Saturday, 11 July 2015

Chris Brown Closet Diffrerent from naija hip hop artist kcee

Foreign

This View Of Chris Brown’s Closet Will Make Your Jaw Drop!

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Chris Brown got his 11.2 million Instagram followers crazy and envious when he shared a picture of his closet, and it was one full and well packed part.
cb closet dailygossipng
And guess what, that’s not even the full closet. The American singer captioned the photo, “What to where? This isn’t my closet. I ran out of room in those“.
Breezy was pictured in a black hoodie and black jeans searching for the perfect shoes to match his outfit.
‘Limpopo’ crooner, Kcee, branded as one of the most fashionable men in the music industry showcased his massive shoe closet in a new Instagram post earlier this week, and comparatively, Kcee’s shoe collection is not match for the few Chris Brown has shared.
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Aliko Dangote Looks To The Future: Oil Refineries, Fertilizer, Retirement

Aliko Dangote Looks To The Future: Oil Refineries, Fertilizer, Retirement

DANGOTEAfrica’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, made his billions in cement and sugar, but looking ahead, he says he’s putting his money in two other sectors that will transform the Dangote group and leave something for posterity — oil refineries and fertilizer.
One of his most promising ventures is to develop Nigeria’s natural-gas sector into an export industry, Dangote said in a McKinsey interview with Rik Kirkland. To that end, Dangote plans to build a $12-billion refinery that can produce 650,000 barrels a day. It will be the largest petrochemical complex in the world in a single location and will generate a turnover of $24 billion a year, he said.
The other venture he’s planning for is fertilizer—urea and ammonia. “We are building two plants: we’ll use some, and some of it we’ll export. In all, we will be making an investment of $16 billion over the next three years,” Dangote said.
Site clearing for the Lekki oil refinery is close to completion near the commercial hub of Lagos, BusinessDayLive reported in March. The refinery is expected to be functional by the first half of 2018, TheGuardian reports.
Dangote plans to build a fertilizer plant with a capacity of 2.6 million metric tons of urea, a nitrogen compound used in fertilizer, according to a January Law360 report.
He’s trying to change the mindset of Africa as an exporter of raw material. “When a country exports raw materials, it actually doesn’t make much money,” Dangote said. “So what we are trying to do is to change that mindset: rather than being raw-materials exporters, we’ll now be goods exporters.”
New partnerships are among the things transforming the Dangote Group, Dangote told McKinsey. In the past, it was normal for Dangote Group to take on the whole risk at first in a venture. “But these days, before going to the capital market, we get some key investors,” he said. “Then, together, we’ll make sure everything is in line. After that, we go out and list in Nigeria. Now we’re even thinking about starting to list on the London Stock Exchange.”
One of those key investors is the Blackstone Group, an American multinational private equity, investment banking, alternative asset management and financial services corporation based in New York City. Dangote partnered with Blackstone to invest $5 billion in infrastructure in Africa. Dangote announced the  50-50 partnership in August at the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, hosted by President Barack Obama in Washington, D.C.
In the McKinsey interview, Dangote said he believes in hiring people who are smarter than him. “What we need to do is make sure that this company outlives us,” he said. “We are trying to leave something for posterity. We’ve done quite a lot in terms of hiring and we have a plan for succession. Somebody like me, in the next 25 years, I might want to do something else. I’m not saying that I’m going to retire, but I might want to do something else.
“So I have a very, very robust team…the most important thing for me is the development of the company, in terms of processes and people.”