Showing posts with label business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label business. Show all posts

Sunday 21 April 2013

Russian billionaire Usmanov top UK Rich list




Kiyo: Russian businessman Alisher Usmanov has knocked Lakshmi Mittal off the top of this year's Sunday Times Rich List with a jump in his fortune to 13.3 billion pounds after a tough year for the Indian steel magnate.
In an annual survey of the wealthiest people in Britain, Mittal drops to fourth after eight years at number one as his fortune tumbled 2.7 billion pounds to 10 billion.
Uzbek-born Usmanov, who is Russia's richest man and has a major shareholding in British Premier League football club Arsenal, saw his wealth rise by 985 million pounds over the past year, according to the annual survey by the British newspaper.

Filo: Arsenal’s third position in the English Premier League Table did not stop Usmanov from clinching the top spot on UK rich list.


Wednesday 17 April 2013

Airport worker resigns with his resignation letter iced onto a cake




Kiyo: Have you heard of cake resignation letter before? Well, that was exactly what Chris Holmes, a passport control employee at Stansted Airport did.
He wanted to leave his part-time airport job on good terms, so he baked a cake and iced it with his entire resignation letter.
Holmes decided to leave his passport control job because he wanted to devote himself to his business and his new family.

Filo: That was creative; another angle to viral marketing


Tuesday 16 April 2013

Dangote To Build $8 Billion Refinery


Filo: Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, has announced plans to construct an $8 billion refinery in Nigeria later this year, according to a report by Nigeria’s Leadership newspaper.
Dangote made the announcement last week in Lagos during a breakfast meeting with some senior editors of various Nigerian media organizations to commemorate his 57th birthday. While Dangote did not disclose the planned location of the facility or its capacity, he said his Dangote Group, will start work on the refinery as soon as the company secures final approval from the federal government and other related agencies.

Kiyo: Shrewd businessman, he would obviously get a consortium to finance the project, which invariably would mitigate tax liability because of interest charges; and Nigerians would celebrate him for creating employment opportunities, which in turn would garner more goodwill for his business group. At the end, it is still the rich getting richer.

Friday 12 April 2013

Pastor Oyakhilome, incorporates secret company for daughters in Caribbean Tax haven





Kiyo: Secret documents link family and associates of one of Africa’s most popular pastors, Nigerian televangelist the Rev. Chris Oyakhilome, to an offshore company in the British Virgin Islands.
A business associate of the pastor says some directors in the company held shares on behalf of the pastor’s daughters, Sharon and Charlyn, who are now teenagers.
The company in question is Gmobile Nigeria Limited, an offshore firm incorporated in 2007 in a Caribbean tax haven, the British Virgin Islands, according to a cache of documents reviewed by Premium Times and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). The shareholders listed in the documents include Oyakhilome’s wife, Anita; another pastor in his organization, Thomas Amenkhienan; a business associate, Aigobomian Inegbedion; and another British Virgin Islands’ company, GTMT International Group Limited.

Filo: Also, documents reviewed by ICIJ and Premium Times show that Anita Oyakhihome held 17, 750 of Gmobile’s 50,000 shares, with Amenkhienan owning 1,500 and Inegbedion 750. The fourth shareholder, GTMT International, also a British Virgin Islands’ company, owned by South African investors, held 30,000 shares.
The documents show that some of these individuals held shares in trust for two minors. The records don’t identify the minors, but Inegbedion confirmed that the minors referred to in the documents were the Oyakhilomes’ daughters, quickly adding that there was nothing wrong with that.
“Their parents bought the shares for them because they have rights to own shares,” Mr. Inegbedion said. “A day-old child has a right to own shares in companies.” He declined to say which of Gmobile directors held shares in trust for the girls.

Kiyo: The issue I see here is the clandestine nature of floating the company and the element of ambiguity with respect to the shareholders, what do you think?


Thursday 11 April 2013

Facebook voted world's best employer


Filo: Social network Facebook has been voted the best company in the world to work for.
Google was also placed sixth in the rankings while seven other technology companies featured in the top 20.
Employees may submit anonymous “reviews” of companies to the website which carried out the survey, Glassdoor. It uses these responses to compile its well-respected annual Employees’ Choice Awards.
Facebook employed 4,619 people by December last year, and opened an engineering department at its existing office in Covent Garden, central London, in October. The company came third in the 2012 rankings.
One contributor wrote of Facebook on Glassdoor: “The atmosphere is amazing. Everyone pulling together to help the company achieve goals we all believe in, while being incredibly open, down-to-earth and helpful about it.”

Kilo: Hmmm, which Nigerian company is the best employer of labour?


Thursday 28 March 2013

Briton kidnapped in Lagos freed

kidnappers





Filo: A British businessman kidnapped last week in Lagos has been released, Britain's Foreign Office website reports today. The statement on the website reads "A British national was kidnapped on Victoria Island, Lagos on 23 March (and was) subsequently released on 27 March"

Kiyo: I also heard the Nigerian police confirmed that the man was trailed on his way back from a nightclub in Victoria Island at around 11 p.m.

Filo: This is bad news for night life

Kiyo: Don’t worry your small head, they are not after people like you; the dude works for an oil company.
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