kadonye wrote:@surealligator, most of what you see in the ukabila mingi thread was actually in a thread in the investor section analysing the impact of Nelson Muguku's death on EB share.All was well until someone decided to remind us that most board members for EB are from central
Then all hell broke loose...
Karibu
Surealligator, You must have also missed this
Stocks, or fixed income investment outside your country of residence / origin is one of the most difficult decisions to take.
Concerns
- Cost Of doing business like bank charges due to fund remittance, cost of travelling (peculiar to African countries)
- Uncertainty of which product or counter to invest in.
- Limited communication options as you are not physically there.
- Fear of fund repartriation of proceeds and at times burden of capital gain tax.
- Lack of wherewithal to start because of the risk of unknown.
- Inadequate information on how to start as the only popular offshore investment is forex trading which I abhor and classify it as gambling.
- Uncertainty of which broker to use.
Advantages
Stock investment across boarders is an act of creativity
- Exchange rate advantage especially when investing in advanced economies. 10% gain in USD is far better than 10% gain in Ksh .
- Exposure to other economies instead of being limited within the box (your country) as every country is fragile .
Recall Greece, Iceland economic crisis Kenya Election crisis of 2008, Nigeria banking toxic asset crisis of 2009.
- Spreading of Risk across different economies.
- Exposure to investment in other asset classes.
a balanced portfolio consists of Technology, Commodity,Energy, manufacturing, and banking stocks. You cannot invest in Commodity (Gold, metals), Energy (Oil and gas) stocks in Nairobi Stock Exchange. But yes tou can as a world citizen to invest elseway.
In this series which I will take you through as time permits from my busy office schedule, I will divide my program (though not sequencial) into two main atreas :-
(i) Investing in Other African countries.
(ii) Investing Outside Africa with online real time trading account.
Based on my past experiences I will share the nitty critty of all of them right from how to open an account, how to fund your account, what to invest on, how to repartriate your proceeds, and the right approach to various markets.
In Africa it will be limited to Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, Uganda and South Africa. But I will classify S/ASfrica in the advanced world.
For Overseas I will be looking at US/Canada, Hong Kong, Singapore, Thailand, Australia and New Zealand market, in addition to cross listed European shares in US market as it is not possible for non residents to trade directly in any EU market.
Be rest assured all my postings will be based on my practical experience over the years not theories or hearsay.
ABOUT YOUNG
I am proudly Nigerian, an honest one 48 years by June 7. 7th child in a family of nine. Young actually my pet name. I joined this forum in 2007.
I am a computer Scientist by profession and I have been working in Nigerian subsidiary of Italian based oil and gas multinational ENI group (listed in NYSE and Milan, Italy bourse)called Nigerian Agip Oil Company since 1988. Married with 3 kids aged between 8 and 16.
Started investing in my local bourse Nigerian Stock Exchange in year 2000.
Started off shore investment in Ghana and Kenya in 2004. Started online real time trading in US, Asia and Oceania in 2005.
Have experienced market burst and booms in all markets.
Hope to voluntary retire from active service a couple of years. Widely travelled to several African countries and Europe / US.
I believe in Africa and the unfolding investment opportunities.
As a busy scientist my thoughts flow faster than my English grammer, apologies for grammatical errors here and there,
http://www.wazua.co.ke/f....aspx?g=posts&t=6779