Tag: Buyers

  • Police to prosecute sellers, buyers of fireworks

    The Nigeria Police Force, Edo Command, yesterday reiterated the ban on sale of fireworks, also known as knockout and warned that offenders would be prosecuted.

    DSP Chidi Nwabuzor, the command’s spokesman, gave the warning in Benin.

    “The command warns sellers, buyers of fireworks, parents, guardians and children to desist from sale, purchase and use of fireworks before, during and after the Yuletide,’’ Nwabuzor said in a statement.

    He said this was because hoodlums might want to hide under the unwholesome practice to perpetrate their nefarious act.

    Read also: Lagos ministry holds Christmas carol

    The spokesman said in view of this, there would be continuous manhunt for offenders, adding that offenders would be arrested and prosecuted accordingly.

    He noted that the Edo Commissioner of Police, Johnson Kokumo, had said that adequate measures had been put in place and operatives drafted to markets and other places of sale with a view to arresting dealers and buyers.

    Nwabuzor said the command remained committed and steadfast in its efforts at fighting crimes.

     

  • Buyers shun AMCON’s N182b assets

    There have been no buyers for the N182billion assets obtained by the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) from debt resolution, the organisation said yesterday.

    AMCON Managing Director Ahmed Kuru, speaking in Lagos at the two-day retreat on AMCON Act Amendment Bill, attended by members of the Senate Committee on Banking, Insurance and other Financial Institutions, said: “Our ability to successfully divest these assets at competitive market price, is severely hampered by several factors including valuation methodology, unperfected title documents, state of the economy, purchasing power.

    “The third challenge is the uncooperative attitudes of select obligors who are either unwilling and/or unable to settle their indebtedness. Such debtors prefer to resort to all manner of diversionary tactics as opposed to dealing with the problem of their indebtedness. It sees most of them are buying time, to where we do not know”.

    The AMCON boss said the N4.8 trillion bad loans owed to the corporation represent 55 per cent of the 2018 budget.

    He said given the current demands on the Federal Government, it is doubtful that it can afford to expense AMCON’s debt in the short term.

    Kuru reminded the Senate Committee on Banking, Insurance and other Financial Institutions that the ramifications for failure by AMCON to recover its debt go beyond economic cost.

    “It was for that reason, AMCON, after seven years of negotiating with the obligors with no commensurate recovery result, has decided to change its strategy, which now pays strict attention to enforcements as a way of compelling especially the recalcitrant obligors to come and pay up their debts,” he said.

    To achieve this however, Kuru said the Corporation will be heavily dependent on the legislature, most especially members of the committee to facilitate the amendment of the AMCON Act since most obligors of AMCON that are politically exposed and business heavyweights now employ different antics in law to tie the Corporation up in courts.

    Further highlighting other challenges faced by the Corporation, the AMCON CEO, again said: “One of the major areas for amendment is the matter of vesting proprietary interest of all collateral assets acquired by AMCON from commercial banks. The proposed amendment will have retrospective effect. The vesting of proprietary interest of all collateral assets in the resolution vehicle was implemented in Malaysia and was instrumental to their success in recovering debt obligations”.

    Chairman, Senate Committee on Banking, Insurance and other Financial Institutions, Senator Rafiu Adebayo Ibrahim, said Nigeria could be made great again, if the legislature empowers AMCON to go after recalcitrant obligors.

    He described this as the only way AMCON coulod meet its mandate of achieving the tough mandate for which it was set up in 2010.

    He hinted that the Senate,as part of its oversight functions, had decided that AMCON must be given all the support required to perform as expected by all Nigerians.

    He urged the AMCON management to collaborate with the Federal Ministry of Finance, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the office of the Attorney General of the Federation to propose that the President issue an Executive Order on seizure of assets of persons who are indebted to AMCON.

  • How conmen dupe unsuspecting crude oil buyers, by NNPC

    How conmen dupe unsuspecting crude oil buyers, by NNPC

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has provided insight into the modus operandi of conmen, who dupe unsuspecting would-be crude oil buyers.

    This is coming a few days after raising concerns on the fraudulent activities of the scammers.

    NNPC’s Group General Manager, Crude Oil Marketing Division (COMD) Mr. Mele Kyari said the corporation “doesn’t sell crude oil from hotel rooms as done by scammers”.

    Kyari said they usually lured their unsuspecting victims with higher discount offers on cargoes, offers of non-OPEC crude specification, crude allocation, presentation of crude oil sale letters as well as conducting business from hotels.

    The corporation’s Group Managing Director, Group Public Affairs Division, Mr. Ndu Ughamadu, in a statement yesterday, quoted Kyari as saying that “some of them (scammers) even go to the extent of luring their victims to hotels to transact these fraudulent crude oil contracts”.

    “The entire public should know that NNPC doesn’t do business of crude oil marketing from hotel rooms,” the statement said.

    He reiterated that there was only one way of buying crude oil from the NNPC, which is through advertisement for the selection of customers who were screened for compliance with the corporation’s expectations and standards.

    “There are very high standards we have set and if you don’t meet them, you cannot be our customer. And once you become our customer, we sign a single annual contract with you,” Kyari added.

    He observed that the crude contracts were typically 30,000 to 32,000 bpd, which accumulated into a standard cargo size of 950,000bpd monthly and not two to three million bpd contracts as being peddled by the scammers.

    Kyari observed that for the crude oil sale processes to be completed, the customer had to show that he had the capability to sell the cargo to the market and that the corporation could get its money back.

    According to him, today, the entire process of crude oil marketing had become seamless and real-time with electronic platforms such as Platts and Argus acting as reporting agencies for global crude trading programmes.

    “The beauty of selling crude oil is that the moment we sell the crude oil cargo to you, the entire world know that cargo X is with Mr. Y. So, you see, you don’t have to scavenge for who buys your crude,” he said.

    He informed would-be buyers not to be gullible as the scammers always cashed in on would-be buyers gullibility to swindle them, adding that those who fall for the scammers were  either not in the business or were themselves fraudulent.

  • Motorists, hawkers, buyers held for ‘illegal street trading’

    Lagos State Environmental Sanitation Corps Agency (LASECORPS) operatives have apprehended motorists, buyers and hawkers at Oshodi.
    They were subsequently arraigned at the Samuel Ilori Court in Ogba. The impounded vehicles are Honda Accent marked MUS-479DE; Hiace – LSR-272XP; Toyota Hilux – KRD-389XE; Sienna – JJJ745DQ; taxi cab – GGE 149XG and a commercial bus – LSD-348EH.
    Magistrate Ogundare Olayiwola sentenced the hawkers and their customers to three months imprisonment with N10, 000 fine option.
    In a statement, LASECORPS said it would henceforth, arrest buyers, sellers and motorists for “illegal street trading
    The agency said it was poised to stop “Illegal Street trading” adding, “if there are no buyers, there would be no sellers.

  • Coscharis Motors unveils special offers for Jaguar buyers

    Coscharis Motors unveils special offers for Jaguar buyers

    Coscharis Motors has announced special offers for buyers of Jaguar products.

    Its President, Dr Cosmas Maduka said the firm is  offering special prices, free insurance and a two-year service plan for Jaguar products for one month to guests at the launch.

    Maduka spoke at the unveiling of the Jaguar’s first Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV) – the F-PACE – at the Eko Hotel and Suites in Victoria Island, Lagos.

    The F-PACE is a performance SUV designed to offer the agility, responsiveness and refinement that Jaguars are renowned for, together with unrivalled dynamics and versatility.

    Developed using Jaguar’s Lightweight aluminium architecture, the F-PACE combines purity of line, surface and proportion with F-TYPE-inspired features, such as the powerful rear haunches, fender vents and distinctive tail light graphics.

    The bold front grille and the muscular bonnet hint at the performance potential of its supercharged V6 petrol engines. Elements, such as slender full-LED headlights, forged 22-inch wheels and short front overhang carry the design vision of the C-X17 concept through to production.

    The All-New F-PACE sits five occupants in comfort.The interior is a blend of premium materials and finishes, exquisite detailing, luxuries, such as heated, electrically reclining rear seats, and cutting-edge technologies including the InControl Touch Pro infotainment system and 12.3-inch HD virtual instrument cluster.

    Coscharis Motors General Manager, Sales Ufuoma Umukoro,  quoting Ian Callum, Director of Design, Jaguar, said: “By remaining absolutely true to our design principles the F-PACE is immediately recognisable as a Jaguar. It offers all of the interior space you would expect – and more – but because of our disciplined approach to surfaces, proportions, and purity of line, we have designed what I consider to be the most balanced, most attractive vehicle in its class.”

    The lightweight aluminium architecture gave the design and engineering teams the ideal starting point. It was created from the outset as a modular structure, so the wheels can be positioned  where they are needed to deliver the proportions, dynamics, and practicality essential for a performance SUV.

    The wheelbase and track are not shared with any other Jaguar. At 4,731mm long and with a 2,874mm wheelbase, the F-PACE offers the sleek profile and short front overhang characteristic of Jaguar design together with an exceptionally spacious interior.

    Rear knee-room is class-leading and the luggage compartment has up to 650 litres* of storage space.

    The light, stiff body structure comprises 80 per cent aluminium, and is the only aluminium-intensive monocoque in the segment. Additional weight savings come from the composite tailgate and magnesium for parts such as the cross-car beam.

    With the 280kW supercharged V6 petrol engine from the F-TYPE under its sculpted aluminium bonnet, the SUV can accelerate from 0-100km/h in 5.5 seconds before reaching an electronically-limited top speed of 250km/h.

  • Canada slams extra 15% property tax on foreign buyers

    A new tax for foreign property buyers is being introduced in British Columbia in Canada in an attempt to cool escalating house prices.

    The 15 per cent foreign buyer tax came into effect  at a time when prices in the province’s capital city, Vancouver, are escalating.

    Indeed, the latest global cities index from international real estate firm, Knight Frank, showed that prices in the city have increased by 17.3 per cent in the mainstream market and by 26.3 per cent in the prime market in the year to March 2016.

    Policy makers have been looking at ways to cool price inflation in recent months and the new tax will relate to residential purchases in Metro Vancouver, an area that extends from Bowen Island to Maple Ridge/Langley Township.

    According to Knight Frank, in real terms the new tax will result in an extra $300,000 in property transfer tax based on a property bought for $2 million by a foreign citizen. This figure will rise to $1.5 million for a $10 million home.

    The latest government data shows foreign buyers, mainly from China, purchased more than $1 billion worth of property in British Colombia between June 10, 2016 and July 14, 2016 of which around 86 per cent was located in the Lower Mainland.

    The foreign buyer tax will also apply to corporations that purchase residential real estate and the British Columbia Government has the power to examine the citizenship status of directors and the beneficiaries of corporate profits in deciding whether to add taxes. The resulting revenue from the new tax will be spent on housing affordability projects.

    However, Knight Frank points out that some loopholes exist and details as to how it will be policed remain unclear. For example, the tax itself relies on buyers self reporting their nationality and providing a social insurance number, backed up by new auditing procedures and penalties. However,  it is unclear whether a resident with citizenship could buy a property by proxy for a family member living abroad.

    “There is no doubt that the new law will cool sales volumes and prices as foreign buyers absorb the additional cost implications. It is worth noting that the planned legislation also allows the BC cabinet to alter the foreign tax rate by between 10 per cent and 20 per cent at a later date and expand it to outside the Lower Mainland,” the firm explained.

  • Buyers of ‘Tokunbo’ vehicles resort to vehicles from neighbouring countries

    Buyers of ‘Tokunbo’ vehicles resort to vehicles from neighbouring countries

    Forgetting completely about the implications of the new automotive policy, which took effect from the first of this month, Mrs. Amaka Nwaneri called her friend in Florida, United States of America (USA), who is a car dealer to ship two vehicles to her.

    Her current car, a Corolla DS, 1999 model which she bought through the same source for 2,000 US dollars (N320,000),shipped to Nigeria for about N160,000 and cleared at the port for N180,000 two years ago, was almost falling apart.

    She and her friends have always found it cheaper to import cars from the US. With her meagre savings of about 8,000 US dollars, which is the equivalent of N1,320,000 at the rate of N165 per dollar She reasoned the money will cover the cost of purchasing the fairly used vehicles, plus the cost of freight and the clearing at the Apapa Ports.

    Sure enough, within two weeks her friend called back that he had identified two vehicles, Toyota Corolla 2003 model for 2,600 US dollars and a GMC Endeavour Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV), 2003 model for 4,000 US dollars.

    Happily, Mrs. Nwaneri now proceeded to remit money to her friend’s account in Florida. However, she called her clearing agent to intimate him of the development. Her agent gave her a shocker when he told her it was no longer business as usual. “With the implementation of the new auto policy, the costs of clearing vehicles at the ports have almost doubled,” he said.

    Previously, the Toyota Corolla would have been cleared by the Customs for between N180,000 and N200,000, but since July 1st, it is now cleared for between N300,000 and N350,0000 while the SUV is now cleared at the ports for about N600,000, depending on the date of manufacturing, model and capacity of the vehicle. The freight or shipping cost, however, remains the same; that is between 1,000 and 1,500 US dollars.

    After adding up the new clearing cost, freighting cost and other expenses which she may incur regarding the vehicles, it dawned on her that the money at her disposal would not cover her expenses. She would need more money in order to import the vehicles.

    But she needed to change her current vehicle which keeps breaking down and letting her down whenever she needed it most. Moreover, she reasoned with the nature of her job, which requires her to be on the move, she cannot afford not to have a reliable vehicle.

    So what other alternatives are left for her? She proceeded to the car shops but sadly realised that the prices were very high, so she went to the popular Julius Berger Bus stop along Apapa Oshodi Express way that is host to a thriving open vehicle market.

    There, she saw an array of fairly used vehicles on display. She could buy her Toyota Corolla or any of such cars depending on the manufactured date, model and the general condition of the car for between N900,000 and N1,000,000 and she could also purchase a Lexus jeep (baby Oku), PathFinder, ecetera manufactured  between 2002 and 2003 for about N1.4million or less.

    From research, the prices of tokunbo vehicles at most open car markets, like Berger, have not really gone up or has not quite been fully affected by the new automotive policy.

    In an interview with Mr. Chinagoron Nweke, the Secretary of the Julius Berger Car Union, he said this was so because the vehicles from Berger and most open car markets come through different sources, for instance the Benin Republic Port and not just through the Nigerian ports.

    Realising that he may have divulged much, he refused further interview with the reporter directing her to other members of the association or the tokunbo vehicle market beside Gate Way Hotel, Ogun State or to Mazamaza Car market opposite Festac Town, Lagos.

    However, further enquiries revealed that 99per cent of vehicles at the open car markets are imported through the Benin Republic Port; therefore the prices are not duly affected by the levies and duty at the Nigerian ports. But with the increased levies and duty, most car dealers and individuals may resort to buying cars from neighbouring countries with less import tariffs for better bargains.

    However, the danger with patronising such dealers is that most of them pay the minimal duty at Benin Republic and when they bring the vehicle into Nigeria, they try to avoid paying the full duty and will not reveal that to the buyer. The buyer may be driving the vehicle within the town without knowing, but once he ventures onto the high way the vehicle gets impounded by Customs officials who would have discovered that the full duty has not been paid.

    One of the car dealers at Berger who pleaded for anonymity disclosed that “the dishonest ones among us may file the forms for paying of car duty in Nigeria. If the cost is N100,000, the car dealer may deposit N10,000 with no intention to pay the rest and will hide it from the intending buyer.

    “But this can only happen with fairly used cars from Benin Republic. If the vehicle is coming from the Apapa Port, the full duty and levies will be paid before the Customs officials may agree to release the vehicle, so buyers should be very careful when they go to the open car market,” he added.

    Another alternative to owning a vehicle in Nigeria now is through car financing, explained Mr. Ohi Obadan of Skymit, one of the authorised Mercedes-Benz dealers in the country.

    In an interview with Mr. Obadan at the corporate office of Skymit at 32, Mobolaji Bank Anthony Way, Ikeja, Lagos, he said that car financing is the easiest way of buying cars in the country.

    Explaining, he said that it is a system where a consumer goes to an established car shop to work out with the dealer on the car to purchase and how to pay for the vehicle over a period of time while the vehicle remains in the custodian of the customer.

    Giving an example, Mr. Obadan said that at Skymit, if a vehicle costs N1million, the intending buyer is asked to deposit 30per cent of the money and pay the remaining N700,000 over a period of 24 months at the prevailing bank interest rate.

    Speaking on the new auto policy, he said it will encourage car smugglers and deny a lot of Nigerians who have sources of bringing cars from abroad the opportunity of owning a vehicle.

    The federal government, determined to resume vehicle assembly plants in the country, decades after all plants except Peugeot Automobile of Nigeria (PAN) closed shops, has insisted on going ahead with plans to discourage vehicle importation from the 1st of this month.

    The policy, among other things, stipulates that a fully built car would attract a duty of 35per cent and a levy of another 35per cent of the cost of the vehicle.

    Many industry stakeholders doubt the workability of the policy, with some arguing that there are no such modalities as the necessary infrastructures, effective power supply, and access to affordable credit facility for effective implementation, amongst others.

    However, the Managing Director, PAN, Nigeria Ltd, Ibrahim Boyi, said full implementation of the new auto policy would revolutionise the growth and development of the nation’s industrial sector.

    Also, many auto manufacturers, both local and international, have lauded the initiative, saying it would be the best policy to have happened in the auto industry in the country.

    Meanwhile, Mrs. Nwaneri is still not able to buy her fairly used cars as the money she budgeted for them before the implementation of the new policy can no longer cover the cost of two. So, maybe, she will buy just one.