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Company Industry Revenue (US$ millions) Profits (US$ millions) 1 Nigeria National Petroleum: Oil and gas 9,706 1,877 2 Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas: Oil and gas 6,315 ... 3 MTN Nigeria: Telecommunications 3,514 536 4 Dangote Cement: Cement 2,699 721 5 Nigerian Petroleum Development: Oil and gas 2,686 219 6 Flour Mills of Nigeria: Agroindustry ...
Nigeria is a federal republic in West Africa, bordering Benin in the west, Chad and Cameroon in the east, and Niger in the north. As of 2015 Nigeria has the world's 20th largest economy, worth more than $500 billion and $1 trillion in terms of nominal GDP and purchasing power parity respectively.
Chidi Nwaogu (born 20 May 1990) is a Nigerian [1] tech entrepreneur and software developer, [2] who is presently one of the founders of Publiseer, a Lagos-based digital publishing company. [3] Before the creation of Publiseer, he founded and sold two startup companies, [ 4 ] which includes LAGbook, a social network with more than one million ...
The frozen food delivery service Yelloh, formerly known as Schwan's Home Delivery, will go out of business in November, the company announced Monday, meaning nearly 80 Wisconsin workers will lose ...
Konga.com is a Nigerian e-commerce company founded in July 2012 with headquarters in Gbagada, Lagos State.It offers a third-party online marketplace, as well as first-party direct retail spanning various categories including consumer electronics, fashion, home appliances, books, children's items, computers & accessories, phones and tablets, health care, and personal care products.
By the fourth quarter of 2010, Zulily was a cash-flow–positive business. [13] The company's early strategies included the use of flash sales announced via early-morning emails; by 2012, it had over 10 million members. [14] When Zulily went public in November 2013, the company had 2.6 million active customers and $331 million in revenue. [13]
However, many events go unreported. Piracy acts interfere with the legitimate trading interests of the affected countries that include Benin, Togo, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Nigeria, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. As an example, trade of Benin's major port, the Port of Cotonou, was reported in 2012 to have dropped by 70 percent. [2]
Early life. Razak Okoya is a Yoruba man from the south-western part of Nigeria. He was born to the family of Tiamiyu Ayinde Okoya in Lagos, the then capital. He attended Ansar-Un-Deen primary school in Oke Popo, his only formal schooling. He worked in his father's tailoring business, which also included the sale of tailoring accessories. [6]