “In market access<br />

for instance, stakeholders<br />

have made their submissions<br />

to the government<br />

stating that products from<br />

African countries gaining<br />

market access must adhere<br />

to specified percentage (of<br />

local content) according to<br />

the CFTA.<br />

“In the case of Cement<br />

for instance, that must be<br />

certain percentage of the<br />

local content specifying that<br />

the local content and other<br />

materials making up the<br />

Cement are produced in Africa,<br />

otherwise there would<br />

be sanctions. This is what<br />

is meant by enforcement<br />

of the rules of Origin and<br />

Market Access so that there<br />

is no exploitation of local<br />

industry producers, hence<br />

they are well protected,”<br />

While giving update on<br />

the level of consultation<br />

with NLC, Ayuba Wabba,<br />

NLC President expressed<br />

optimism that the ongoing<br />

consultation on African<br />

Continental Free Trade<br />

Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

CFTA: OPS, NLC, MAN want FG to prioritize market<br />

access, enforcement of rules of Origin in CFTA deal<br />

Agreement will be beneficial<br />

and provide safeguard<br />

for Nigeria.<br />

Wabba who stated this<br />

in a chat with <strong>BusinessDay</strong>,<br />

maintained that the decision<br />

of Nigeria and South<br />

Africa as the largest economies<br />

in the continent to decline<br />

signing the agreement<br />

in Kigali, Kenya, was commendable<br />

as it provides<br />

opportunities for relevant<br />

stakeholders to make input<br />

into government policies<br />

and programmes.<br />

He observed that opening<br />

of borders for free flow<br />

of goods across African<br />

continent, should involve<br />

provision of relevant infrastructure<br />

and level playing<br />

ground for reciprocity,<br />

competition and products<br />

produced within African<br />

continent.<br />

“We saw that it was the<br />

voice of Esau but I think,<br />

the hands of Jacob.<br />

So clearly speaking, we<br />

said let us also make sure<br />

that we are able to protect<br />

our markets. Because<br />

there’s a push somewhere<br />

and we thought we should<br />

be able to expose that push<br />

but importantly, putting<br />

safeguards to make sure that<br />

Africa does not become a<br />

dumping ground for other<br />

countries because we have<br />

the population, we have<br />

what it takes and therefore<br />

we must work towards industrialisation<br />

of Africa.<br />

“If you look at Africa<br />

today, how many countries<br />

are into production that really<br />

we can be able to trade<br />

among African countries,<br />

even within West African<br />

sub-region? Clearly speaking,<br />

this is what we want,<br />

yes. Free trade agreement<br />

is good especially among<br />

African countries, but it<br />

must be done within the<br />

context of reciprocity and<br />

also within the fact that<br />

we are the same pedestal<br />

where Nigeria can be competitive.<br />

We can be able to<br />

also produce.<br />

“Two, is the issue of infrastructure<br />

of doing trade.<br />

Today, trade is being facilitated<br />

in all the European<br />

countries and other countries<br />

around them because<br />

they have infrastructure<br />

and there’s interconnectivity.<br />

For us, to move within<br />

West African countries is<br />

really is nightmare, sometimes<br />

you have to go to<br />

Europe before you can connect<br />

African countries.<br />

“The first thing is to put<br />

infrastructure in place that<br />

can be able to facilitate<br />

trade where countries have<br />

connecting roads and rails.<br />

For you to go to Cameroon<br />

from here, you know the<br />

difficulty it will take to arrive<br />

there, only going to<br />

Dakar.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY<br />

45


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

46 BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

NEWS<br />

L-R: Aliyu Abdulhameed, managing director, Nigerian Incentive-Based Risk Sharing System for<br />

Agricultural Lending (NIRSAL); Zainab Ahmed, minister of state, budget and national planning,<br />

and Laoye Jaiyeola, CEO, Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), at a workshop on low<br />

carbon investment opportunities in Nigeria, organised by NESG in Lagos, at the weekend.<br />

Pic by Olawale Amoo<br />

Lagos-Badagry 2019 rail completion...<br />

Continued from page 1<br />

system along the Lagos-<br />

Badagry axis, referred as<br />

the blue line may no longer<br />

be feasible.<br />

Awarded to the China<br />

Civil Engineering Construction<br />

Corporation<br />

(CCECC), with advisory<br />

services being provided by<br />

CPCS Transcom Limited,<br />

the blue line project is being<br />

financed solely by the<br />

Lagos state government.<br />

The slow pace of work<br />

on the on-going blue rail<br />

project linking Marina and<br />

Okokomaiko to meet with<br />

the proposed integrated<br />

transportation system initiative<br />

and the lack of push<br />

to deliver it on record time<br />

has been described as one<br />

of the factors piling up<br />

traffic along the corridor<br />

which has become a recurring<br />

decimal.<br />

Meanwhile, many motorists<br />

and other road<br />

users have continued to<br />

narrate their harrowing<br />

experiences of deadly attacks<br />

by some criminal<br />

elements and destitutes<br />

who lay siege at the newly<br />

constructed Lagos-Badagry<br />

rail terminals.<br />

A visit to the railway<br />

terminals reveals the occupants<br />

had fixed mosquito<br />

nets and curtains at their<br />

respective sleeping corners,<br />

while clothes were<br />

littered all over the floor.<br />

Occupants used stones<br />

and similar objects to<br />

carve out their spaces.<br />

Ijeoma Goldie, a petty<br />

trader who hawks mineral<br />

drinks and water along<br />

the corridor, said she had<br />

witnessed a lot of crimes<br />

perpetrated by hoodlums<br />

using the rail terminal at<br />

Mile 2 and Suru-Alaba as<br />

their target points.<br />

About two weeks ago<br />

during a traffic gridlock,<br />

the criminals attacked<br />

many vehicles and<br />

smashed the windscreen<br />

and made away with their<br />

belongings.<br />

A Chinese supervisor<br />

working for the CCECC<br />

at the site who did not<br />

give his name said it was<br />

not their responsibility to<br />

chase away the hoodlums<br />

and other occupants of the<br />

railway terminals.<br />

According to him, “Our<br />

job is to fix the project and<br />

getting protected from<br />

these people is government’s<br />

responsibility. I<br />

believe, after completion<br />

of the construction, their<br />

activities here will be over.”<br />

In <strong>Apr</strong>il 2008 during<br />

the administration of former<br />

governor Babatunde<br />

Fashola, the Lagos state<br />

government approved<br />

N70 billion (Out of the<br />

estimated N220 billion)<br />

for construction of the<br />

Okokomaiko-Iddo-Marina<br />

Line, with an estimated<br />

completion date of 2011.<br />

However, the project<br />

has suffered many delays<br />

due to funding shortfalls<br />

with the completion date<br />

being revised to June 2013,<br />

then December 20<strong>16</strong>, then<br />

2017. As at November<br />

20<strong>16</strong>, only <strong>16</strong> km of the<br />

27 km blue line had been<br />

completed.<br />

Comparing the Lagos<br />

rail project to similar ones<br />

in other parts of Africa<br />

shows that Ethiopia managed<br />

deliver the first modern<br />

light rail project in<br />

Sub-Saharan Africa which<br />

opened in the capital Addis<br />

Ababa in 2015.<br />

Ethiopia’s rail project<br />

was delivered on time despite<br />

being longer than<br />

the Lagos – Badagry rail<br />

line currently under construction.<br />

Addis Ababa’s two line<br />

34-kilometre systems was<br />

built by the China Railway<br />

Engineering Corporation<br />

(CREC) and cost $475m, 85<br />

percent of which was covered<br />

by China’s Exim bank.<br />

Lagos has a population<br />

of about 20 million<br />

people, compared to Addis<br />

Ababa’s 5 million.<br />

The Ethiopian light rail<br />

has a capacity to carry 60,000<br />

passengers a day across the<br />

capital of Africa’s second<br />

most populous nation.<br />

Ethiopia was able to<br />

complete the project despite<br />

its $50 billion GDP<br />

being about half the Lagos<br />

economy.<br />

Lagos currently doesn’t<br />

have enough infrastructure<br />

to move its teeming<br />

population, with choked<br />

roads and bridges sometimes<br />

leading to 4 hour “go<br />

slows” or traffic jams.<br />

Speaking with <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

on telephone,<br />

Kola Ojelabi, LAMATA’s<br />

head of media and communications,<br />

said the project<br />

was stopped for almost<br />

three years because of<br />

various problems of obstruction<br />

on the right of<br />

way (RoW).<br />

Reacting to the menace<br />

of hoodlums living on the<br />

rail lines harassing motorists<br />

and other road users,<br />

he explained that, it is<br />

illegal for anybody under<br />

any guise to live on the<br />

rail tracks, not to talk of<br />

turning themselves into<br />

criminals and causing a<br />

breach to public safety.<br />

According to him, the<br />

state government is exploring<br />

the option of lighting<br />

up the entire stretch<br />

or highway and erecting<br />

a protective safety fence<br />

along the entire Lagos-<br />

Badagry rail corridor when<br />

completed.<br />

“It is true that we have<br />

given different completion<br />

dates for the project but<br />

one of the challenges that<br />

we had was that the train<br />

was originally to go to the<br />

Iddo Railway Terminus,<br />

but the Railway Act did not<br />

allow us to do such.’’<br />

“Since we could not<br />

take the train station to<br />

Iddo, we had to change the<br />

alignment, and in changing<br />

that, there were a lot of<br />

obstructions on the way.’’<br />

Among these challenges<br />

was a fertiliser plant<br />

around Ijora belonging to<br />

the Federal Government.<br />

The state government had<br />

to negotiate to use the<br />

compound, so that it could<br />

take away the warehouse<br />

and build another warehouse<br />

for them.<br />

Moving into the lagoon,<br />

there were two major<br />

Adeosun reassigns portfolios in SEC, Mary...<br />

Continued from page 1<br />

position of Acting Director-General<br />

of the Commission.<br />

Uduk’s appointment is<br />

governed by the provisions<br />

of the Investments and Securities<br />

Act (ISA), 2007 and<br />

the conditions of service<br />

applicable to the Director-<br />

General of the Commission.<br />

The Minister, in a letter<br />

dated 13th <strong>Apr</strong>il, <strong>2018</strong>,<br />

said Uduk’s appointment<br />

had become necessary to<br />

ensure effective regulation<br />

of the Capital Market. Her<br />

appointment will, subject<br />

to satisfactory performance,<br />

subsist until further notice.<br />

The Minister also announced<br />

the redeployment<br />

of the former acting Director-General<br />

of the Commission,<br />

Abdul Zubair, to External<br />

Relations Department.<br />

She further made the following<br />

reassignment of the<br />

under-mentioned persons<br />

- Reginald C. Karawusa – Acting<br />

Executive Commissioner,<br />

Legal and Enforcement; Isiyaku<br />

Tilde – Acting Executive<br />

Commissioner, Operations;<br />

Henry Roland Adekunle –<br />

Acting Executive Commissioner,<br />

Corporate Services.<br />

The new Acting Director-<br />

General joined the Commission<br />

in 1986 as an assistant<br />

financial analyst.<br />

Her career as a regulator<br />

has spanned many functions<br />

and departments in<br />

the Commission, from corporate<br />

finance, administration,<br />

to providing structural,<br />

policy and due diligence for<br />

capital market transactions.<br />

She has also been responsible<br />

for managing<br />

several landmark capital<br />

market projects, including<br />

challenges, including the<br />

relocation of gas link, a<br />

gas pipe underneath the<br />

lagoon, which also took<br />

some time.<br />

There was the wreckage<br />

of a ship that was at the<br />

bottom of the lagoon that<br />

also had to be removed.<br />

These delayed the time<br />

line for the delivery of the<br />

project, Ojelabi of LA-<br />

MATA explained.<br />

“From the initial plan<br />

of the Lagos State Government,<br />

this rail project<br />

ought to have been delivered<br />

in 2012 or 2013,’’<br />

he said.<br />

Ojelabi explained that<br />

LAMATA lost about three<br />

years to the recovery of RoW,<br />

adding that, the state government<br />

had to bear the<br />

additional costs, which were<br />

not in the initial budget.<br />

This, according to him<br />

was to ensure that the<br />

structures were solid because<br />

rail infrastructure<br />

the registration of Capital<br />

Market Operators, articulating<br />

rules for bonds and<br />

equities; Mergers, acquisitions<br />

and Takeovers, and<br />

managing the banking and<br />

insurance industry consolidations<br />

between 2005-2007.<br />

Uduk served as the pioneer<br />

Head of the Operations<br />

Division in the Lagos Zonal<br />

Office, and has headed the<br />

following Departments in<br />

the Commission: Internal<br />

Control, Investment Management,<br />

Financial Standards<br />

and Corporate Governance<br />

and Securities, and<br />

Investment Services Department,<br />

among others.<br />

Meanwhile, the Federal<br />

Ministry of Finance has requested<br />

for a formal explanation<br />

from the SEC of the<br />

recent communications between<br />

the Commission and<br />

the Nigerian Stock Exchange<br />

(NSE), which adversely impacted<br />

market confidence.<br />

is expected to last a minimum<br />

of 100 years.<br />

When completed, the<br />

rail project will cover a<br />

distance of 27.5 km from<br />

Marina to Okokomaiko,<br />

with 13 stations and an<br />

end-to-end journey time<br />

of 35 minutes.<br />

The entire blue line will<br />

operate over a secure and<br />

exclusive right-of-way,<br />

with no level crossings and<br />

no uncontrolled access by<br />

pedestrians or vehicles.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

US Nigeria Mission reiterates commitment<br />

to deepen ties with Nigeria<br />

US Consulate General,<br />

John Bray, has<br />

reiterated the commitment<br />

of the US<br />

Nigeria Mission to deepen<br />

bilateral ties with Nigeria for<br />

sustainable development.<br />

The mission recently<br />

graduated 20 young Nigerians<br />

of the Carrington Youth<br />

Fellowship Initiative (CYFI),<br />

an initiative geared towards<br />

promoting civic engagement,<br />

economic empowerment,<br />

and education and health<br />

care delivery.<br />

Launched in 2011, the<br />

CYFI works to bring together<br />

Nigerian youth to design<br />

and implement projects<br />

focused on societal innovation.<br />

These projects centre<br />

on broader themes championed<br />

by Ambassador Walter<br />

Carrington, for whom the initiative<br />

is named.<br />

Bray in his message to<br />

the graduates urged them<br />

to remain in touch with<br />

their cohort and maintain<br />

the strength of the bond<br />

they have formed together<br />

through collaboration.<br />

“Our objective at the US<br />

Consulate General in Lagos<br />

is to support efforts that address<br />

Nigerian issues, par-<br />

Kachikwu named as one of 100<br />

most influential Africans of 2017<br />

Minister of State<br />

for Petroleum<br />

Resources,.<br />

Emmanuel<br />

Ibe Kachikwu, has been<br />

named by the New African,<br />

a London-based magazine,<br />

as one of the 100<br />

Most Influential Africans<br />

of 2017 in the category of<br />

Business and Finance.<br />

In a letter signed by<br />

Omar Ben Yedder, group<br />

publisher and managing<br />

director, congratulating<br />

Kachikwu, the magazine’s<br />

publisher said their organisation<br />

was ‘’dedicated<br />

to changing the African<br />

narrative and fighting for<br />

its interests, and hope to<br />

continue on this journey<br />

ticularly economic development,<br />

access to healthcare,<br />

peace and security, transparency<br />

and good governance.<br />

To that end, the CYFI program<br />

is an incredibly valuable<br />

program, in that it allows<br />

some of the most promising<br />

young people in Nigeria who<br />

are passionate about these<br />

issues to affect real, positive<br />

change.<br />

“Always remember that<br />

you are a select few chosen<br />

from a pool of the most<br />

talented and driven young<br />

people in Nigeria. The friendships<br />

and partnerships<br />

you’ve developed over your<br />

year with CYFI will become<br />

some of the most rewarding.<br />

“As you’ve learned this<br />

year, you can run into all<br />

kinds of challenges in the<br />

course of implementing real<br />

and meaningful change.<br />

I hope that the successes<br />

you have had this year have<br />

shown you that the importance<br />

and impact of your efforts<br />

far outweigh the trials<br />

and tribulations you sometimes<br />

face in the course of<br />

enacting this change,” Bray<br />

said, urging them to stay<br />

committed and passionate<br />

to societal innovation and<br />

change in their society, even<br />

in the face of opposition.<br />

alongside people engaged<br />

in transformational roles<br />

across the continent such<br />

as your goodself.”<br />

According to Yedder, it<br />

has become the tradition<br />

of the publishing outfit to<br />

dedicate its annual year<br />

end edition to ‘’celebrating<br />

and reflecting on what<br />

shaped the African continent<br />

in the past year and<br />

highlighting the men and<br />

women who were changemakers<br />

and influencers in<br />

a number of sectors and<br />

industries’’. It is in accordance<br />

with that tradition<br />

that Kachikwu was spotlighted<br />

as one of the greatest<br />

influencers of the continent,<br />

last year.<br />

C002D5556<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

47<br />

NEWS<br />

ICRC pledges commitment to successful implementation of port concession<br />

MICHEAL ANI<br />

The importance of<br />

ensuring Public<br />

Private Partnerships<br />

(PPP) in the<br />

country are executed without<br />

undue encumbrances<br />

was highlighted last week,<br />

when a delegation from the<br />

Infrastructure Concession<br />

Regulatory Commission<br />

(ICRC) visited Josepdam<br />

port concession site in Lagos,<br />

as part of its monitoring<br />

activities.<br />

ICRC is a commission<br />

established in 2005, and<br />

saddled with the responsibility<br />

of monitoring and<br />

SEYI JOHN SALAU<br />

… embarks on fact finding to Josepdam concession project<br />

ensuring the efficient execution<br />

of all PPP projects<br />

entered into by Ministries,<br />

Departments and Agencies<br />

(MDAs) on behalf of the<br />

Federal Government.<br />

Chidi Izuwah, acting<br />

director-general, ICRC,<br />

who led the delegation, expressed<br />

delight at the site,<br />

which shows the potentials<br />

of PPP for making the<br />

economy more vibrant and<br />

improving the country’s indices<br />

as it pertained to port<br />

operations.<br />

According to Izuwah,<br />

the commission is aware of<br />

some of the challenges currently<br />

being faced by Josepdam,<br />

which range from the<br />

challenge of having third<br />

party and equipment occupying<br />

more than 25 percent<br />

of their terminal land mass,<br />

court injunction brought<br />

against Jospdam port services<br />

by third party and inability<br />

to meet covenanted<br />

GMT target as stated in the<br />

agreement due to certain<br />

challenges.<br />

Izuwah however maintained<br />

that all disagreements<br />

relating to concession<br />

exercises at the ports<br />

must therefore be resolved<br />

in order to make Nigerian<br />

ports the hub for international<br />

shipping trade in the<br />

West and Central African<br />

sub-region.<br />

To him, the commission<br />

is working tirelessly to ensure<br />

that all of such challenges<br />

be resolved.<br />

“It is on this premise<br />

that the ICRC decided to<br />

embark on this monitoring<br />

exercise to brainstorm with<br />

your management and the<br />

NPA on the way forward.<br />

“As the regulator of the<br />

lease agreement, we can-<br />

not fold our hands and<br />

leave you to struggle it out<br />

alone,” he said.<br />

“Under the President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari-led<br />

administration, there is a<br />

will to address this issue<br />

and effort is being made to<br />

resolve it to create a winwin<br />

situation for all parties,”<br />

he said.<br />

Simon Travers, managing<br />

director, JBS, urged the<br />

commission to assist in<br />

finding an amicable settlement<br />

on the issue of the<br />

third party presence at the<br />

terminal, which was hindering<br />

its operations.<br />

He recommended that<br />

the NPA should review and<br />

extend the lease agreement<br />

for years lost due to<br />

the third party interference<br />

and also appealed to the<br />

government to repair the<br />

access road to the port.<br />

Prior to the ports exercise<br />

and subsequent<br />

concession of terminals<br />

in 2006, the nation’s ports<br />

were known for inefficiency<br />

and decaying infrastructure<br />

resulting in the delay<br />

in cargo clearance and several<br />

other malpractices.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

A1


A2<br />

NEWS<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Business<br />

confidence index<br />

rises to 24.5 point<br />

in March - CBN<br />

HOPE MOSES-ASHIKE<br />

Nigerian businesses<br />

are showing more confidence<br />

in the macro<br />

economy as the overall<br />

Confidence Index (CI)<br />

rose to 24.5 index point<br />

in March, from 14.5 index<br />

points recorded in<br />

February <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

The March <strong>2018</strong> Business<br />

Expectations Survey<br />

(BES) was carried out by<br />

the Central Bank of Nigeria<br />

(CBN) between March<br />

12 and 22, with a sample<br />

size of 650 businesses<br />

nationwide. A response<br />

rate of 91.8 percent was<br />

achieved, and the sample<br />

covered the services,<br />

industry, wholesale/retail<br />

trade and construction<br />

sectors.<br />

The respondent firms<br />

were made up of small,<br />

medium and large organisations<br />

covering<br />

both import- and exportoriented<br />

businesses.<br />

The optimism in the<br />

current month was driven<br />

by the opinion of respondents<br />

from services<br />

(13.9 points), industrial<br />

(7.5 points) construction<br />

(1.8 points) and wholesale/retail<br />

trade sectors<br />

(1.2), while the drivers<br />

of the optimism for next<br />

month were services<br />

(38.5 points), industrial<br />

(<strong>16</strong>.8 points), construction<br />

4.9 points) and<br />

wholesale/retail trade<br />

(4.0 points) sectors. The<br />

positive outlook by type<br />

of business in March<br />

<strong>2018</strong> was driven by businesses<br />

that are both import-<br />

and export-oriented<br />

(29.1 points), those<br />

that are neither importnor<br />

export-oriented<br />

(25.9 points), businesses<br />

that are export-related<br />

(23.5 points), and those<br />

that are import- oriented<br />

(17.7 points).<br />

However, the surveyed<br />

firms identified insuffi-<br />

Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

I&E window success snaps Nigeria’s dependence on CBN dollar supply<br />

LOLADE AKINMURELE …as deals hit $<strong>16</strong>.6bn in <strong>2018</strong><br />

Some $<strong>16</strong>.6 billion<br />

worth of deals have<br />

been done on Nigeria’s<br />

Investors<br />

and Exporters (I&E)<br />

window year to date, the latest<br />

sign that Africa’s largest<br />

economy is recovering from<br />

a paralyzing dollar shortage<br />

that curbed growth and<br />

hurt businesses in need of<br />

the greenback for critical<br />

imports.<br />

What is perhaps more<br />

telling is that the success of<br />

the I & E window in attracting<br />

autonomous supplies<br />

is helping the foreign ex-<br />

change market be relatively<br />

less dependent on central<br />

bank supplies upon which<br />

it was heavily reliant in 20<strong>16</strong><br />

after independent sources<br />

gummed up in reaction to<br />

capital controls.<br />

According to data provided<br />

by trading platform,<br />

FMDQ, the total value of<br />

trades recorded on the I & E<br />

window for the week-ended<br />

<strong>Apr</strong>il 6, <strong>2018</strong> was $1.34 billion,<br />

a 3.9 percent increase<br />

from the previous week.<br />

Those I&E deals accounted<br />

for 80 percent of trading<br />

activity in the Spot FX market<br />

between the commercial<br />

banks and their clients that<br />

same week, which stood at<br />

$1.656 billion, an indication<br />

that the foreign exchange<br />

market is growing less dependent<br />

on CBN supply,<br />

which traders say account<br />

for less than 15 percent of<br />

dollar supply on the I&E<br />

window.<br />

The CBN supplied nearly<br />

80 percent of dollars to the<br />

foreign exchange market in<br />

the thick of a brutal scarcity<br />

in 20<strong>16</strong>, burning through its<br />

external reserves at blistering<br />

pace to keep up with the<br />

dollar demand of households<br />

and businesses.<br />

When those antics<br />

proved no more than a<br />

drop in an ocean, following<br />

a demand backlog that has<br />

grown in excess of $7 billion,<br />

the apex bank unveiled the I<br />

& E window in <strong>Apr</strong>il 2017, as<br />

part of a sweeping reform to<br />

lure dollars back to its shores<br />

in the wake of acute shortages<br />

created by a plunge in the<br />

global price and production<br />

of oil and capital controls<br />

that curbed foreign investment<br />

inflows in 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

This time, the central<br />

bank would allow the market<br />

to determine the exchange<br />

rate at which to<br />

trade, in a departure from<br />

the false float in June 20<strong>16</strong><br />

after which the apex bank<br />

continued to manipulate the<br />

market in defense of the naira<br />

value against the dollar,<br />

despite announcing to limit<br />

its interventions.<br />

The move turned out<br />

successful, with the window<br />

attracting some $42 billion<br />

since inception, according<br />

to FMDQ data.<br />

For context, that amount<br />

is the same as Egypt had in<br />

its external reserves as of<br />

February <strong>2018</strong> and is more<br />

than double the level of Nigeria’s<br />

external reserves in<br />

20<strong>16</strong> and is only $4 billion<br />

behind the current reserves<br />

of $46 billion.<br />

In that period, the naira<br />

has been relatively stableaveraging<br />

N360 per US dollar-<br />

while the stock market<br />

has rallied to a 3-year high,<br />

as foreign portfolio investors<br />

lap up Nigerian assets from<br />

stocks to bonds.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

FT FINANCIAL TIMES<br />

C002D5556<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

A3<br />

World Business Newspaper<br />

Security and plane costs<br />

hit $9m as Zuckerberg<br />

tours US<br />

Why don’t more<br />

deputies get a shot<br />

at the top job?<br />

Sidekicks play a vital role that deserves more recognition<br />

PILITA CLARK<br />

Which chief executive wrote<br />

this last week: “There is no<br />

such thing as a free lunch.<br />

We will have to fight to succeed and my<br />

team and I are ready to do so. Because<br />

it’s worth it!”<br />

I doubt it will help much if I tell you<br />

it was the boss of one of the world’s<br />

biggest banks, because the words<br />

came from Christian Sewing, Deutsche<br />

Bank’s new CEO, in a message he<br />

sent to staff about his appointment<br />

on Monday.<br />

Outside banking circles, Mr Sewing<br />

is not a big name in his native<br />

Germany, let alone anywhere else. He<br />

joined Deutsche as a teenager in 1989<br />

and has been quietly plugging away<br />

there for all but two years ever since.<br />

I have no idea if he will be the answer<br />

to the bank’s plummeting share<br />

price or years of annual losses. But<br />

I rather hope he will be because Mr<br />

Sewing — formerly one of Deutsche’s<br />

deputy chief executives — is an example<br />

of something you do not see every<br />

day: a deputy who got the top job.<br />

I am biased because, although I<br />

have never had a job remotely as important<br />

as any of Mr Sewing’s, I have<br />

been a serial deputy, most recently this<br />

paper’s deputy news editor. And as is<br />

well known, this is often an excellent<br />

way to make sure you do a lot of thankless<br />

work and never get the boss’s job.<br />

In my case, this was not a problem.<br />

I am rarely gripped by the urge to run<br />

anything and have mostly been a deputy<br />

to pleasant, hard-working people<br />

who made their offsider’s life easy.<br />

At the same time, I decided I<br />

never wanted another job with the<br />

word “deputy” in the title. I agree with<br />

Richard Hytner, one of the few people<br />

to have written a book (Consiglieri)<br />

about the under-studied role of the<br />

sidekick. When people hear the word<br />

“number two”, he says, they often think<br />

“also-ran, loser, couldn’t hack it as<br />

number one”.<br />

And in my experience, they do. It<br />

was no surprise to see a survey last<br />

year showing the number of deputy<br />

chief executives in the 100 largest<br />

UK companies had dwindled to zero.<br />

Even deputies themselves dislike the<br />

Fastest expansion in loan books since Trump’s election<br />

ALISTAIR GRAY<br />

US banks have finally reopened<br />

the lending taps to corporate<br />

America, expanding their loan<br />

books at the fastest pace since Donald<br />

Trump’s election resulted in a lengthy<br />

credit stagnation.<br />

While the industry data published<br />

on Friday reflect only one month of<br />

recovery, bankers said they were an<br />

Page A4<br />

title. Two friends of mine who recently<br />

became a number two did something<br />

smart I wish I had thought of. They<br />

insisted on being called an “executive”<br />

so-and-so, rather than a deputy.<br />

Mr Hytner, a former deputy chairman<br />

of the Saatchi & Saatchi advertising<br />

group, thinks the deputy’s sorry<br />

reputation is unfair. Support acts are<br />

often happy to be number two and play<br />

a vital role in their organisations that<br />

he thinks deserves more recognition.<br />

I agree, but I am more interested in<br />

why deputies are so often passed over<br />

for the top job in favour of an outsider<br />

or thrusting insider.<br />

This is annoying for several reasons.<br />

First, the deputy usually has a<br />

proven record of running an organisation<br />

because they often have to do it<br />

when the boss is busy or away. They<br />

also usually do this without one of the<br />

big advantages the boss has: a deputy.<br />

Promoting people to be a deputy is<br />

also a helpful way to groom talented<br />

staff and create a pool of potential<br />

leaders who can be considered alongside<br />

outside candidates when a new<br />

chief is needed.<br />

These number twos have one big<br />

advantage over external hires: they<br />

are a known quantity. Outsiders who<br />

look terrific on paper and have stellar<br />

records elsewhere are not guaranteed<br />

the same success in new organisations.<br />

The corporate landscape is littered<br />

with examples of high-fliers raided<br />

from rival organisations who falter.<br />

Few fall to ground as quickly as<br />

John Browett, the former boss of the<br />

Dixons electronics chain who lasted<br />

less than a year as Apple’s head of retail.<br />

But they can be just as disruptive.<br />

This is no argument against the<br />

often excellent outside hire. Carolyn<br />

McCall, the former boss of the Guardian<br />

Media Group, was dismissed as a<br />

media luvvie when she was picked to<br />

run easyJet in 2010.<br />

By the time she left seven years<br />

later, the company’s share price had<br />

quadrupled and its passenger numbers<br />

had soared to records.<br />

There are plenty of other examples<br />

like her. Would deputies have ever<br />

done as well? It is impossible to say<br />

because, as is so often the case, they<br />

never got the chance to lead.<br />

US banks open lending taps to corporate America<br />

encouraging sign and predicted a more<br />

sustained pick up as US business gets<br />

more comfortable about taking on<br />

more debt.<br />

“You saw a decent pick up in March<br />

and we’re seeing that in our pipeline,”<br />

said Bill Demchak, chairman and chief<br />

executive of PNC Financial Services, the<br />

sixth-biggest US retail bank by assets.<br />

Continues on page A4<br />

Tighter interest rates<br />

raise fears of central<br />

bank exposure<br />

Second fiddle: Julia Louis-Dreyfus as US vice-president Selina Meyer in ‘Veep’ © HBO<br />

Berlin’s airport travails bruise German engineering pride<br />

Project nears completion, almost a decade late and regarded as national joke<br />

GUY CHAZAN<br />

It has been such a mess that one<br />

senior Lufthansa executive recently<br />

predicted it would have to be torn<br />

down and rebuilt.<br />

But after years of scandal and<br />

controversy, Berlin’s new airport is finally<br />

inching towards completion. The<br />

€5.3bn building will begin operations<br />

in October 2020, nearly a decade later<br />

than planned. Germany’s biggest national<br />

joke is readying for primetime.<br />

Engelbert Lütke-Daldrup, boss of<br />

the airport operating company, knows<br />

many will view the new deadline, first<br />

unveiled last December, with scepticism.<br />

Since work began on BER, as it<br />

is known, its official opening has been<br />

postponed six times.<br />

But on a recent press tour of the<br />

building, he promised there would be<br />

no more delays. “We’ve deliberately<br />

gone for a date that’s reliable, that has<br />

Americas find common cause in attack on Maduro<br />

Trump is the first US president to miss Americas Summit in its 24-year history<br />

GIDEON LONG<br />

Latin America found rare common<br />

ground with the US in<br />

criticising Nicolás Maduro,<br />

Venezuela’s president, at a fractious<br />

Summit of the Americas marked by<br />

Donald Trump’s decision to stay<br />

at home to deal with the conflict<br />

in Syria.<br />

Mr Trump pulled out just three<br />

days before the start of this weekend’s<br />

summit in Lima, becoming<br />

the first US president to miss the<br />

event in its 24-year history. Some<br />

Latin Americans said his no-show<br />

proved how little he cared about<br />

the region.<br />

The US leader sent Mike Pence,<br />

vice-president, in his place, but a<br />

White House faux pas served only<br />

to raise Latin American hackles<br />

further. In a note to journalists, Mr<br />

Pence’s office said he would attend<br />

a banquet hosted by Pedro Pablo<br />

Kuczynski, who resigned as Peru’s<br />

president last month.<br />

Trade tension between the US<br />

and China also cast a shadow over<br />

Page A5<br />

sufficient reserves built in to cover all<br />

unforeseen circumstances,” he said. “It<br />

means we’ll all have to be a bit more<br />

patient — the public too.”<br />

Mr Lütke-Daldrup whisked journalists<br />

through the new terminal<br />

building, a cavernous, light-filled<br />

space the size of eight football fields.<br />

Eerily empty now, it will one day<br />

swarm with travellers: by 2040, BER<br />

will be capable of processing up to 55m<br />

passengers a year.<br />

“With BER the city will finally get<br />

the airport it deserves,” said Burkhard<br />

Kieker, head of VisitBerlin, which promotes<br />

tourism to the German capital.<br />

But it’s questionable whether it will<br />

ever be able to shake off its reputation<br />

as a national embarrassment. “BER is<br />

not exactly a glorious chapter in the<br />

history of German engineering and<br />

construction,” Mr Lütke-Daldrup said.<br />

That is an understatement. Dogged<br />

by technical snafus, poor planning<br />

the summit. Latin American companies<br />

export billions of dollars<br />

in raw materials to both countries<br />

and are wary of any threat of further<br />

tariffs.<br />

But on Venezuela, most nations<br />

of the Americas were in agreement.<br />

With the exception of a few<br />

leftwing countries, notably Cuba,<br />

they expressed concern about the<br />

exodus of Venezuelans fleeing hyperinflation,<br />

hunger and crime in<br />

their homeland.<br />

“It’s incredible that [Mr Maduro]<br />

remains in a state of denial when<br />

faced with such a clear crisis, when<br />

the whole world can see with its<br />

own eyes how his people are physically<br />

dying of hunger,” said Juan<br />

Manuel Santos, president of Colombia,<br />

which has borne the brunt<br />

of the exodus. Colombia, Chile<br />

and Argentina said they would not<br />

recognise the results of Venezuela’s<br />

presidential election, arguing the<br />

May 20 contest would be neither<br />

free nor fair.<br />

“The elections are not democratic,<br />

they’re not transparent, they<br />

and dizzying management changes,<br />

BER has become a byword for incompetence.<br />

When work on the site began in<br />

September 2006, the opening was set<br />

for 2011. That has since been repeatedly<br />

pushed back, while the project’s<br />

budget has more than doubled from<br />

€2.5bn to €5.3bn.<br />

Thorsten Dirks, a senior executive<br />

at Lufthansa, said last month that all<br />

the equipment the airline had installed<br />

in BER was now hopelessly out of date.<br />

“My prediction: the thing will be pulled<br />

down and rebuilt,” he said.<br />

Critics think the 2020 deadline<br />

will go the way of all the others. “This<br />

is the same team that never managed<br />

to get it up and running on time and<br />

crashed all the previous deadlines,”<br />

said Dieter Faulenbach da Costa, an<br />

airport planner who has been one of<br />

BER’s harshest critics. “Why should it<br />

be any better this time?”<br />

don’t comply with the minimum<br />

standards of a truly democratic society,”<br />

said Sebastián Piñera, Chile’s<br />

president. “No country that truly<br />

believes in democracy in my opinion<br />

should recognise these elections.”<br />

Mr Pence described Venezuela<br />

as “essentially a failed state” and the<br />

government in Caracas as a “corrupt<br />

dictatorship”. “The responsibility for<br />

the Venezuelan people’s suffering<br />

can be laid at the feet of one man:<br />

Nicolás Maduro,” he said.<br />

With Mr Maduro barred from the<br />

summit, the defence of Caracas fell<br />

to Havana, and at times the exchanges<br />

between Bruno Rodríguez, Cuba’s<br />

foreign minister, and Mr Pence were<br />

reminiscent of the darkest days of<br />

the cold war.<br />

Mr Rodríguez accused the Trump<br />

administration of promoting “hate,<br />

division, selfishness, calumny, racism,<br />

xenophobia and lies”. The<br />

thawing of relations between the two<br />

nations under Barack Obama had<br />

been reversed, he said, and Cuba<br />

“will not cede one millimetre” in the<br />

way it conducts its internal affairs.


A4 BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556 Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

FT<br />

NATIONAL<br />

US poised to support $13bn capital increase for World Bank<br />

Package would see big lending reforms and rise in China’s shareholding<br />

SHAWN DONNAN AND SAM FLEMING<br />

The Trump administration is<br />

poised to back a $13bn capital<br />

increase for the World Bank in<br />

a package that would see significant<br />

lending reforms and an increase in<br />

China’s shareholding.<br />

Barring last-minute hiccups, US<br />

Treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin is<br />

set to tell fellow World Bank shareholders<br />

at next week’s spring meetings in<br />

Washington that he will support an<br />

increase in the bank’s capital, a senior<br />

Treasury official confirmed to the<br />

Financial Times on Friday. The move<br />

would be a significant shift in the US<br />

administration’s attitudes towards<br />

multilateral institutions.<br />

“I think we are moving in that<br />

direction. We have been working for<br />

months on reforms at the bank and<br />

they have made a lot of progress,” the<br />

senior official said.<br />

The turnround in White House<br />

views on the World Bank marks a major<br />

win for its president, Jim Yong Kim,<br />

who was first nominated for the role by<br />

former President Barack Obama. He<br />

has worked hard to build a relationship<br />

with the new administration and<br />

aligned himself with Ivanka Trump,<br />

the president’s daughter, who was behind<br />

a $150m women’s empowerment<br />

fund launched by the bank last year.<br />

The administration, which expressed<br />

reservations about World<br />

Bank lending to China and other<br />

middle-income countries at last October’s<br />

annual meetings, had been wary<br />

of the plans for a capital increase and<br />

expectations for an agreement at next<br />

week’s meetings were muted.<br />

However, Scott Morris, a former<br />

Treasury official now at the Center for<br />

Global Development, a Washington<br />

think-tank, said: “I’m hearing a lot<br />

of positive sentiment both from the<br />

Bank side and the US side. That’s pretty<br />

remarkable.”<br />

US banks open lending<br />

taps to corporate America...<br />

Continued from page A11<br />

“That should set us up well for the rest<br />

of the year.”<br />

Commercial and industrial loan balances<br />

swelled at a seasonally adjusted<br />

rate of 9.3 per cent last month to hit a<br />

record $2.13 trillion, according to the<br />

Federal Reserve figures.<br />

That was by far the biggest increase<br />

since the 20<strong>16</strong> election. In only two<br />

other months since the vote has the rate<br />

of growth been higher than 3 per cent.<br />

The protracted period of weakness<br />

had called into question how businesses<br />

feel about the Trump administration’s<br />

agenda and uncertainty about tax<br />

reform in particular, suggesting they<br />

were nervous about the direction of<br />

the economy.<br />

Commercial loan volumes have<br />

been among the biggest concerns to<br />

investors in US banks, who are otherwise<br />

upbeat about a profit-boosting<br />

mix of higher interest rates and financial<br />

deregulation.<br />

Analysts have offered some technical<br />

explanations for the corporate lending<br />

sluggishness: instead of borrowing<br />

from banks large companies have been<br />

tapping capital markets, for instance.<br />

However, bankers have identified<br />

policy uncertainty from Washington as<br />

a primary factor, arguing it held made<br />

companies hold back on expansion<br />

plans.<br />

Presenting quarterly earnings on<br />

Friday, executives said business was<br />

feeling more comfortable — especially<br />

now that tax reform had passed. John<br />

Gerspach, Citigroup’s chief financial<br />

officer, said the “best is yet to come”<br />

from the tax cuts.<br />

Marianne Lake, chief financial officer<br />

at JPMorgan Chase, said the bank<br />

was “expecting growth in the mid-single<br />

digits” in commercial and industrial<br />

loan balances for the year. They rose 5<br />

per cent in the first quarter compared<br />

with a year ago.<br />

She added, though, that the bank<br />

would “continue to be very selective and<br />

cautious” — especially in commercial<br />

real estate, where “pricing has become<br />

fiercely competitive”.<br />

Earnings season continues on Monday<br />

with results from Bank of America,<br />

which is also forecast to benefit from<br />

a pick-up in loan demand. Analysts<br />

have pencilled in a 40 per cent year-onyear<br />

rise in first quarter net income to<br />

$6.<strong>16</strong>bn, according to estimates collated<br />

by Bloomberg.<br />

The recent commercial lending<br />

recovery has helped banks compensate<br />

for weakness in other areas, notably<br />

mortgages. Higher interest rates have<br />

led to a slump in demand for refinancings.<br />

Wells Fargo has been particularly<br />

hard hit, reporting a 24 per cent decline<br />

in mortgage banking income in the first<br />

quarter.<br />

Security and plane costs hit $9m as Zuckerberg tours US<br />

Surge in costs for safety picked up by company for founder worth estimated $66bn<br />

TIM BRADSHAW<br />

Facebook shareholders picked up<br />

a $9m bill for chief executive Mark<br />

Zuckerberg’s personal security<br />

detail and private aircraft usage last year,<br />

as he took on a “personal challenge” to<br />

visit every US state.<br />

Mr Zuckerberg, whose net worth<br />

is estimated at $66bn, spent much of<br />

2017 criss-crossing the US, from Alaska<br />

to Louisiana, as part of an effort to “get<br />

out and talk to more people about how<br />

they’re living, working and thinking<br />

about the future”.<br />

While the grand tour was styled by<br />

Mr Zuckerberg as the latest in a series<br />

of “personal challenges” designed to<br />

help him “grow outside of my work”,<br />

Facebook’s shareholders were left to pick<br />

up the tab for much of the travel.<br />

Mr Zuckerberg, who receives a notional<br />

$1 annual salary, saw his “other<br />

compensation” jump by more than 50<br />

per cent, from $5.8m in 20<strong>16</strong> to $8.9m<br />

MATTHEW GARRAHAN<br />

After almost two weeks of swirling<br />

speculation about his future, it<br />

still came as a shock late on Saturday<br />

night when WPP announced that<br />

Martin Sorrell, its chief executive of more<br />

than three decades, would be stepping<br />

down following an investigation into<br />

an unspecified misconduct allegation.<br />

Company and man have been inextricably<br />

linked since 1987 when he was<br />

appointed to lead what was then known<br />

as Wire & Plastic Products, a small maker<br />

of shopping baskets until Sir Martin and<br />

a business partner bought a minority<br />

stake. They set about transforming it into<br />

a global marketing services company<br />

and with Sir Martin running the show<br />

and masterminding deal after deal, WPP<br />

ascended to the summit of the advertising<br />

industry.<br />

last year, according to a regulatory filing<br />

released on Friday afternoon.<br />

The figure includes $7.3m in personal<br />

security fees both at home and on his<br />

travels, up from $4.8m in the prior year,<br />

and $1.5m for “costs related to personal<br />

usage of private aircraft” — a 75 per cent<br />

increase on 20<strong>16</strong>’s flight costs.<br />

The disclosure comes at the end<br />

of a bruising week for Mr Zuckerberg,<br />

as he faced questions from dozens of<br />

lawmakers in Washington DC about<br />

Facebook’s handling of personal privacy<br />

and electoral interference.<br />

During Mr Zuckerberg’s walkabout,<br />

he posted on his Facebook page about<br />

driving a tractor in Wisconsin, fishing for<br />

salmon with Native Alaskans, and petting<br />

a service dog in Montana’s Glacier<br />

National Park.<br />

He has also spoken about meeting<br />

recovering drug addicts in Ohio and<br />

visiting a church in Charleston, South<br />

Carolina, where a shooting in 2015 killed<br />

nine people.<br />

The local families and community<br />

Martin Sorrell’s empire building reshaped adland<br />

The former Saatchi & Saatchi finance<br />

director created the model of<br />

an advertising holding company with<br />

a conglomerate-style structure where<br />

individual media buying, creative,<br />

public relations and digital services<br />

businesses coexisted under one roof. A<br />

flurry of deals saw J. Walter Thompson,<br />

Ogilvy & Mather, Young & Rubicam and<br />

Grey added to WPP’s portfolio. Other<br />

companies, such as the media buying<br />

giant GroupM, were created in-house.<br />

“You can’t underestimate what he<br />

achieved,” said Alex DeGroote, media<br />

analyst with Cenkos Securities. “He<br />

took a cash shell that had zero value and<br />

turned it into an established FTSE 100<br />

name over a 30-year period, acquiring<br />

the global marketing services industry’s<br />

biggest names. I don’t think anyone will<br />

be capable of doing it again.”<br />

The impact on the ad landscape<br />

groups he flew to visit were often given<br />

only a few hours’ notice of his arrival, in<br />

order to ensure his security.<br />

Facebook said in its proxy filing that<br />

the company paid the security costs due<br />

to “specific threats” to Mr Zuckerberg’s<br />

safety that arise “directly as a result of<br />

his position” as Facebook’s founder and<br />

chief executive.<br />

“We require these security measures<br />

for the company’s benefit because of the<br />

importance of Mr. Zuckerberg to Facebook,<br />

and we believe that the costs of this<br />

overall security program are appropriate<br />

and necessary,” the company said in the<br />

filing. Using private aircraft is part of the<br />

security programme, it added.<br />

The proxy filing also disclosed that<br />

Facebook’s other executives saw their<br />

cash bonuses fall in 2017 compared<br />

with the previous year. Sheryl Sandberg,<br />

Facebook’s chief operating officer, received<br />

a bonus payout of $640,378, less<br />

than half the amount she received in<br />

2017, after a reduction in her “individual<br />

performance” rating.<br />

His impact on the industry was profound but not everyone was a fan of his approach<br />

was profound as rivals such as Publicis<br />

and Omnicom followed WPP’s model,<br />

consolidating what had been a large and<br />

disparate industry into a handful of holding<br />

companies. But not everyone was a<br />

fan of his approach — or of the changes<br />

wreaked on the ad industry by WPP and<br />

Sir Martin, who declined to comment.<br />

When WPP acquired Ogilvy &<br />

Mather in 1989, the late David Ogilvy<br />

called him an “odious little shit”. He also<br />

upset some within advertising’s creative<br />

community: Ogilvy employees were<br />

not happy in 1992 when WPP uprooted<br />

them from central London to a new<br />

office in Canary Wharf — an area not<br />

exactly rich in inspiration for advertising<br />

creatives. “There was a period, probably<br />

in the first four or five years, when<br />

it could have killed the agency,” Paul<br />

O’Donnell, Ogilvy’s former UK head,<br />

told the Financial Times in 2014.<br />

Donald Trump creates<br />

task force to scrutinise<br />

postal service<br />

President seeks report on pricing linked to<br />

USPS contract with Amazon<br />

BARNEY JOPSON AND<br />

KADHIM SHUBBER<br />

Donald Trump has begun to<br />

act on his complaints that<br />

the US Postal Service is losing<br />

out on shipments for Amazon<br />

by ordering an official review of<br />

the mail agency’s pricing of package<br />

deliveries.<br />

After amplifying his longstanding<br />

dissatisfaction over Amazon’s<br />

delivery contract with the post<br />

office, Mr Trump late on Thursday<br />

created a task force to evaluate the<br />

“operations and finances” of the<br />

post office.<br />

The move caught Washington<br />

by surprise as it had been unclear<br />

how Mr Trump would act on his<br />

contested claims that delivering<br />

packages for Amazon was contributing<br />

to the postal service’s<br />

substantial losses.<br />

An executive order creating the<br />

task force — to be led by Treasury<br />

secretary Steven Mnuchin — said<br />

it would examine “the expansion<br />

and pricing of the package delivery<br />

market and the USPS’s role in<br />

competitive markets”.<br />

Despite Amazon’s high-tech<br />

credentials, it relies on about<br />

230,000 postal workers to deliver<br />

millions of packages along the<br />

“last mile” to many American<br />

homes.<br />

As concern about the power of<br />

big tech companies escalates in<br />

Washington, Mr Trump has turned<br />

Amazon into the target of a personal<br />

crusade even as Congress is<br />

preoccupied with Facebook, hauling<br />

its founder Mark Zuckerberg in<br />

to testify this week.<br />

Package deliveries for ecommerce<br />

have been a source of<br />

revenue growth for the postal<br />

service, going some way towards<br />

offsetting a sharp decline in letter<br />

volume. But the post office has<br />

still posted a net loss in each of the<br />

past 11 years, including a $2.7bn<br />

loss in 2017.<br />

The executive order says: “The<br />

USPS is on an unsustainable<br />

financial path and must be restructured<br />

to prevent a taxpayerfunded<br />

bailout.”<br />

In one tweet this month, Mr<br />

Trump said: “I am right about Amazon<br />

costing the United States Post<br />

Office massive amounts of money<br />

for being their Delivery Boy.”<br />

His discontent over the alliance<br />

of the postal service with Amazon<br />

appears to have become entangled<br />

with its founder Jeff Bezos’s ownership<br />

of the Washington Post<br />

— one of the president’s least<br />

favourite media outlets.<br />

Allies of the postal service said<br />

it cannot be losing money on its<br />

work for Amazon since it is barred<br />

by law from charging its customers<br />

less than the cost of delivery.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

FINANCIAL TIMES<br />

COMPANIES & MARKETS<br />

@ FINANCIAL TIMES LIMITED<br />

Corporate America poised<br />

to unveil record buybacks<br />

Companies likely to boost dividends to fresh high on back of tax cuts, JPMorgan says<br />

C002D5556<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

A5<br />

ROBIN WIGGLESWORTH<br />

US companies are expected<br />

to shower investors with a<br />

record amount of share buybacks<br />

in the current earnings season,<br />

as corporate executives take<br />

advantage of major tax cuts and a<br />

faltering stock market to increase<br />

their repurchase programmes.<br />

S&P 500 companies have already<br />

announced about $<strong>16</strong>7bn of<br />

new buyback authorisations this<br />

year, and analysts at JPMorgan<br />

predict that trend will accelerate<br />

this quarter as boardrooms digest<br />

the full scale of the tax cuts passed<br />

in December.<br />

“We are expecting record buyback<br />

announcements during this<br />

earnings season given further clarity<br />

on tax reform, equity multiples<br />

are broadly attractive, and companies<br />

likely to replenish buyback<br />

programmes after the recent selloff,”<br />

noted Dubravko Lakos-Bujas,<br />

an analyst at JPMorgan.<br />

Overall, US companies will buy<br />

back about $800bn of their stock<br />

this year, the bank forecasts, up<br />

from $525bn in 2017, and boost<br />

dividend payouts by about 10 per<br />

cent to a record $500bn.<br />

President Donald Trump and<br />

the Republican-controlled Congress<br />

have lauded a potential upswing<br />

in investment by US companies<br />

following the tax cuts, but<br />

strategists at Goldman Sachs expect<br />

a heftier increase in buybacks and<br />

dividends.<br />

The buyback and dividend bonanza<br />

would be a welcome boost<br />

to the US stock market, which has<br />

become more volatile this year over<br />

concerns that global economic<br />

The UK pension industry will<br />

undergo a “fundamental shift”<br />

over the next three years, curtailing<br />

new business growth for asset<br />

managers hired to provide sophisticated<br />

investment strategies to final<br />

salary retirement schemes.<br />

A growing number of UK defined<br />

benefit (DB) pension schemes have<br />

adopted liability driven investment<br />

strategies (LDIs) over the past 20<br />

years to reduce the risk that they may<br />

be unable to meet retirement payments<br />

that stretch for decades ahead.<br />

Demand for LDIs will slow markedly<br />

by 2021, said London consultancy<br />

Hymans Robertson. It predicted<br />

that this shift would also significantly<br />

affect the UK government bond<br />

market.<br />

LDIs provide protection against<br />

unforeseen changes in interest rates,<br />

inflation and life expectancy while<br />

also helping DB pension schemes to<br />

increase assets.<br />

Insight, a division of BNY Mellon,<br />

Legal & General Investment Management<br />

and BlackRock are the three<br />

biggest players in the LDI market.<br />

BMO of Canada, Schroders and<br />

River & Mercantile each run more<br />

than 100 mandates that are significantly<br />

smaller in combined assets<br />

growth is slowing and international<br />

trade tension are escalating.<br />

“I find it hard not to be excited<br />

about equities,” said Marco Pirondini,<br />

head of US equities at Amundi<br />

Pioneer Asset Management. “Companies<br />

are super profitable, and<br />

have money to increase investments,<br />

buybacks and dividends.”<br />

David Kostin, chief US equity<br />

strategist at Goldman Sachs, said<br />

that a surge in corporate share buybacks<br />

helped turn round markets<br />

after the turmoil of early February,<br />

and thinks that a renewed pick-up<br />

will put the S&P 500 back on track<br />

for a 10 per cent gain by the end of<br />

the year.<br />

While US companies will lift<br />

their spending on investments,<br />

research and development by 11<br />

per cent to more than $1tn this year,<br />

shareholder returns in the form of<br />

buybacks and dividends will grow<br />

by 21.6 per cent to nearly $1.2tn, Mr<br />

Kostin predicted.<br />

“I’m willing to bet that as soon<br />

as companies start buying shares<br />

again [after the earning season<br />

blackout] that we will see the market<br />

volatility fall again,” Mr Pirondini<br />

said. “The geopolitical temperature<br />

is going up, and that’s not a good<br />

thing. But it is the economic cycle<br />

that will drive markets, and the<br />

global economy looks good.”<br />

The buyback spree will also lift<br />

the amount of profit companies<br />

make per share. S&P 500 companies<br />

are expected to report earnings<br />

growth of 17.1 per cent in the first<br />

quarter, which would the highest<br />

growth since the start of 2011,<br />

according to FactSet. That is up<br />

sharply from the rate of 11.3 per<br />

cent that was projected at the start<br />

of the year.<br />

UK pensions industry faces ‘fundamental shift’<br />

Consultancy predicts liability driven investment demand<br />

to be saturated by 2021<br />

CHRIS FLOOD<br />

than the LDI operations of each of<br />

the big three.<br />

A survey by Hymans found<br />

that more than three-quarters of<br />

the £1.5tn total assets held by DB<br />

schemes already employed some<br />

form of LDI, suggesting that new demand<br />

could become exhausted over<br />

the next three years.<br />

“We will reach the age of peak LDI<br />

by 2021 at the latest,” said Jon Hatchett,<br />

a partner with Hymans. “Pension<br />

schemes have added about £100bn of<br />

notional hedging [via LDIs] annually<br />

over the past three years and will not<br />

materially hedge above asset levels<br />

of £1.5tn.”<br />

If new demand for LDIs was to<br />

drop to £50bn a year, then the market<br />

would not reach saturation point<br />

until 2026.<br />

Robert Gall, head of market strategy<br />

at Insight Investment, said it would<br />

take “many years” before the hedging<br />

requirements of pension funds could<br />

be fully met.<br />

“We expect the fundamental<br />

demand for LDI to persist for the<br />

foreseeable future,” said Mr Gall.<br />

Professor David Blake, director of<br />

the pensions institute at Cass Business<br />

School, London, said demand<br />

for LDIs would depend on changes<br />

in central banks’ policies as interest<br />

rates were rising in the UK and US.<br />

Monetary policymakers are starting to wean bond markets off the support provided through quantitative easing<br />

Tighter interest rates raise fears of central bank exposure<br />

Officials responsible for asset portfolios worry about prospect of steep losses<br />

CLAIRE JONES<br />

Officials responsible for managing<br />

central banks’ vast asset<br />

portfolios fear exposure<br />

to steep losses as their policymaking<br />

counterparts tighten interest<br />

rates on the back of a global economic<br />

expansion.<br />

Central banks are some of the<br />

biggest investors in markets for government<br />

and highly rated corporate<br />

bonds, making their portfolios sensitive<br />

to changes in interest rates.<br />

In a poll of central bank reserve<br />

managers, responsible for assets<br />

worth $5.5tn, most said rising rates<br />

posed the biggest threat to their<br />

performance over the next year.<br />

The US Federal Reserve is expected<br />

to raise rates three times<br />

this year, and the European Central<br />

Bank set to follow suit around mid-<br />

2019. Rates are at or close to historic<br />

lows, a legacy of central banks’ response<br />

to the financial crisis of 2008<br />

that left global markets teetering.<br />

Higher rates are expected to<br />

push up yields on government<br />

bonds and other relatively safe assets.<br />

With yields moving in the opposite<br />

direction to price, that would<br />

lower the value of the sort of assets<br />

that central banks tend to own.<br />

In the poll of reserve managers<br />

at 79 central banks conducted<br />

by Central Banking Publications,<br />

a trade publisher, and HSBC, just<br />

over three-quarters of respondents<br />

thought rising interest rates would<br />

be one of the biggest threats over<br />

the next year, with 59 per cent saying<br />

it was the most important risk.<br />

The reserve managers signalled<br />

they would respond to tighter<br />

monetary policy by buying more<br />

short-term debt for now, in a sign<br />

they expect bonds with longer-term<br />

maturities to offer higher yields<br />

in the coming years as monetary<br />

policymakers raise rates.<br />

The prospect of rate rises comes<br />

at a time when monetary policymakers<br />

are beginning to wean<br />

bond markets off the support they<br />

have provided through quantitative<br />

easing. Monetary policymakers<br />

across advanced economies<br />

bought trillions of dollars of assets<br />

as part of “quantitative easing”<br />

programmes aimed at restoring<br />

economic growth and staving off<br />

deflation.<br />

While the policies are credited<br />

with spearheading the global economic<br />

recovery, critics have said<br />

policymakers have inflated bubbles<br />

in asset prices.<br />

Assets bought by banks under<br />

QE are not included as central<br />

banks’ reserves, as policymakers<br />

are not expected to hold on to these<br />

over the longer term. The Federal<br />

Reserve has started to unwind its<br />

QE operations while the European<br />

Central Bank is expected to halt<br />

fresh asset purchases under its<br />

€2.4tn programme at the end of<br />

this year.<br />

Reserves are usually amassed<br />

through central banks’ attempts to<br />

control the value of their currency<br />

through purchases of the main<br />

global reserve currencies such as<br />

dollars or euros.<br />

Central banks tend to invest<br />

their reserves in safe government<br />

or corporate bonds, as well as gold,<br />

though some invest in equities.<br />

Most assets are denominated in<br />

dollars or euros.<br />

Central banks hold reserves<br />

worth $10.8tn according to IMF<br />

data. Asian central banks are responsible<br />

for the biggest reserve<br />

stockpiles.<br />

Maiden Cloudcover women in business forum holds, challenges females to aim higher<br />

The maiden edition of Women<br />

in Business, a networking session<br />

for women in all sectors of<br />

the economy powered by Cloudcover<br />

Limited, an innovative company delivering<br />

constant internet connectivity to<br />

Nigerians, has held in Lagos with a call<br />

on women to always aim high and not<br />

be limited by their situations.<br />

The interactive session brought together<br />

women from diverse industries<br />

and organisations, and addressed issues<br />

concerning women in all areas of<br />

economic endeavour.<br />

Featuring women entrepreneurs,<br />

professionals, businesswomen and<br />

budding entrepreneurs, the event held<br />

at Brown’s Cafe, Victoria Island, and<br />

had the co-founder of She Leads Africa,<br />

Afua Osei as keynote speaker.<br />

Afua Osei, an Entrepreneur, Investor,<br />

and a seasoned Public Speaker, urged<br />

women not to be overwhelmed by the<br />

harsh economic environment that seeks to<br />

limit them from attaining greater heights.<br />

According to her, “It’s a tough society<br />

with series of odds stacked against<br />

women but we must never give up. We<br />

will find it hard going alone but our<br />

strength is in our unity. When we collectively<br />

face challenges, we will achieve<br />

more. We should network more, share<br />

insights more and seek solutions together.<br />

We must not be overwhelmed by<br />

the institutional and cultural hurdles in<br />

our paths, we must refuse to be limited.”<br />

Osei who had also served in the office<br />

of America’s ex-First Lady, Michelle<br />

Obama, added that “this is a unique opportunity<br />

that has been offered to us by<br />

Cloudcover, we should do well to seize it<br />

and also look into offerings by the company<br />

that can assist us in our respective<br />

endeavours. Whether entrepreneur,<br />

professional or businesswomen, we will<br />

find the device invaluable.”<br />

In her brief remarks, Group Chief<br />

Operating Officer of Cloudcover Limited,<br />

Eleanor Potter, explained that<br />

the aim of the interaction was to help<br />

women surmount cultural and institutional<br />

hurdles they face in realizing<br />

their career and business goals through<br />

quality networking.<br />

She said that Cloudcover recognises<br />

the huge but underappreciated<br />

roles women have been playing in the<br />

Nigerian business landscape and will<br />

continue to offer them innovative<br />

solutions that will give them a head<br />

start and make their tasks easier in<br />

whichever sector of the economy they<br />

are playing in.<br />

Potter said: “We recognise the<br />

thousands of women playing in different<br />

sectors of the economy and who<br />

need help to further progress along.<br />

No matter whom you are; established<br />

entrepreneur, up and coming one, a<br />

professional, Cloudcover will empower<br />

you to do more through these networking<br />

sessions and our innovative internet<br />

and data solutions like the Cloudcover<br />

CC1 MiFi device that makes use of dynamic<br />

network roaming to give users<br />

seamless and constant internet connectivity<br />

across seven network providers in<br />

Nigeria. With the CC1 device, women<br />

and indeed everybody no longer have<br />

to own multiple SIMs and MiFi as the<br />

device uses virtual sim technology.<br />

These and more are ways by which we<br />

will continue to help women grow.”<br />

Co-founder of Cloudcover Limited,<br />

Uchenna Agbo, disclosed that being<br />

women themselves, they understand<br />

the challenges businesswomen, entrepreneurs<br />

and professionals are facing<br />

in Nigeria, hence their resolve to create<br />

a platform to help as many as possible.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

A6 BUSINESS DAY


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

A7


A8<br />

NEWS<br />

New technologies<br />

key to driving<br />

Africa’s growth<br />

MIKE OCHONMA<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Chun-Yuan Gu,<br />

president, ABB,<br />

Asia, Middle East<br />

region, says Africa<br />

has an historic opportunity<br />

to accelerate growth and<br />

development by tapping<br />

into the potential that new<br />

technologies holds in the<br />

continent.<br />

Delivering a speech at<br />

the ABB Customer World<br />

Africa <strong>2018</strong> conference in<br />

Johannesburg, South Africa,<br />

Chun-Yuan Gu noted<br />

that the digital revolution<br />

had already transformed<br />

the lives of millions of people<br />

through mobile phone<br />

and Internet access, saying<br />

these technologies had allowed<br />

Africans to leap over<br />

fixed-line telephone usage<br />

and use financial services<br />

without “setting foot in a<br />

bank.”<br />

“Now, those technologies<br />

are transforming industry,<br />

and Africa is the<br />

place that stands to benefit<br />

most, by leapfrogging older<br />

technologies on to a sustainable<br />

path to growth and<br />

development,” he said.<br />

Underlining Africa’s opportunities<br />

and ABB’s key<br />

role in unlocking value for<br />

its customers through automation<br />

is the 40% rise<br />

in the group’s 2017 orders<br />

across all its divisions, subregions<br />

and channels, Gu<br />

said.<br />

“Africa has the world’s<br />

most youthful population.<br />

This, combined with improving<br />

economic fundamentals,<br />

makes the continent<br />

ideally positioned<br />

to take advantage of new<br />

technologies. Training and<br />

preparing the next generation<br />

of engineers is pivotal.”<br />

He pointed out that Africa<br />

had the tools and the<br />

means to compete in global<br />

markets, adding that by<br />

taking advantage of ABB’s<br />

digital offering, ABB Ability,<br />

Africa would be capable<br />

of building robust industries<br />

that can compete<br />

with rivals in other parts of<br />

the globe.<br />

ABB Ability, which was<br />

launched last year, works<br />

by gathering and analysing<br />

data from customers’ operations<br />

and applying to that<br />

data, knowledge and expertise<br />

gained from ABB’s<br />

vast global installed base<br />

of 70-million connected<br />

devices and 70 000 control<br />

systems.<br />

“It helps customers in<br />

utilities, industry, transport<br />

and infrastructure<br />

develop new processes<br />

and advance existing ones<br />

by providing insights and<br />

optimising planning and<br />

controls for real-time operations,”<br />

Gu said.<br />

Nigeria tops countries with<br />

highest death sentences in SSA<br />

KELVIN UMWENI<br />

Though no execution<br />

was recorded<br />

in Nigeria, the total<br />

number of death<br />

penalty recorded<br />

at the end of 2017 stood at<br />

621, the second highest in<br />

the world after China, while<br />

2,285 people were known to<br />

be under death sentence.<br />

This is according to a report<br />

released <strong>Apr</strong>il 12, by<br />

Amnesty International, a<br />

global movement for the protection<br />

of human rights.<br />

The report noted that in<br />

Nigeria, 68 persons were<br />

commuted, 17 pardons were<br />

granted while 28 persons under<br />

death sentence were exonerated<br />

in 2017, the highest<br />

in the world.<br />

Global death sentences<br />

decreased by 17 percent to<br />

over 2,591 in 2017 from 3,117<br />

recorded in the previous year<br />

with over 21,919 people under<br />

death sentence as of yearend<br />

2017.<br />

In the same vein, the total<br />

number of executions carried<br />

out by countries around<br />

the world (excluding China)<br />

in 2017 was down for the<br />

second consecutive time by<br />

4 percent to 993 compared<br />

with 1,032 executions recorded<br />

in 20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

The Middle East countries<br />

of Iran, Saudi Arabia,<br />

Iraq and Pakistan accounted<br />

for 84 percent of all recorded<br />

executions globally in 2017;<br />

Iran alone accounted for 51<br />

percent of this figure.<br />

China, with over 1,000 recorded<br />

executions, remains<br />

the country with the highest<br />

number of executions worldwide,<br />

though the Chinese<br />

government still classifies<br />

figures as “a state secret,” thus<br />

making it difficult to obtain<br />

complete official statistics.<br />

The report noted that the<br />

United States of America<br />

(USA) was the only country<br />

to carry out executions in<br />

Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

the Americas, while Guyana,<br />

Trinidad and Tobago and the<br />

USA were the only country<br />

in the region that imposed<br />

death sentences.<br />

Eleven countries of USA,<br />

China, Vietnam, Saudi Arabia,<br />

Iran, Iraq, Somalia, Japan,<br />

North Korea, Afghanistan<br />

and Malaysia, excluding<br />

Syria and Libya, were fingered<br />

by Amnesty International<br />

to have persistently<br />

executed in the last five years<br />

(2013 – 2017).


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

A9


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

A10 BUSINESS DAY


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

A11


A12<br />

NEWS<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Adeosun, Emefiele join economic experts to<br />

discuss global issues at IMF/World Bank meeting<br />

Minister of finance,<br />

Kemi<br />

Adeosun, and<br />

Central Bank of<br />

Nigeria (CBN) governor, Godwin<br />

Emefiele, left Nigeria for<br />

Washington DC on Sunday to<br />

join other economic experts<br />

from around the world to discuss<br />

issues affecting global<br />

economy. Discussions would<br />

take place under the auspices<br />

of the World Bank Group and<br />

the International Monetary<br />

Fund (IMF).<br />

The Spring Meetings of the<br />

IMF and the World Bank will<br />

bring together central bankers,<br />

ministers of finance and<br />

development, parliamentarians,<br />

private sector executives,<br />

representatives from civil society<br />

organisations and the<br />

academia.<br />

The experts will discuss<br />

issues of global concern, including<br />

the world economic<br />

outlook, poverty eradication,<br />

economic development and<br />

aid effectiveness.<br />

There will also be seminars,<br />

regional briefings, press<br />

conferences and many other<br />

events with focus on global<br />

economy, international development<br />

and the world’s<br />

financial system. The meetings<br />

will hold between <strong>Apr</strong>il<br />

<strong>16</strong> and <strong>Apr</strong>il 22, <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

Nigeria attends the meet-<br />

ing each year because of the<br />

quantum of investments and<br />

assistance it receives from<br />

both the IMF and the World<br />

Bank.<br />

Although Nigeria currently<br />

has zero loans with the IMF,<br />

it enjoys technical support<br />

from the organisation.<br />

The World Bank Group on<br />

the other hand is helping to<br />

fight poverty and improve living<br />

standards in the country<br />

through 33 Core Knowledge<br />

Product Reports and 29 ongoing<br />

National and Regional<br />

projects. This is in addition to<br />

about 60 Trust Funds.<br />

The World Bank Group<br />

since 1958 supported Nigeria<br />

with loans and International<br />

Development Association<br />

(IDA) credits worth about<br />

$14.2 billion.<br />

The group in 2017 fiscal<br />

year alone committed $1.51<br />

billion to the country, and so<br />

far in <strong>2018</strong>, it already spent<br />

$486 million on different development<br />

projects across the<br />

country. Some of the projects<br />

include Electricity Transmission<br />

Project, Agro-Processing,<br />

Productivity Enhancement<br />

and Livelihood Improvement<br />

Support Project, Polio<br />

Eradication Support Project<br />

and Housing Finance Development<br />

Programme, among<br />

Capital market plan to top discussions as<br />

SEC holds first CMC meeting for <strong>2018</strong><br />

ONYINYE NWACHUKWU, Abuja<br />

Progress made so<br />

far on the capital<br />

market master<br />

plan implementation<br />

and other<br />

market initiatives will top<br />

discussions as the Securities<br />

and Exchange Commission<br />

(SEC) holds its first<br />

Capital Market Committee<br />

(CMC) meeting for <strong>2018</strong>.<br />

The meeting is scheduled<br />

to hold in Lagos from<br />

<strong>Apr</strong>il 19 to 20.<br />

The ten-year plan for the<br />

Nigerian capital market,<br />

which is expected to help<br />

refocus and double the<br />

market size as well as grow<br />

the economy, was unveiled<br />

November 2014.<br />

The Commission has so<br />

far implemented some initiatives<br />

in the Master Plan<br />

with the aim of attracting<br />

more investors to the market.<br />

Some of the initiatives<br />

include direct cash settlement,<br />

dematerialisation<br />

and e-Dividend Registration,<br />

as they promote<br />

transparency, protect and<br />

enhance investors’ confidence<br />

in the capital market.<br />

Mary Uduk, who was<br />

appointed last Friday by<br />

minister of finance, Kemi<br />

Adeosun, to take over as<br />

SEC’s acting director-general,<br />

is expected to chair<br />

the meeting.<br />

Uduk took over from<br />

Abdul Zubair, who Adeosun<br />

redeployed to external<br />

relations department of the<br />

SEC.<br />

Those who have been<br />

invited to attend the expanded<br />

session are chief<br />

executive officers (CEOs)<br />

of all registered capital<br />

market firms, including<br />

Broker Dealer, Capital Market<br />

Solicitors, Custodians,<br />

Fund Managers, Issuing<br />

Houses, Rating Agencies,<br />

Registrars, Reporting Accountants,<br />

Trustees, and<br />

Consultants, etc.<br />

Others are CEOs of the<br />

Nigerian Stock Exchange<br />

(NSE), National Association<br />

of Securities Dealers<br />

(NASD), The Financial<br />

Markets Dealers Quotations<br />

(FMDQ), Africa Exchange<br />

Holdings (AFEX),<br />

Nigeria Commodity Exchange<br />

(NCX), Central Securities<br />

Clearing System<br />

(CSCS), Chartered Institute<br />

of Stockbrokers (CIS); as<br />

well as representatives of<br />

relevant Financial Services’<br />

Agencies, among others.<br />

Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

Kenya Airways sacks 86% of<br />

its Nigerian employees<br />

... unions to picket airline operations<br />

IFEOMA OKEKE<br />

East African carrier,<br />

Kenya Airways,<br />

weekend, sacked 22<br />

out of its 26 Nigerian<br />

employees, representing<br />

86.4 percent of the affected<br />

workers.<br />

A source close to the airline<br />

told <strong>BusinessDay</strong> that<br />

the staff members were issued<br />

the disengagement<br />

letters at the airline’s office<br />

in Lagos, in the presence<br />

of stern looking police officers<br />

that were engaged by<br />

the airline to scare away the<br />

affected staff and prevent<br />

possible breakdown of law<br />

and order.<br />

Only four of its Nigerian<br />

staff members are retained<br />

by the management of the<br />

airline after the purging<br />

exercise. Those retained<br />

are Afeez Balogun, country<br />

manager, the station manager,<br />

and two other staff.<br />

The source disclosed that<br />

the affected workers were<br />

only given four weeks wages<br />

on disengagement, a situation<br />

the industry unions are<br />

already frowning at.<br />

It was gathered that the<br />

abrupt sack of the Nigerian<br />

workers happened when<br />

the airline was still negoti-<br />

ating the new condition of<br />

service with the industry<br />

unions.<br />

The source said the carrier’s<br />

management took the<br />

decision without taking into<br />

consideration the Nigerian<br />

Labour Laws, which kick<br />

against unilateral decision<br />

by employers when disengaging<br />

workers.<br />

It was learnt that plans<br />

had also reached an advanced<br />

stage by the management<br />

of the airline to<br />

replace the sacked workers<br />

with casuals, as it had already<br />

contracted engagement<br />

of new workers to a<br />

general sales agent in the<br />

country.<br />

However, there are indications<br />

that the sack of<br />

the workers may cause disruption<br />

to the smooth operations<br />

of the airline today<br />

(Monday), as the unions<br />

have prepared to picket the<br />

operations of the airline.<br />

Olayinka Abioye, general<br />

secretary, National Union<br />

of Air Transport Employees<br />

(NUATE), confirmed the<br />

sack of the 22 workers, saying<br />

however that the unilateral<br />

sack of the workers<br />

by the airline would not be<br />

allowed to stand by the industry<br />

unions.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

A13


A14<br />

NEWS<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

‘Only Nigerians with creative, innovative<br />

mindset can push frontier of growth’<br />

KELECHI EWUZIE<br />

ships between buyers and<br />

sellers.” Like a typical MBA<br />

curriculum, The Chairman’s<br />

Empire is designed to teach<br />

business tactics and strategic<br />

thinking and the fundamentals<br />

of maintaining a healthy<br />

cash flow in order to avoid<br />

bankruptcy.<br />

“The game is designed<br />

to act as a guide on how to<br />

invest big to reap big and become<br />

the chairman of a vast<br />

business/economic empire,<br />

and inspire and contribute<br />

to your world through engagement<br />

in corporate social<br />

responsibility projects, etc,”<br />

she said. The game set up is<br />

structured like a typical business<br />

with players/investors<br />

why ply different sectors of<br />

the economy. It also has a<br />

central bank or the banks<br />

from which players obtain<br />

loans/credit for investment.<br />

The ‘investor’ must be<br />

careful to invest in sectors<br />

with low risk, but with potential<br />

for higher returns on<br />

investment.<br />

“The Chairman’s Empire<br />

was developed by HIIMA<br />

Edutainment, a Nigerian<br />

company and an arm of<br />

Distinct Integrated Services<br />

Limited, as an exciting business<br />

education game, which<br />

enables players catch up with<br />

the ever evolving business<br />

world.<br />

Zinox merges Konga,<br />

Yudala operations<br />

JUMOKE AKIYODE-LAWANSON<br />

Zinox Group has announced<br />

the merging<br />

of e-commerce<br />

operations between<br />

Konga and<br />

Yudala, as earlier predicted<br />

after Zinox acquired Konga,<br />

one of Nigeria’s largest online<br />

malls a few months ago.<br />

The merger, which takes<br />

effect from May 1, will see<br />

both companies operate on<br />

the ‘Konga’ brand name and<br />

is likely to give the company<br />

a stronger hold on Nigeria’s e-<br />

commerce market.<br />

In a statement, Zinox says<br />

the decision will see both<br />

Yudala and Konga leverage<br />

the combined strengths of<br />

both platforms, which is expected<br />

to further broaden<br />

the scope of organised retail<br />

and e-commerce in Nigeria<br />

and deliver more value to<br />

customers and merchants.<br />

“Combining forces to<br />

power the new Konga will<br />

enable us effectively achieve<br />

our goals of platform expansion<br />

and accelerated growth,<br />

as we embark on an ambitious<br />

journey to redefine the<br />

retail ecosystem with the<br />

industry’s most advanced<br />

technology,” Olusiji Ijogun,<br />

the newly appointed chairman<br />

of Konga, said.<br />

“Effective from May 1, Yudala<br />

will now operate under<br />

the name Konga, with dual<br />

CEOs in the persons of Nick<br />

Imudia who will be in charge<br />

of online among others and<br />

Prince Nnamdi Ekeh who will<br />

be responsible for offline. This<br />

merger will further strengthen<br />

our position in the Nigerian<br />

retail market as we creatively<br />

position Konga as the first<br />

profitable e-commerce company<br />

in Africa.<br />

“The efficiency of Konga’s<br />

cutting-edge online platform,<br />

access to thousands of merchants<br />

and Yudala’s expansive<br />

network of fully stocked<br />

offline stores is poised to give<br />

our customers the best shopping<br />

experience imaginable.<br />

We will be working closely<br />

with all our combined clients,<br />

customers, merchants<br />

and employees to make the<br />

integration process as seamless<br />

as possible and thereafter<br />

make public our road map to<br />

sustain our leadership on the<br />

continent,” Ijogun said.<br />

One of the exciting benefits<br />

of this merger is the possibility<br />

it offers prospective<br />

shoppers to order online, pay<br />

and pick-up the product(s)<br />

at the nearest Konga offline<br />

store. There are also increasing<br />

business opportunities for<br />

merchants nationwide.<br />

Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

Medview explains rationalisation of<br />

staff, denies debt to service providers<br />

IFEOMA OKEKE<br />

Industry experts in the<br />

business and education<br />

sectors have warned that<br />

in the coming decade,<br />

the only assurance for Nigerians<br />

to remain relevant and<br />

push the frontier of growth is<br />

to be creative and innovative<br />

in their decision making.<br />

Ima Mariam Agunbiade-<br />

Etiebet, chief executive of<br />

Distinct Integrated Services<br />

Limited, said it was important<br />

that Nigerians learn financial<br />

discipline, planning and<br />

management as this would<br />

help them develop entrepreneurial,<br />

creative and innovative<br />

mindset to see possibilities<br />

and opportunities.<br />

Agunbiade-Etiebet stated<br />

this at the unveiling of the<br />

Chairman’s Empire, an innovative<br />

board game in Lagos.<br />

The Chairman’s Empire<br />

is a thrilling board game<br />

that can be played by two or<br />

more people, and takes players<br />

through the nitty-gritty of<br />

modern business practice. It<br />

is designed to be enjoyed by<br />

both adults and children of<br />

seven years old and above.<br />

According to Agunbiade-<br />

Etiebet, “The Chairman’s<br />

Empire, among other things,<br />

helps the players understand<br />

the dynamics of doing business,<br />

including the relation-<br />

Managing director<br />

of<br />

Medview Airlines,<br />

Muneer<br />

Bankole, says the airline<br />

had to undergo rationalisation<br />

of 52 staff members,<br />

both professional and administrative<br />

wise, as part of<br />

efforts to re-align its operations.<br />

Furthermore, Bankole<br />

says the airline is not indebted<br />

to any of its international<br />

service providers.<br />

Speaking at a press conference,<br />

weekend, Bankole<br />

said the airline had paid<br />

January salaries and had<br />

paid up 60 percent of staff<br />

in February, and was not indebted<br />

as those rationalised<br />

had to undergo the company’s<br />

processes but would be<br />

paid soon.<br />

According to Bankole,<br />

“Today, I will tell you that<br />

Medview is carrying out<br />

staff rationalisation and<br />

that is normal in any business.<br />

We came back in January<br />

and we announced to<br />

staff that we had to carry<br />

out this exercise. In January,<br />

we didn’t owe anyone and<br />

in February we had paid 60<br />

percent of our colleagues,<br />

including our pilots, but<br />

those that were laid off were<br />

52 and we are still doing it.<br />

“We had to rationalise<br />

their salaries because they<br />

have to meet the processes<br />

and procedures of disengagement,<br />

because when<br />

we give them letters, they<br />

have to go through Human<br />

Resources, return their<br />

Identification card and we<br />

check their books to see if<br />

they are not on loan and<br />

then they are paid their final<br />

packages.<br />

“In January, we had paid<br />

all and paid 60% in February<br />

and we are doing the<br />

exercise simultaneously. It<br />

affects captains, engineers,<br />

handlers and it affects those<br />

who have cases and those<br />

indicted for disciplinary of<br />

fences are equally affected.”<br />

On alleged debts to service<br />

providers, he said if<br />

they were owing any of their<br />

foreign service providers,<br />

the airline would not last six<br />

months.<br />

The airline, according to<br />

Bankole, is also realigning<br />

its operations to ensure its<br />

long-term sustainability by<br />

strengthening its domestic<br />

operations.<br />

“The 777 is undergoing<br />

C-Check and will be back<br />

by May but this affected<br />

our scheduled operations.<br />

When you have two aircraft<br />

outside, you restructure<br />

your operations and plan<br />

your schedule.


Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

NEWS<br />

L - R: Ivy Ojigbede,<br />

group retail<br />

sales manager,<br />

Investment One<br />

Financial Services;<br />

Oluyori Ezekiel,<br />

managing director,<br />

Investment One<br />

Stockbrokers<br />

International<br />

Limited, and<br />

Oluchi Amorha,<br />

communications<br />

officer, Investment<br />

One Financial<br />

Services, after<br />

the launch of the<br />

company’s All Stars<br />

League initiative<br />

in Lagos, at the<br />

weekend<br />

C002D5556<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

A15<br />

fivethings<br />

for your new week<br />

Fascinating business facts<br />

35<br />

Zimbabwe is to sell shares in 35 state-owned firms,<br />

including telecoms and mining entities in the latest<br />

step to revive the economy under new political<br />

leadership, Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa said on<br />

Friday. Targeted firms include mobile carriers NetOne<br />

and Telecel, fixed line operator TelOne and savings<br />

bank POSB, all owned by the state. Shares in 17<br />

government-run mines would also be sold. Like most<br />

parastatals, the mines, which mainly produce gold,<br />

have struggled over the years due to lack of capital<br />

and mismanagement, forcing some to close.<br />

Stakeholders pick holes in FG’s<br />

attempt to sell Yola Disco, Afam plant<br />

OLUSOLA BELLO<br />

Stakeholders in the<br />

power sector say it<br />

is improper for the<br />

Federal Government<br />

to put Yola<br />

Electric Distribution Company<br />

up for sale, given that<br />

it is performing better than<br />

most of the other Discos<br />

that are privatised.<br />

They wonder if the real<br />

value of the Disco would<br />

be realised if it is sold now<br />

in view of the fact that the<br />

circumstances that made<br />

the core investor to return<br />

it to the government, which<br />

was insecurity, is still very<br />

much prevalent.<br />

They also frown at the<br />

situation in which the government<br />

is yet to refund the<br />

core investors, Integrated<br />

Energy and Distribution<br />

Marketing Company<br />

(IEDM), the $80.5 million<br />

that was the value negotiated<br />

after the return of the<br />

company, and is putting it<br />

put for sale.<br />

A former managing director<br />

of Ikeja Electric said:<br />

“It is crazy to want to sell<br />

Yola Disco now considering<br />

the performance of the<br />

sold ones. Presently Yola<br />

is performing better than<br />

most Discos despite the<br />

fact that it is still being run<br />

by civil servants. If the government<br />

had given the old<br />

management a third of the<br />

over N1 trillion intervention<br />

fund it has pumped<br />

into the system since privatisation<br />

could country<br />

would have been singing a<br />

different song.”<br />

Another executive director<br />

of one of the Discos<br />

queried the rationale<br />

behind the government<br />

selling the asset while still<br />

owing the former core investors,<br />

and described the<br />

action of the government<br />

capable of causing disincentive<br />

to other investors.<br />

“Whoever wants to buy<br />

the asset must be seeing<br />

what others are not seeing.<br />

I only hope that they do<br />

proper due diligent before<br />

throwing themselves into<br />

it,” he said.<br />

According to some others<br />

that spoke with <strong>BusinessDay</strong>,<br />

the Boko Haram<br />

insurgency is big challenge<br />

to any investor, as it seems<br />

intensified, even though the<br />

government claimed that<br />

the group has been technically<br />

defeated. They also<br />

cited the problems of the<br />

Fulani herdsmen, another<br />

major factor threatening investments<br />

in that region.<br />

The Fulani’s herdsmen<br />

problem has led to displacement<br />

of a number of<br />

people in Taraba and Adamawa<br />

states, which were<br />

considered as relatively<br />

peaceful before now. They<br />

said it would be difficult for<br />

any investor to want stake<br />

his money on the company,<br />

given the level of uncertainty<br />

prevailing in the<br />

areas covered by the distribution<br />

company.<br />

Efforts to get the reaction<br />

Bureau of Public Enterprise<br />

(BPE) on the views<br />

expressed by stakeholders,<br />

especially on why the refund<br />

of N80.5 million the<br />

former core investor is being<br />

delayed, was not successful.<br />

40<br />

National Microfinance Bank (NMB), Tanzania’s biggest<br />

bank by market capitalisation, is ready to participate<br />

in a needed consolidation of Tanzania’s fragmented<br />

banking sector, its chief executive said. Tanzania’s<br />

banking sector, hit by bad loans and low lending,<br />

would be healthier if smaller banks were taken over<br />

by larger ones, Ineke Bussemaker told Reuters. The<br />

East African nation has about 40 licensed banks, but<br />

the sector is dominated by a handful of big lenders.<br />

Netherlands-based Rabobank Group is NMB’s biggest<br />

shareholder with a 34.9 percent stake, while the<br />

Tanzanian government owns 31.9 percent.<br />

$3.5bn<br />

Kenya’s second-biggest infrastructure project since<br />

independence five decades ago, a $3.5 billion inter-city<br />

expressway, will be delayed amid concerns by lawmakers<br />

that East Africa’s largest economy is taking on too<br />

much debt, the company building it said. The nation’s<br />

debt could rise to 58 percent of gross domestic product<br />

by the end of June, from 40.6 percent in the 2011-12 fiscal<br />

year, according to World Bank estimates.<br />

$100m<br />

Russian IT services company IBS has postponed its<br />

planned initial public offering due to the Moscow market<br />

volatility caused by imposition of fresh US sanctions<br />

against the country. IBS said last week it would launch<br />

a flotation on the Moscow exchange and was said to be<br />

raising $100m by selling 30-35 per cent of its enlarged<br />

capital. Two days after that announcement, Washington<br />

said it was placing sanctions on seven Russian<br />

oligarchs, 12 of their companies and 17 Russia officials,<br />

leading to a run on the rouble and the largest daily fall<br />

in the Moscow stock market since 2014.<br />

$71.50<br />

With oil at above $71 a barrel, OPEC is beginning to<br />

reformulate its target in terms of upstream investment<br />

rather than oil inventories, according to an<br />

analysis of recent statements made by ministers<br />

from member countries. “There is no such thing as a<br />

target price by Saudi Arabia,” the kingdom’s energy<br />

minister, Khalid al-Falih, told reporters on Wednesday<br />

(“Saudi Arabia happy with oil market, won’t let<br />

another glut form”, Reuters


A<strong>16</strong><br />

NEWS<br />

Coronation Merchant Bank records<br />

66% growth in gross earnings<br />

HOPE MOSES-ASHIKE<br />

We will not betray your confidence<br />

in us, Buhari tells Nigerians<br />

TONY AILEMEN, Abuja<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

In spite of the tough operating<br />

environment<br />

witnessed in the financial<br />

market in 2017,<br />

Coronation Merchant Bank<br />

Group recorded 66 percent<br />

increase in gross earnings to<br />

N25.5 billion in full year 2017<br />

financial result, as against<br />

N15.2 billion recorded in the<br />

previous year.<br />

Aside the strong earnings<br />

performance, the Group recorded<br />

a significant growth<br />

in its balance sheet in 2017.<br />

Total assets increased by<br />

28 percent to N136.7 billion<br />

from N106.6 billion in<br />

December 20<strong>16</strong>, and shareholder’s<br />

funds increased to<br />

N29.5 billion from N25.9 billion<br />

- a valid testament to the<br />

resilience of the Group’s operations<br />

and its adaptability<br />

to current market realities<br />

and challenges.<br />

“The impressive results<br />

of the bank in the last three<br />

years demonstrate the effectiveness<br />

of our strategy, the<br />

quality of our past decisions<br />

and the commitment of our<br />

board and management to<br />

maximise shareholder value<br />

whilst actively expanding<br />

our franchise in select, high<br />

growth markets where we<br />

believe we have a competitive<br />

advantage,” Abu Jimoh,<br />

CEO of the bank, said.<br />

The bank’s interest income<br />

growth of 67 percent<br />

year/year and non-interest<br />

income growth of 57 percent<br />

in 2017 reaffirm the sustain-<br />

President Muhammadu<br />

Buhari has assured<br />

Nigerians living<br />

in the United Kingdom<br />

(UK) that his administration<br />

will work to justify<br />

Nigerian’s confidence in his<br />

administration.<br />

The President speaking in<br />

London on Sunday while receiving<br />

the Buhari Diaspora<br />

Support Organisation, led by<br />

Efe Sylvester, assured, “We<br />

will do our best to justify your<br />

trust in us, and that confidence<br />

won’t be abused.”<br />

A statement by special<br />

adviser to the President on<br />

media and publicity, Femi<br />

Adesina, said the President<br />

expressed happiness that the<br />

country had people who were<br />

ready to defend her.<br />

“You have shown courage<br />

and sacrifice. I assure you that<br />

your confidence in us won’t<br />

be abused, we will do our best<br />

to justify it,” he said.<br />

The group, a new force<br />

set up to counter the activities<br />

of other Nigerians who<br />

had been engaging in protest<br />

against the President at the<br />

Nigeria House in London,<br />

had expressed their confidence<br />

in the current administration’s<br />

efforts to rebuild the<br />

country.<br />

ability of its core business<br />

growth. “We will continue<br />

to gain momentum in our<br />

efforts to achieve more diversified<br />

earnings, as we<br />

strengthen our subsidiaries<br />

offerings,” Jimoh said at the<br />

annual general meeting held<br />

at the weekend in Lagos.<br />

Despite the high inflation<br />

rate, cost-to-income ratio<br />

increased marginally by 90<br />

basis points to 46.1 percent<br />

compared to 45.2 percent in<br />

December 20<strong>16</strong>, reaffirming<br />

the bank’s commitment to<br />

rein in costs while improving<br />

operating efficiency.<br />

“We remain committed<br />

to providing our clients with<br />

superior financial services<br />

whilst generating attractive<br />

and sustainable returns for<br />

shareholders.”<br />

The bank recorded<br />

growth in loan book by 42<br />

percent to N32.3 billion in<br />

2017 from N22.7 billion in<br />

20<strong>16</strong>.<br />

“While general economic<br />

conditions and the regulatory<br />

environment remain<br />

tight, we believe that our<br />

new business and lending<br />

strategies, embedded risk<br />

management culture and<br />

continuous cost savings<br />

will enable us stand firm<br />

throughout this period”.<br />

“In the coming years, we<br />

will focus on the disciplined<br />

implementation of our<br />

growth strategy to drive efficiency<br />

in all segments of our<br />

business leveraging fintech<br />

and process re-engineering,”<br />

Jimoh said.<br />

The President, who noted<br />

that Nigeria was gifted with<br />

tremendous human and natural<br />

resources, however, regretted<br />

that “failure of some of<br />

the leadership we had in the<br />

past led to our not being able<br />

to capitalise on resources to<br />

improve the lot of the people.”<br />

For him, “wicked people<br />

plundered the country, and<br />

kept Nigerians poor. Looking<br />

at the condition in which the<br />

current administration met the<br />

country, without savings and<br />

the economy badly vandalised,<br />

“we have not done too badly.”<br />

He reiterated that the<br />

damage done to the Nigerian<br />

economy in the years of plunder<br />

was massive, and that government<br />

was doing its best to<br />

recover some of the loot, but<br />

noted that it was impossible<br />

to identify and recover all.<br />

“If they had used 50% of<br />

the money we made, when<br />

oil prices went as high as<br />

$143 dollars per barrel, and<br />

stabilized at $100 dollars<br />

with production at 2.1 million<br />

barrels per day for many<br />

years, Nigerians would have<br />

minded their businesses. You<br />

could almost grow food on<br />

our roads, as they were abandoned.<br />

The stealing was so<br />

much, and they were so inept<br />

that they could not even cover<br />

the stealing properly.”<br />

Emefiele says AGSMEIS funds<br />

to reach N60bn by June<br />

… 358 entrepreneurs benefit as CBN, Bankers’ Committee commence disbursement<br />

HOPE MOSES-ASHIKE & ONYINYE NWACHUKWU<br />

Funds pooled by the<br />

commercial lenders<br />

under the Agribusiness/Small<br />

and<br />

Medium Enterprises<br />

Investment Scheme (AGS-<br />

MEIS) is already in excess of<br />

N26 billion, and is expected<br />

to exceed N60 billion by June<br />

<strong>2018</strong>, CBN governor, Godwin<br />

Emefiele, said as disbursements<br />

of the funds began in<br />

Abuja, last week.<br />

The flag off saw the disbursement<br />

of about N118<br />

million to 358 beneficiaries<br />

under the scheme that seeks<br />

to reasonably cut the present<br />

high unemployment rates in<br />

the country.<br />

The beneficiaries are<br />

youths who have been<br />

trained on various entrepreneurship,<br />

vocational and<br />

management skills across the<br />

country by Entrepreneurship<br />

Development Institutions<br />

Paga celebrates<br />

9th year<br />

anniversary<br />

Paga is celebrating<br />

its ninth anniversary<br />

as Nigeria’s first<br />

and leading mobile<br />

money company. Founded<br />

by CEO, Tayo Oviosu in<br />

<strong>Apr</strong>il 2009, Paga has provided<br />

easy means for simple<br />

mobile money transfers,<br />

bill payments and<br />

provision of financial services<br />

to over 8 million users<br />

on their platform through<br />

the years.<br />

Since 2009, Paga has<br />

created meaningful financial<br />

technology that has led<br />

the drive for financial inclusion<br />

which aims to bank<br />

over 70 million unbanked<br />

and underbanked Nigerians<br />

leveraging its web<br />

channels, mobile apps and<br />

short code (*242#).<br />

Paga has pioneered the<br />

mobile money industry<br />

objective by creating what<br />

is recognized as the single<br />

largest shared active agent<br />

network in Nigeria with<br />

over 14,000 agents. These<br />

agent outlets are widespread<br />

across the 36 states<br />

in Nigeria and they enable<br />

millions of Nigerians<br />

to perform simple money<br />

transfers and pay bills for<br />

life and business.<br />

Notable businesses and<br />

organizations like Dangote<br />

foundation, Ikeja Electric,<br />

Eko Distribution Company,<br />

JAMB, WAEC, UK<br />

Immigration among many<br />

more companies have leveraged<br />

the reach and impact<br />

of Paga to achieve payment<br />

collections and bulk<br />

disbursements.<br />

and Centres, such as Fate<br />

Foundation, Lagos Business<br />

School, House of Tara and<br />

Thrive Agric.<br />

The Bankers’ Committee<br />

had, at its meeting on February<br />

9, 2017, came up with<br />

the AGSMEIS to improve<br />

access to affordable financing<br />

for MSMEs, particularly<br />

those operating in the informal<br />

sector of the economy,<br />

and to support the Federal<br />

Government’s efforts and<br />

policy measures to promote<br />

sustainable economic development<br />

and employment<br />

generation.<br />

As a commitment to the<br />

successful implementation<br />

of the scheme, all deposit<br />

money banks, voluntarily<br />

agreed to set aside and<br />

contribute 5 percent of their<br />

profit after tax (PAT) annually<br />

to finance eligible projects<br />

under the scheme.<br />

Quoting data from the<br />

National Bureau of Statistics<br />

(NBS), Emefiele said the rate<br />

of unemployment in Nigeria<br />

worsened marginally during<br />

the third quarter of 2017, and<br />

that this raised concerns and<br />

risks for the collective peace<br />

and progress across the nation.<br />

He noted that one of the<br />

most effective ways to tackle<br />

this scourge was through entrepreneurship<br />

development<br />

and easy access to affordable<br />

financing, which according<br />

to him, has been a huge challenge<br />

to entrepreneurship<br />

development in the country<br />

today.<br />

He regretted the financial<br />

intermediaries’ apathy to<br />

youth entrepreneurship and<br />

start-ups, which are usually<br />

perceived as being too risky,<br />

lacking relevant managerial<br />

skills and not possessing adequate<br />

collaterals acceptable<br />

for conventional credit.<br />

He said the situation<br />

therefore led the Bankers’<br />

Monday <strong>16</strong> <strong>Apr</strong>il <strong>2018</strong><br />

Committee Retreat, to design<br />

and fund a suitable scheme<br />

that will not only reduce the<br />

huge financing gap for Macro<br />

Small and Medium Enterprises<br />

(MSMEs), but also<br />

fully commits to the pursuits<br />

of job creation, financial inclusion<br />

and inclusive growth<br />

for Nigerians, particularly the<br />

teeming youth population.<br />

The AGSMEIS has been<br />

designed to be implemented<br />

in three broad components,<br />

namely Direct, Indirect and<br />

Developmental components.<br />

Under the Direct component<br />

of the AGSMEIS, beneficiaries<br />

can access loans to a<br />

limit of N10 million, at interest<br />

rate of 5 percent per annum<br />

and a maximum tenor<br />

of up to seven years. There is<br />

also a moratorium period of<br />

18 months on principal and<br />

six months on interest element,<br />

depending on the nature<br />

of the business.


BUSINESS DAY<br />

Opinion<br />

NEWS YOU CAN TRUST I MONDAY <strong>16</strong> APRIL <strong>2018</strong><br />

CHOGM <strong>2018</strong>: Nigeria, Commonwealth and the London summit<br />

C002D5556<br />

This week, from<br />

today Monday<br />

<strong>16</strong> to Friday 20<br />

<strong>Apr</strong>il, the 25th<br />

biennial summit<br />

of the Commonwealth,<br />

the Commonwealth Heads<br />

of Government Meeting<br />

(CHOGM), will take place<br />

in London. It is the first<br />

time the event is held in<br />

the UK since 1997. As a<br />

proud Londoner, with a<br />

longstanding relationship<br />

with the Commonwealth,<br />

I cannot but comment on<br />

thehistoric event, even<br />

more so because of the<br />

importance of this week’s<br />

summitandthe role that<br />

Nigeria should play in it.<br />

But before we get into all<br />

that, let’s remind ourselves<br />

of Nigeria’srelationship<br />

with the Commonwealth.<br />

Nigeria joined the<br />

Commonwealth at independence<br />

in 1960. For<br />

most part, since that time,<br />

we have been an enthusiastic<br />

member of the organisation.<br />

We produced<br />

its third Secretary-General,<br />

since the office was<br />

established in 1965, in the<br />

person of the globally respected<br />

elder statesman,<br />

Chief Emeka Anyaoku,<br />

who led the organisation<br />

for ten years, from 1990<br />

to 2000. On any visit to<br />

the Commonwealth Secretariat,<br />

I never cease to<br />

admire Chief Anyaoku’s<br />

larger than life portrait in<br />

his traditional Nigerian<br />

attire. He was an iconic<br />

and highly successful secretary<br />

general!<br />

I attended my first<br />

CHOGM in Abuja in December<br />

2003. I had been<br />

asked by the Commonwealth<br />

Business Council<br />

to be the rapporteur for<br />

the Business Forum during<br />

the summit. With both<br />

the Hilton and Sheraton<br />

hotels cordoned off to<br />

accommodate the guests,<br />

including the Queen and<br />

her entourage, and with<br />

several colourful social<br />

and cultural activities,<br />

it was a very memorable<br />

event for many of the foreign<br />

visitors.<br />

Of course, Nigeria will<br />

always pull out all the<br />

stops to organise spectacular<br />

events to impress<br />

GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES<br />

OLU FASAN<br />

Dr Fasan, a London-based lawyer and<br />

political economist, is a Visiting Fellow at<br />

the London School of Economics. email:<br />

o.fasan@lse.ac.uk,<br />

He tweets @olu_fasan<br />

Anyaoku<br />

foreigners. Sadly, it lacks<br />

the ability and/or the willingness<br />

to organise its<br />

own affairs. For instance,<br />

despite its enthusiasm for<br />

the Commonwealth, Nigeria<br />

falls far short of meeting<br />

its goals. Of the three<br />

Commonwealth goals –<br />

development, democracy<br />

and peace – Nigeria is<br />

certainly nowhere near<br />

attaining at least two, development<br />

and peace, not<br />

with widespread poverty,<br />

inequality, political tension<br />

and insecurity in the<br />

country.<br />

However, its internal<br />

deficiencies notwithstanding,<br />

Nigeria has always<br />

been an active member<br />

of the Commonwealth.<br />

The only exception was<br />

during the Abacha dictatorship<br />

when, following<br />

the execution of Ken<br />

Saro-Wiwa, Nigeria was<br />

ejected from the organisation<br />

in 1995. This was<br />

particularly embarrassing<br />

because, at that time, a<br />

Nigerian, Chief Anyaoku,<br />

was secretary-general of<br />

the Commonwealth. Abacha<br />

turned a deaf ear to<br />

Anyaoku’s entreaties, rejected<br />

Mandela’s pleas,<br />

and killed Saro-Wiwa.<br />

Nigeria crossed the Rubicon,<br />

its behaviour was<br />

beyond the pale, and had<br />

to be sent out of the Commonwealth.<br />

But no member wants<br />

to be ostracised from the<br />

Commonwealth for too<br />

long. Every member suspended<br />

from the organisation<br />

always applied to<br />

be readmitted when the<br />

time became auspicious,<br />

as Nigeria did in 1999 after<br />

returning to democracy,<br />

and as The Gambia and<br />

Zimbabwe are currently<br />

doing after Yahya Jammeh<br />

and Robert Mugabe were<br />

replaced by more civilised<br />

leaders.<br />

So, why is the Commonwealth<br />

that important?<br />

Well, I would say there<br />

are two main reasons. The<br />

first is its functional value.<br />

The Commonwealth, a<br />

club of mostly former British<br />

colonies, is the only<br />

plurilateral organisation<br />

in the world whose membership<br />

spans the globe.<br />

Its 53 member-countries<br />

spread across Africa, Asia,<br />

the Caribbean, the Americas,<br />

Europe and the Pacific.<br />

It is also the only<br />

monwealth Charter,<br />

agreed on 14 December<br />

2012, sets out <strong>16</strong> core<br />

principles to which all<br />

members are committed.<br />

These range from democracy,<br />

human rights and<br />

peace and security to rule<br />

of law, good governance,<br />

gender equality as well as<br />

health, education, food<br />

and shelter. Of course, as<br />

Nigeria shows, not every<br />

Commonwealth member<br />

adheres to all these<br />

principles, or fully to any.<br />

However, the principles<br />

are benchmarks against<br />

which the behaviour of<br />

Indeed, can the trade minister, Okechukwu<br />

Enelamah, freely engage in<br />

such bilateral trade talks when President<br />

Buhari can easily overrule him<br />

(a la AfCFTA!)? What’s more, would<br />

Nigeria embrace a more economic<br />

Commonwealth with greater push for<br />

a commitment to free trade? Or would<br />

it be one the refuseniks? The latter, of<br />

course, is more likely, which reflects<br />

the regressive state of policy-making in<br />

Nigeria.<br />

such organisation with<br />

membership encompassing<br />

developed, developing,<br />

small and vulnerable<br />

states. These global<br />

reach and diversity enable<br />

the Commonwealth to<br />

leverage support for its<br />

members and their citizens<br />

through institutional<br />

development, capacity<br />

building, technical cooperation<br />

and professional<br />

development.<br />

Then, there is the normative<br />

value. The Com-<br />

every member-country<br />

can be measured, and<br />

therefore serve as a powerful<br />

source of normative<br />

pressure.<br />

For instance, all eyes<br />

will be on Nigeria next<br />

year as it holds its general<br />

elections. It will be<br />

expected to conduct<br />

the elections in an environment<br />

“where there<br />

is confidence, transparency<br />

and accountability<br />

in the electoral process,<br />

and where voters are free<br />

to exercise an informed<br />

choice between alternative<br />

candidates for office”.<br />

Following the success of<br />

the 2015 elections, Nigeria<br />

would be expected to<br />

strengthen its democracy<br />

and enhance the credibility<br />

of its electoral process<br />

by conducting free, fair<br />

and peaceful elections.<br />

Commonwealth election<br />

observers would, of<br />

course, be on the ground<br />

to see if Nigeria passes the<br />

electoral test. It is a test<br />

that Nigeria must not fail!<br />

So, the Commonwealth<br />

is a relevant organisation<br />

that provides valuable<br />

public good. But it<br />

is now facing pressure<br />

to do more, to become<br />

somewhat an economic<br />

bloc! Which brings me<br />

to why this week’s London<br />

summit is important.<br />

The summit,which comes<br />

just a year before Britain<br />

leaves the EU (Brexit), will<br />

have a significant impact<br />

on the future of the Commonwealth.<br />

It is not surprising<br />

that the theme of<br />

the CHOGM <strong>2018</strong> is “Towards<br />

a common future”.<br />

Simply put, the Commonwealth<br />

will be different<br />

post-Brexit. This is because<br />

the UK is very keen<br />

to secure trade deals with<br />

as many Commonwealth<br />

countries as possible, with<br />

Nigeria among its priority<br />

countries. In fact, British<br />

officials had hoped that<br />

trade talks would form a<br />

key part of the CHOGM<br />

agenda, but other Commonwealth<br />

members resisted<br />

turning the summit<br />

into a trade round. But the<br />

issue will still dominate<br />

discussions on the margins<br />

of the summit. As one<br />

British minister said, “We<br />

are hoping that through<br />

the bilateral discussion<br />

that will take place there<br />

would be huge opportunities<br />

to advance trade talks”.<br />

Sadly, Nigeria is unlikely<br />

to engage constructively<br />

in such talks, given its<br />

reflex defensive attitude<br />

to trade issues. Indeed,<br />

can the trade minister,<br />

Okechukwu Enelamah,<br />

freely engage in such bilateral<br />

trade talks when<br />

President Buhari can<br />

easily overrule him (a la<br />

AfCFTA!)? What’s more,<br />

would Nigeria embrace a<br />

more economic Commonwealth<br />

with greater push<br />

for a commitment to free<br />

trade? Or would it be one<br />

the refuseniks? The latter,<br />

of course, is more likely,<br />

which reflects the regressive<br />

state of policy-making<br />

in Nigeria.<br />

Nevertheless, trade and<br />

investment issues, if not<br />

actual trade talks, will still<br />

dominate the CHOGM<br />

agenda, particularly its<br />

Business Forum, from<br />

<strong>16</strong> to 18 <strong>Apr</strong>il, where the<br />

discussion will focus on,<br />

among others, advancing<br />

intra-Commonwealth<br />

trade and strengthening<br />

the “Commonwealth advantage”.<br />

In 2015, the Commonwealth<br />

Secretariat invited<br />

me to join a panel of experts<br />

to review its flagship<br />

trade publication, “The<br />

Commonwealth in the<br />

Unfolding Global Trade<br />

Landscape”. The study<br />

showed that there is a<br />

“Commonwealth Advantage”,<br />

which helps to increase<br />

trade by 20%, and<br />

reduce the cost of doing<br />

business by up to 19%,<br />

between Commonwealth<br />

countries than between<br />

them and non-Commonwealth<br />

countries. These<br />

findings will shape discussions<br />

at the Commonwealth<br />

Business Forum.<br />

But the CHOGM will<br />

not all be about business<br />

talks. One subject that<br />

might also be broached<br />

is the next head of the<br />

Commonwealth after<br />

the Queen. Of course,<br />

the Queen is universally<br />

adored, so much so that,<br />

according to media reports,<br />

some Commonwealth<br />

high commissioners<br />

want to nominate her<br />

for the Nobel Peace Prize.<br />

But after her, who next?<br />

Obviously, the Queen’s<br />

successor to lead the<br />

organisation should be<br />

Prince Charles when he<br />

becomes king, but the role<br />

is not hereditary, and, in<br />

principle, nothing should<br />

be taken for granted!<br />

Yet, for me, the present<br />

informal arrangement<br />

whereby the symbolic<br />

head of the Commonwealth<br />

is the British<br />

monarch, who is also<br />

head of state of <strong>16</strong> Commonwealth<br />

countries,<br />

while the chief executive<br />

of the organisation, i.e.<br />

the secretary-general,<br />

is rotated among other<br />

Commonwealth members,<br />

currently held by<br />

Patricia Scotland from<br />

Dominica, seems to work<br />

perfectly well. Surely,<br />

when the time to take<br />

that decision comes,<br />

Nigeria should support<br />

Prince Charles for the<br />

role!<br />

So, this week’s CHOGM<br />

is an interesting one for<br />

the Commonwealth and<br />

all its well-wishers. I look<br />

forward to it, and hope<br />

Nigeria takes active part<br />

in deciding the organisation’s<br />

“common future”,<br />

including on economic<br />

cooperation.<br />

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