Tag: Aliko Dangote

  • Mixed fortunes for Aliko Dangote

    Mixed fortunes for Aliko Dangote

    No one at the moment seems to understand the intricacies of sadness and joy better than Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote. Only recently, the world acclaimed President of Dangote Group was named by Bloomberg among the 50 world’s most influential personalities. Among those who made the list were Barack Obama, Angela Merkel and Pope Francis, with Dangote at number 41 on the list.

    But just as he was in a celebratory mood over his latest accomplishment, tragedy struck and left the business tycoon bereaved. Dangote lost his niece, who was also his adopted daughter, to the cold hands of death last week. Fatima Bello Dangote, who reportedly lost her father alongside Ibrahim Abacha in an ill-fated plane in 1996, lost her two-year battle with brain cancer in a private hospital in the United Kingdom penultimate Friday. Dangote was said to have single-handedly brought late Fatima up and trained her through schools and universities after her father’s death.

    Fatima’s death has left Dangote bereaved, casting a gloom on what is supposed to be a season of joy.

  • Aliko Dangote, Femi Otedola in billionaires’ bond

    Aliko Dangote, Femi Otedola in billionaires’ bond

    Femi
    Femi Otedola

    To say that billionaire businessmen, Aliko Dangote and Femi Otedola, are two of the movers and shakers of the Nigerian economy is like stating the obvious.

    The entrepreneurial geniuses have proven the fact that like minds really do attract. So fond of each other are they that they hangout and attend events together like Siamese twins.

    The animosity that once existed between them has become a thing of the past. The business tycoons have since buried the hatchet to form a formidable friendship.

  • Aliko vs. Arsenal’s long juju

    Nigeria’s own Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote has obviously been caught in the thrall of the White man’s long juju – football. And Arsenal Football Club is no doubt one major coves of worship. This is quite understandable. Yours truly too must confess upfront that he is also under the same spell of English football and a member of the Arsenal FC congregation.

    Football indeed may well be the new religion, the new opium, the new global economy and even the future world order. Is it for nothing that the US recently started fiddling with FIFA? Or has the new power game just begun? Why are the Abramovichs, the Glazers, the Kroenkes, Usmanovs the Arab and Asian moguls taking positions in English and European leagues? Now Aliko has joined the fray. These fellows are no ordinary folks, they sure see farther than the rest of us.

    Such is the growing importance of football that Aliko wishes to buy Arsenal – almost at all cost. He is pitching in a board that has strong American (Kroenke) and Russian (Usmanov) blocs. Over the years, the Gunners, as Arsenal is known, has grown to be among the greatest soccer landmarks not only of England but in the football world. Nigeria alone would boast of no fewer than 10 million fans while its worldwide fan base would likely nudge the billion mark.

    This is no doubt a huge global brand that could be deployed to sell even products as lugubrious as cement. This may explain why Aliko, Nigeria’s own Midas has been under the spell of this football club and insists he must own it if not today, certainly, tomorrow. He had made the first bid to acquire substantial interest five years ago but was apparently rebuffed.

    He was not deterred. Aliko said recently that he had been a fan for about 30 years when he was taken to watch Arsenal by David Dein, a one-time major shareholder and grandee of the club. And here is what the multi-billion dollars mogul thinks: “What I always say is that money doesn’t have colour. It doesn’t matter whether you are from Africa or anywhere in the world. The colour of money is the same. Once I put money on the table, they will not think if I am an African.”

    Aliko also debunked the notion by some commentators that he is setting about some form of vanity investing in which he is bound to lose money. He said pointedly that the club is doing well and requires just another strategic direction for it to do even better.

    Well, Hardball has one or two frank words for Aliko here: first, without discounting his deep business acumen, football doesn’t seem like such a money spinner; it seems more an ego business. Second point is that it would take some doing and an unduly large cash too to hand Arsenal to an African.

    Finally, Aliko’s charity must begin from home. Kano, his home state is teeming with a horde of sports-crazy youth who have scarce opportunity to express themselves or get discovered. Kano could use some modern sporting facilities for catching and grooming young talents. Aliko can help in this regard before he buys Arsenal.

  • Dangote ready to buy Arsenal ‘at any price’

    Dangote ready to buy Arsenal ‘at any price’

    Nigerian billionaire Aliko Dangote has insisted  he will have “enough time and  resources” to buy English Premier League side, Arsenal, at whatever cost very soon.

    Dangote is Africa’s richest man having amassed a fortune in the region of $18.4 billion (£12.2 billion). He is currently ranked the 67th richest man in the world.

    The business mogul  reiterated his interest in purchasing the Gunners last month, saying he already know his strategy on how to take the club forward.

    That day may arrive sooner than first expected, with Dangote telling the BBC on Wednesday that completion of his proposed oil refinery in Nigeria will provide the funds necessary to launch a takeover of the English FA Cup winners.

    “When we get this refinery on track, I will have enough time and enough resources to pay what they are asking for,” he told BBC Hausa.

    “There were a couple of us who were rushing to buy, and we thought with the prices then, the people who were interested in selling were trying to go for a kill.”

    “We backtracked, because we were very busy doing other things, especially our industrialisation.”

    “They are doing well, but they need another strategic direction,” he added. “They need more direction than the current situation, where they just develop players and sell them.”

    Stan Kroenke is Arsenal’s majority shareholder, with the American owning 66.64 per cent of the club’s parent company, Arsenal Holdings Plc.

  • Forgive us if we offended you, Jonathan pleads

    Forgive us if we offended you, Jonathan pleads

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Sunday delivered his valedictory message to worshipers at the Aso Rock Chapel during a thanksgiving service.

    Excerpts from the message follows:

    “No system is perfect. Every human system must have an element of imperfection. For the period of eight years that we have been here. I will take the period as a block because my transition from VP to President was gradual and complicated. It was intertwined so you cannot actually draw the line.

    “Because when the President was challenged within major health issues, I was running the country for sometimes even before the doctrine of necessity made me as acting president. Then I took over at first and conducting the 2011 election I won and I had to run my full four years as an elected president.

    “So for the eight that one has been there, definitely one is not perfect. We have certainly done things that probably we wouldn’t have done that way, but we didn’t do things deliberately. So for those who we have offended it was not deliberate, it was circumstances of the office.

    “So we also plead that those people should forgive, we think we have done our best. You can do your best and your friends may misunderstand you. Today we are talking about leaving, it is only God that knows why things go the way they do.

    “We came in as Vice President and my wife, today we are leaving as the former president and former First Lady. We have achieved it through you. Let me specifically thank the chaplain, the clergymen, the pastors and their wives.

    “For the past eight years we have every reason to be thankful to God. Every individual has his/her own calling. I also believe that people who take over political leadership have their own callings to do specific things. No one, head of a government, be it at the national level or the sub- regional levels can do every thing.

    “But when you leave, you will want to do something to show that yes I was here. The chaplain has said that nothing is perfect, if you wait for perfection, you cannot achieve anything.

    “Ordinarily 24th of May would haven been the last Service here. But that 24th, we will all go to the National Christian Centre for the inauguration service. So for me and my wife, this is our last day of worship here.

    “Though we are leaving as president and First Lady, but we have not left you, because we are still in this country, we will continue to interact one way or the other, probably along the line we may even come closer. I believe some of you may even come closer, and even do more meaningful things together when we leave office.

    I don’t really believe that it is only in government that you can do thing, even outside government you do a lot of things. The richest people in the world don’t even serve in government.

    Dangote has never been in government, so you don’t need to be in government to be rich. Bill Gates has not been in government. So outside government a lot of things happen, it is for us to be committed and continue to be focus. Me and my wife really love all of you.”

  • Dangote wants to buy Arsenal

    Dangote wants to buy Arsenal

    Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, has expressed interest in becoming the owner of English Premier League giants, Arsenal FC.

    But the plan to buy the North London club is not an immediate priority for the Nigerian billionaire, as he hopes he can convince the owners to sell “at the right price” in the future, supersport.com says.

    The Nigerian said he is ready to offer Arsenal owners “a price they won’t want to resist.”

    “I still hope, one day at the right price, that I’ll buy the team. I might buy it, not at a ridiculous price but a price that the owners won’t want to resist. I know my strategy,” supersport.com quoted Dangote as saying to Bloomberg.

    Dangote, who is a tycoon dealing in cement and commodities, explained that he wants to focus on his business having invested around $16 million into it, and will make another attempt at pricing Arsenal away by the time he builds his business empire to “a certain level.”

    “We have $16 billion-worth of investments in the next few years. Right now I want to take my own business to a certain level. Once I finish on that trajectory, then maybe [an offer will follow.]”

    In 2010, Dangote made attempts to acquire a stake in the English club but discussions broke down.

    According to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Dangote is worth three times more than the current major shareholder at Arsenal, Stan Kroenke.

    Kroenke, who holds 67 percent of Arsenal, is reportedly worth $5.6 billion while Dangote is valued at $15.7 billion.

    But Dangote will have to convince Kroenke to give up his 67 percent shares in the club as well as 30 percent owned by Red and White Sec Limited under the control of Uzbek billionaire Alisher Usmanov and Farhad Moshiri.

     

  • Low birthday soiree for Aliko Dangote

    Low birthday soiree for Aliko Dangote

    It is an unwritten law that each time Africa’s richest man adds a year, he must be celebrated in one way or the other. Where an elaborate shindig is impossible, a low key party is not negotiable for a man who has redefined affluence.

    On April 10, Aliko Dangote turned 58. Given his precedence as a billionaire without a knack for extravagance, it came as no surprise that the soft-spoken business tycoon chose to celebrate by hosting a very private dinner with his friends and family members.

    With investments in virtually every sector of the nation’s economy, Dangote has always courted fortune and dined with prosperity. Aliko Dangote is such a big player in the nation’s economy that its growth and survival is more or less tied to the apron string of his business interests. Some have even said that whenever he sneezes, the nation catches cold.

  • ‘Manufacturing can rescue Nigeria’s economy’

    ‘Manufacturing can rescue Nigeria’s economy’

    •Builders seek partnership with Dangote on housing scheme

    Nigerian businessmen have been urged to emulate industrialist Aliko Dangote by investing in real manufacturing concerns as a way out of the declining crude oil price in the international market.

    President of the Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors (NIQS), Lagos State chapter, Mr. Olayemi Shonubi, said this when he led members and  students of the institute on a facility visit to the Ibese plant of Dangote Cement in Ogun State at the weekend.

    He said three or four people of Dangote’s class would have made a huge difference in Nigerian economy.

    The Lagos State NIQS president noted that most Nigerian businessmen were traders, adding that the nation’s economy needed entrepreneurs who would invest in manufacturing.

    He explained that countries being referred to as developed world were industrialised nations and not trading countries.

    Shonubi, who praised the magnitude and worth of the cement plant, noted that more of such plants in various sectors of the economy would have helped the nation, especially in this era of crude oil price declining.

    He lamented that the falling oil price had reduced the nation’s revenue and currency value.

    Shonubi called on the government to formulate policies to encourage more investors like Dangote to invest in manufacturing rather than trading.

    “This will serve as an effective mechanism to industrialise the country, create more jobs and help lift the nation’s economy,” he said.

    Chairman of the Council of Registered Builders of Nigeria (CORBON), Prof. Kabir Bala, has called for “a solid partnership” with Dangote Cement.

    Bala, who spoke when he visited the Dangote Cement Obajana Plant, said the agency wanted the collaboration to be “project specific.”

    He said he was impressed by the success recorded at the plant, adding: “We want to see Dangote-CORBON housing scheme. We are also interested in the training aspect.”

    CORBON’s Registrar Dr. Peter Kuroshi said the 40 per cent slash in cement prices by Dangote had provided an opportunity to embark on a mass housing scheme to bring down the country’s rental fees.

    The Obajana Plant Director, Mr. JV Gungune, explained the production process to the visitors, thanking the CORBON members for the visit.

    He promised to forward the group’s requests to the appropriate quarters.

    Explaining the achievements that have been recorded since the inception of the plant, its Operations Manager, Mr. Haruna Adinoyi, said with Line 4 on stream, the Obajana plant alone produces 13.25 million metric tons yearly.

    He also added that the Dangote Cement Plc controlled 62 per cent of the nation’s market share.

    He, however, said the country’s cement consumption is very low compared to South Africa.

    He described the Obajana cement plant as the single largest plant in the world.

    Dangote Cement Regional Director Sales Mr. Johnson Olaniyi, who coordinated the visit, said with the new brands of cement introduced by Dangote, the company had decided “to tackle the menace of re-bagging by unscrupulous elements as well as the evil of collapse building in the country.”

    Other members of CORBON’s delegation were its immediate past registrar, Mr. Aliyu Ova and Mr. Karshima A.J., a building inspector.

     

  • How to cushion effect of declining oil price, by Dangote

    How to cushion effect of declining oil price, by Dangote

    BUSINESS mogul Aliko Dangote has suggested ways out of the woods amid declining oil prices.

    Speaking during the International Conference & Exhibition of the Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE) in Lagos, the President, Dangote Group  cited some causes of the continued fall in oil price, and suggested how the Federal Government would best deploy proceeds from oil sales in sustainable development.

    He said increasing exploitation of shale oil by oil consumer countries, such as the United States, increased exploration and production of oil following high price of crude fuelled by emerging economies in Asia, discoveries of oil in new climes and power play in the global oil business, among others, were responsible for the continued drop in price of oil.

    The Dangote chief, however, said proper investment of oil proceeds by the government would cushion the effect of adverse situations, such as periods of poor pricing of crude, which is the mainstay of Nigeria’s economy.

    Primary among the options is the diversification of the economy and exiting the mono-economy.

    He mentioned some vital decisions to make the petroleum industry have a marked impact on the economy. They include giving attention to the  reform of the oil and gas policy and regulatory environment and ensuring that the much anticipated and long awaited Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) is passed into law.

    Dangota said: “This affects the source of the bulk of national foreign exchange earnings. This is critical to the transformation of the sector and its repositioning to play an effective role in the new economy.

    “The second critical imperative is the removal of petroleum fuel subsidy. In reality, this subsidy of gasoline fuel benefits the more affluent, but small minority of the population. It has social governance as well as economic development ramifications. The subsidy diverts resources to the well off, while starving much needed funding from the sorely needed infrastructure developments.

    “The third policy imperative has to do with Nigeria’s inability to monetise its enormous natural gas resources. This has been a major policy failure in view of the great potential of gas to accelerate economic growth. The huge deficit in our energy consumption especially electricity, which has constrained our economic growth can be easily eliminated. The key is to adopt a pricing regime for gas that will encourage investment in gas infrastructure.  Whilst the gas policy and Gas Master Plan have been developed, progress has been limited by inability or unwillingness to implement.

    “A fourth imperative is the growing incidence of sea piracy in the Gulf of Guinea, with Nigeria reportedly being the home of most of the pirates. The Gulf of Guinea cannot evolve into a substantial Intercontinental Petroleum Trading Centre, with the threat of piracy looming largely over tankers plying the Gulf on petroleum trading voyages. Nigeria, being the largest trading partner on the Gulf and having the largest Navy must take decisive action to stamp out piracy completely.

    “Lastly, indigenous participation in all areas and sectors of the oil and gas industry must continue to attract focused attention and encouragement from the government.”

    He said  Dangote Group intends to contribute to the economic value chain in the petroleum industry through a Joint Venture (JV) partnership with First Exploration & Production (E&P) in a vehicle called West African E&P (WAEP), which will focus in upstream assets to provide feedstock to the midstream and downstream businesses. In the downstream, the Dangote Group plans to build 500,000 barrels per day oil refinery, largest in sub-Saharan Africa; 750,000 tonnes per annum (TPA) polypropylene petrochemical complex; fertiliser plant; and 2.8 million tons per annum (mtpa) Urea and Ammonia plant. The company plans to build gas infrastructure to support the Federal Government’s Gas Revolution and supplement the Gas Master Plan that delivers gas to the domestic market.

    “The Dangote Group and its partners are committed to delivering these projects before the end of this decade.  Our decision to embark on these investments is motivated by a strong desire to help transform the industry into a veritable driver of national economic growth and industrialisation. We are confident that public policy will continue to move in the direction that will expand the space for private sector to assume leadership in the economic development arena. Nigeria will be uniquely positioned to begin to exert geopolitical influence in global energy policies and power play if it can strengthen its internal governance structure, carry out long delayed policy and regulatory reforms, address social iniquities, and create a conducive environment for the private sector to play a lead role in our economic transformation journey,” he added.

  • Dangote urges foreign investments in Africa’s resources

    Dangote urges foreign investments in Africa’s resources

    President of Dangote Group and the richest man in Africa, Aliko Dangote has described Africa as a blessed continent with numerous natural resources, arguing that with its abundant blessing in natural resources, what the continent needs now is trade both within itself and with the international communities.

    Dangote said the growth rate of Africa will hit seven per cent, once the challenge of infrastructure, especially power is fixed in the continent.

    He said: “If we can take care of the infrastructure, mainly power, we can hit a growth rate of seven per cent…The future is bright because we have what it takes to really get to the next level, we have the best land and of course water, we have all the resources countries like China and others are looking for within Africa in abundance…We really don’t need aids anymore in Africa, what we need is trade”

    Dangote urged developed countries to promote investments in Africa rather than providing aids for the continent. He argued that through investment in the real sector, the continent can achieve real growth and development.

    He explained that most people do not seem to know much about Africa, but have only a notion of the continent that is based on history or hearsay. He enjoined the western nations not to “give any more aid to Africa” but to partner with businesses there and invest.  He said: “You will make money and we’ll make money and it’s better for everyone, and the continent will experience real growth and development”

    Dangote who has investments in more than 14 African countries acknowledged that business risks exist in Africa but are no major consequences. He said: “Before, there was the risk that governments might nationalise assets but now we have investment agreements in the countries that say if it does get nationalised, they’ll have to pay us.”

    Dangote argued that few people know much about Africa and instead rely on historical information or hearsay for its facts. “I am not saying it is as good as elsewhere but investment in the continent comes with almost the highest ROI in the world.