Friday, September 14, 2012

Tracking the valuable paper

The world has so many papers but there is one which is of more value, we need to track it and sustain in it, sometimes it seems so hard t... thumbnail 1 summary
The world has so many papers but there is one which is of more value, we need to track it and sustain in it, sometimes it seems so hard to get enough of it. But I say there is always a way out.
As time goes by more opportunity is created but do you see it? I wonder why they say the rich get richer but there are still some poor folks who break that limit because the decided not to accept limits, people are still making it from the scratch! How do you feel about that news?
I just have to say this that tracking the valuable paper starts from you, your inner decision to see and seek it all the way. There are places it could be found like the internet is a valuable spotlight, farming is a way to go, reselling of goods could be your game, licensing could be where you should be, real estate always has a way to grow, stock market might make you a star, investing in other talent could make you find the leader in you. There are a lot more, have an open mind and think. There is a greatness in you, invest and seek opportunity wisely.
Success Nigeria, Success the world

Friday, August 31, 2012

Agriculture the future, Youth invest in it.

From farm to factory, to fork to fashion, there are investment opportunities in Nigeria’s agricultural value chain. To be sure, the futur... thumbnail 1 summary
From farm to factory, to fork to fashion, there are investment opportunities in Nigeria’s agricultural value chain. To be sure, the future of global food security is in unfarmed African lands.Agriculture is the linchpin of Nigeria’s economy. Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), at The New World Nigeria investment summit in London, said the sector accounts for 40 percent of GDP and 60 percent of employment – one-half of jobs created in Nigeria between 2001 and 2007 were from agriculture.
Farming may not bring fame, like the movie and music industry, but it promises a fortune – “from $99 billion today to $256 billion by 2030.” Fixation with oil has cost Nigeria its dominant position as an exporter of cocoa, groundnut and palm; our global share of these outputs shrunk to 5 percent as at 2000. Meanwhile, Nigeria’s annual total food import bill is $4.2 billion, spent on importing wheat, fish, rice and sugar.