₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,328,676 members, 8,436,867 topics. Date: Tuesday, 30 June 2026 at 10:45 PM

Toggle theme

Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts - Investment (9886) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralInvestmentNigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts (15942943 Views)

1 2 3 ... 9883 9884 9885 9886 9887 9888 9889 ... 10699 Reply (Go Down)

Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by ositadima1(m): 6:28pm On Dec 14, 2025
Streetinvestor2:
You post here is completely different from what I posted.i am not repeating an argument to win.
I posted to confirmed two facts which time have proved to be right concerning kpakus
1.They both whr not targeting same asset
2.Kpakus don't have any money on ground
Na you sabi do argument to win..lol
grin grin grin

So all your predictions have come to pass, lol. Yet tomorrow you’ll return to say the same thing, just framed differently.

After they acquire ARPN, you’ll come back again with the same argument, merely worded differently. Anyway, you have every right to talk.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by HesInMe:
It was not intended as an insult like that, but if that's how you took it, I apologize. I thought this was a settled matter, and you were just being argumentative.

You're right that we can't run a DCF on this because we're not privy to the cash flow numbers. That's why we use alternative analyses like implied valuation using publicly traded comparables.

You calculated (assuming you'd used the correct plantation size) that ARPN was valued at a similar price per hectare as Presco -- but we know qualitatively that ARPN has a much lower plantation yield (lower average plantation age) and no value-adding post-harvest processing. That implies a premium valuation to Presco -- just like we'd conclude if we ran a DCF. If you really care, we can quantify that premium, but it'd be a premium nonetheless.

That conclusion is hardly surprising. Business intuition tells us that oil palm assets are now hot-ticket ones, so it'd actually be surprising if a large plantation did not command a price premium today.

So the question now is, how does Ellah make up that premium over fair value? Another way to look at this is to ask: Why would a rational investor buy ARPN at the same price as Presco's shares today given the implied valuation? Illiquid ARPN should actually trade at a discount to Presco. Why not just buy Presco?

Does that make sense?

ositadima1:
Once you start with insults, you signal that you lack the numbers to let the data speak for itself. The only relevant question is whether the discounted future cash flows of ARPN exceed the acquisition price at Ellah’s cost of capital. Without numbers, claims of “overpayment” are nothing more than baseless opinions.

You implicitly admitted with presco that price alone does not determine value; execution and capital structure do. The same standard must therefore be applied to Ellah.

Until then, this debate is not about valuation, it is about emotional bias.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Streetinvestor2: 6:58pm On Dec 14, 2025
ositadima1:
grin grin grin

So all your predictions have come to pass, lol. Yet tomorrow you’ll return to say the same thing, just framed differently.

After they acquire ARPN, you’ll come back again with the same argument, merely worded differently. Anyway, you have every right to talk.
ThankGod you know I have right to talk so your opinion does not count.
And is obviously u wished to see what u liked to see in my post and not the two facts my post was all about. Time has equally proved them right or you can prove i was wrong. Sorry if you word your post differently to win arguments. I don't do such...lol
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Pennystockwarri(m):
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Streetinvestor2: 7:11pm On Dec 14, 2025
HesInMe:
It was not intended as an insult like that, but if that's how you took it, I apologize. I thought this was a settled matter, and you were just being argumentative.

You're right that we can't run a DCF on this because we're not privy to the cash flow numbers. That's why we use alternative analyses like implied valuation using publicly traded comparables.

You calculated (assuming you'd used the correct plantation size) that ARPN was valued at a similar price

Yes, you could take issue with the comps. But the conclusion is clearly unsurprising. Business intuition tells us that oil palm assets are now hot-ticket ones, so it'd actually be surprising if a large plantation did not command a price premium today. And that the illiquid ARPN should actually trade at a discount to Presco.
The valuation thr is only biological assets and what ever quantity they truly have from FFB which we cannot put number to it.Then valuation of land bank,The food crops which I don't know the real size.Then I have my doubts on the valuation for the cassava mill.This is why I asked in the past which independent body did the whole valuation beside chuka and his team
What is the valuation of the cassava mill alone in that asset compare it with value of present kpakus as a farm
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by ositadima1(m): 7:22pm On Dec 14, 2025
HesInMe:
It was not intended as an insult like that, but if that's how you took it, I apologize. I thought this was a settled matter, and you were just being argumentative.

You're right that we can't run a DCF on this because we're not privy to the cash flow numbers. That's why we use alternative analyses like implied valuation using publicly traded comparables.

You calculated (assuming you'd used the correct plantation size) that ARPN was valued at a similar price per hectare as Presco -- but we know qualitatively that ARPN has a much lower plantation yield (lower average plantation age) and no value-adding post-harvest processing. That implies a premium valuation to Presco -- just like we'd conclude if we ran a DCF. If you really care, we can quantify that premium, but it'd be a premium nonetheless.

That conclusion is hardly surprising. Business intuition tells us that oil palm assets are now hot-ticket ones, so it'd actually be surprising if a large plantation did not command a price premium today.

So the question now is, how does Ellah make up that premium over fair value? Another way to look at this is to ask: Why would a rational investor buy ARPN at the same price as Presco's shares today given the implied valuation? Illiquid ARPN should actually trade at a discount to Presco. Why not just buy Presco?

Does that make sense?
I agree that using comparables makes sense when we don’t have detailed cash flow data, but only if the differences are actually quantified. Right now, your claim of a “premium” is based on qualitative points like plantation age, yield, and processing capacity, without showing how those differences affect cash flow timing, required capex, or returns.

A younger plantation with lower current yields is not automatically worth less on a DCF basis. Its value depends on how quickly yields ramp up and on the buyer’s cost of capital. Also, this is a control acquisition, not a minority investment, so it shouldn’t be priced the same way as a liquid public share like Presco.

The real issue isn’t whether ARPN looks expensive compared to Presco at a glance, but whether reasonable assumptions about yield growth and capital costs make the deal value-creating for Ellah. Without even a rough framework for those assumptions, calling it “overpayment” is still an assumption, not a conclusion.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by HesInMe:
Lol. ChatGPT will be the end of humanity.

Take some time to learn about the business. There's a YT video online where Presco's CFO discusses the economics of oil palm plantations. The differences in yield based on plantation age, and in margin based on revenue mix, are not qualitative. They're real money, and massive numbers at that.

ositadima1:
I agree that using comparables makes sense when we don’t have detailed cash flow data, but only if the differences are actually quantified. Right now, your claim of a “premium” is based on qualitative points like plantation age, yield, and processing capacity, without showing how those differences affect cash flow timing, required capex, or returns.

A younger plantation with lower current yields is not automatically worth less on a DCF basis. Its value depends on how quickly yields ramp up and on the buyer’s cost of capital. Also, this is a control acquisition, not a minority investment, so it shouldn’t be priced the same way as a liquid public share like Presco.

The real issue isn’t whether ARPN looks expensive compared to Presco at a glance, but whether reasonable assumptions about yield growth and capital costs make the deal value-creating for Ellah. Without even a rough framework for those assumptions, calling it “overpayment” is still an assumption, not a conclusion.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by ositadima1(m): 7:54pm On Dec 14, 2025
HesInMe:
Lol. ChatGPT will be the end of humanity.

Take some time to learn about the business. There's a YT video online where Presco's CFO discusses the economics of oil palm plantations. The differences in yield based on plantation age, and in margin based on revenue mix, are not qualitative. They're real money, and massive numbers at that.
Can you stop going in circles and making the same points without any quantitative evidence, even rough assumptions? You haven’t provided any solid justification for your claim of a premium. You keep repeating the same arguments while avoiding the questions raised.

At the very least, Pa Emma would show his workings and numbers. You’ve successfully avoided doing that. Either present a quantitative case, even if it’s rough or half-baked, or let it rest. grin grin grin
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by HesInMe: 7:56pm On Dec 14, 2025
Do some leg work. I've shown you how to do easy implied valuation. You can even prompt ChatGPT:

Assume the common commercially planted varieties and cultivation practices of oil palm. Quantify the difference in per-hectare yield between a plantation age 4 years and one age 8 years.

Do same for price differences in FFB vs crude palm oil.

ositadima1:
Can you stop going in circles and making the same points without any quantitative evidence, even rough assumptions? You haven’t provided any solid justification for your claim of a premium. You keep repeating the same arguments while avoiding the questions raised.

At the very least, Pa Emma would show his workings and numbers. You’ve successfully avoided doing that. Either present a quantitative case, even if it’s rough or half-baked, or let it rest. grin grin grin
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by ositadima1(m): 7:59pm On Dec 14, 2025
HesInMe:
Or you can prompt ChatGPT:

Assume the common commercially planted varieties and cultivation practices of oil palm. Quantity the difference in per-hectare yield between a plantation age 4 years and one age 8 years.
So you’re putting the burden of proof on me? You must be joking. Defend your own position and stand up to scrutiny, or let it rest.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by HesInMe:
Last comment on this. You're the one asking for quantitative support. You've argued so much you've forgotten the initial issue: whether the ARPN acquisition was good value. We've demonstrated that it was priced at a premium to Presco, and that Ellah has few ways to recoup that premium at its current scale.

Except by marketing the transformational nature of the transaction to a willing audience of investors. And guess which agrobusiness CEO is always in the news?

ositadima1:
So you’re putting the burden of proof on me? You must be joking. Defend your own position and stand up to scrutiny, or let it rest.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by emmaodet: 9:33pm On Dec 14, 2025
Mankind2024:
You reminded me of my campaign on Nairaland in 2023/24 when I brought the gospel of the Magnificent 7 stocks (check my past topics). Today, the Magnificent 7 stocks—of which NVIDIA is a leader—have delivered inflation-beating returns of three digits on my invested capital.
This was not luck, but trust in compounding, discipline, patience, and time.
Just be careful with this strategy of holding forever without regularly rebalancing your portfolio.

See below -

The Top 10 Stocks Change Over Time — A Lot

This chart compares the S&P 500’s top 10 companies from 1985 to 2025.

The names keep changing: IBM, GE, Exxon, AT&T, Walmart…

Many former giants aren’t in the top 10 today.

The lesson? Market leaders don’t stay on top forever.

Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Pennystockwarri(m): 9:42pm On Dec 14, 2025
https://x.com/i/spaces/1kvJpMEEWBaxE

Discussing key points from last week's trading session on the NGX, and what to expect this week.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Mankind2024: 12:59am On Dec 15, 2025
@Emma,
Frequent activity is a killer of a compounding portfolio. My foreign portfolio has survived over 8 market downturns and reversals to means; it has always bounced back to the apex due to the shield I built around it. The day you understand the power of compounding is the day you overcome the power of what you cannot control.
avoid buying stock, buy business and hold 4eva.

emmaodet:
Just be careful with this strategy of holding forever without regularly rebalancing your portfolio.

See below -

The Top 10 Stocks Change Over Time — A Lot

This chart compares the S&P 500’s top 10 companies from 1985 to 2025.

The names keep changing: IBM, GE, Exxon, AT&T, Walmart…

Many former giants aren’t in the top 10 today.

The lesson? Market leaders don’t stay on top forever.

Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by nosa2(m): 1:20am On Dec 15, 2025
Streetinvestor2:
We are not that close.We still get close to 40% gap and likely 50% as our population goes higheri n 5 yrs Unless the government go begin allow importation back into the country .A liter still goes for #2k and above. Even at #1500 for a litter the guys will still be making good money from my research.The kill for these oil guys is the industrial need for palm oil in nigeria. It will definitely continue to increase if the manufacturer ingredients and production part of the economy continue to expand
Finally somebody willing to engage on this. Lets review the effect of the policy, aside from creating a boom for the palm oil guys what is the policy doing to the other sectors of the economy? Think about that and you will begin to see the probability of the protection being removed and why I have been saying what I have been saying.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by nosa2(m): 1:22am On Dec 15, 2025
ositadima1:
Once you start with insults, you signal that you lack the numbers to let the data speak for itself. The only relevant question is whether the discounted future cash flows of ARPN exceed the acquisition price at Ellah’s cost of capital. Without numbers, claims of “overpayment” are nothing more than baseless opinions.

You implicitly admitted with presco that price alone does not determine value; execution and capital structure do. The same standard must therefore be applied to Ellah.

Until then, this debate is not about valuation, it is about emotional bias.
Then again one can argue that if the deal was very favorable to Ellah shareholders then Management would have been splashing the details everywhere
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by essentialone(m): 1:48am On Dec 15, 2025
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by emmanuelewumi(m): 5:02am On Dec 15, 2025
Mankind2024:
@Emma,
Frequent activity is a killer of a compounding portfolio. My foreign portfolio has survived over 8 market downturns and reversals to means; it has always bounced back to the apex due to the shield I built around it. The day you understand the power of compounding is the day you overcome the power of what you cannot control.
avoid buying stock, buy business and hold 4eva.
You can hold forever if the business is still growing and delivering.


I have been a shareholder of Zenith, UBA, for over 20 years

Shareholder of United Capital, Presco, Okomu for over 10 years.

I sold my First Bank, Access, FCMB, Fidelity, Sterling and others this year in order to reduce the number of stocks in my portfolio to around 25
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by nosa2(m): 6:06am On Dec 15, 2025
emmanuelewumi:
You can hold forever if the business is still growing and delivering.


I have been a shareholder of Zenith, UBA, for over 20 years

Shareholder of United Capital, Presco, Okomu for over 10 years.

I sold my First Bank, Access, FCMB, Fidelity, Sterling and others this year in order to reduce the number of stocks in my portfolio to around 25
You suppose open index fund. 25 stocks is very inefficient in my opinion
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Mankind2024:
You are a disciplined, rational investor, a wealth engine. I'm following your footsteps. Why wouldn't I hold BRK.B, SPDR S&P 500, QQQ, Gold, MSCI China, AVGO 4eva?
NVIDIA, Apple, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Tesla, and Microsoft forever? These are no longer the magnificent 7 stocks, but now the Magnificent 7 businesses. I will make sure my children continue with them. I remember telling you to invest in them for your children too, back in 2023. Lol


emmanuelewumi:
You can hold forever if the business is still growing and delivering.


I have been a shareholder of Zenith, UBA, for over 20 years

Shareholder of United Capital, Presco, Okomu for over 10 years.

I sold my First Bank, Access, FCMB, Fidelity, Sterling and others this year in order to reduce the number of stocks in my portfolio to around 25
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Stockhunter: 6:34am On Dec 15, 2025
Very true. Thats why i was saying that the nigeria's top 10 for the past 10 years may likely not make it to the list again when reviewed in the next 10 years.. welldone..

emmaodet:
Just be careful with this strategy of holding forever without regularly rebalancing your portfolio.

See below -

The Top 10 Stocks Change Over Time — A Lot

This chart compares the S&P 500’s top 10 companies from 1985 to 2025.

The names keep changing: IBM, GE, Exxon, AT&T, Walmart…

Many former giants aren’t in the top 10 today.

The lesson? Market leaders don’t stay on top forever.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by ositadima1(m): 6:46am On Dec 15, 2025
nosa2:
Then again one can argue that if the deal was very favorable to Ellah shareholders then Management would have been splashing the details everywhere
Honestly, I can’t say whether the deal will be successful or not. I don’t even hold any units of Ellah. My point is simply that if you boldly claim Ellah is buying at a huge premium, then you must back that claim with numbers, not with reverse logic like the one in your post.

I don’t have enough concrete facts to take a firm position on Ellah, and neither has anyone else presented such facts. For that reason, I remain neutral. If I were to trade Ellah, it would be purely on a TA basis.

My view is simple: give Ellah a chance to compete and see how execution plays out. Leave the policing to the relevant regulators.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by emmanuelewumi(m):
nosa2:
You suppose open index fund. 25 stocks is very inefficient in my opinion
I love the sound of dividend alerts from January to December. In fact my portfolio income is now 15 times of what I got in 2020. That is the only efficiency that is important to me


Used to have about 60 stocks in my portfolio and then used to receive over 100 dividend alerts. Although I have received 57 credit from alerts from my portfolio this year, with an outstanding one towards the end of the year.

Although I started reducing the stocks in the portfolio around late 2024.

Just checked my portfolio and I found out I have the following securities in my portfolio. 17 stocks and 7 bonds.
Equities
1. Afriland Properties
2. CSCS
3. Friesland WAMCO
4. Africa Prudential Registrars
5. Aradel
6. Dunlop ( dead stock, with no buyer)
7. GTB
8. Nahco
9. Presco
10. Unilever
11. United Capital
12. Zenith Bank
13. Stanbic IBTC Bank
14. Okomu Oil
15. Custodian
16. Fortis Global Insurance ( dead stock)
17. Transcorp

Bonds

1. 12.4% FGN March 2036
2. 12.98% FGN March 2050
3. 16.2884% FGN March 2027
4. 12.5% FGN March 2035
5. 13% FGN December 2031
6. 19% FGN February 2034
7. 19.89 FGN May 2033.

The securities should be able to give me at least 36 investment income credit alerts

I sold the following this year
1. NGX
2. Fidelity Bank
3. FCMB
4. NASCON
5. Access Bank
6. Total Energy
7. SFS REIT
8. UPDC REIT
9. Seplat
10. First Bank
11. CAP Plc
12. Airtel
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by nosa2(m): 7:39am On Dec 15, 2025
Streetinvestor2:
We are not that close.We still get close to 40% gap and likely 50% as our population goes higheri n 5 yrs Unless the government go begin allow importation back into the country .A liter still goes for #2k and above. Even at #1500 for a litter the guys will still be making good money from my research.The kill for these oil guys is the industrial need for palm oil in nigeria. It will definitely continue to increase if the manufacturer ingredients and production part of the economy continue to expand
Fair enough. I guess I am with you on this. There is too much opacity for me to take a position as well
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by emmanuelewumi(m):
emmanuelewumi:
I love the sound of dividend alerts from January to December. In fact my portfolio income is now 15 times of what I got in 2020. That is the only efficiency that is important to me


Used to have about 60 stocks in my portfolio and then used to receive over 100 dividend alerts. Although I have received 57 credit from alerts from my portfolio this year, with an outstanding one towards the end of the year.

But I started reducing the stocks in the port around late 2024.

Just checked my portfolio and I found out I have the following securities in my portfolio. 17 stocks and 7 bonds.
Equities
1. Afriland Properties
2. CSCS
3. Friesland WAMCO
4. Africa Prudential Registrars
5. Aradel
6. Dunlop ( dead stock, with no buyer)
7. GTB
8. Nahco
9. Presco
10. Unilever
11. United Capital
12. Zenith Bank
13. Stanbic IBTC Bank
14. Okomu Oil
15. Custodian
16. Fortis Global Insurance ( dead stock)
17. Transcorp

Bonds

1. 12.4% FGN March 2036
2. 12.98% FGN March 2050
3. 16.2884% FGN March 2027
4. 12.5% FGN March 2035
5. 13% FGN December 2031
6. 19% FGN February 2034
7. 19.89 FGN May 2033.

The securities should be able to give me at least 36 investment income credit alerts

I sold the following this year
1. NGX
2. Fidelity Bank
3. FCMB
4. NASCON
5. Access Bank
6. Total Energy
7. SFS REIT
8. UPDC REIT
9. Seplat
10. First Bank
11. CAP Plc
12. Airtel
The over 1000% growth in the portfolio income is due to dividend reinvestment, portfolio rebalancing and leverage by borrowing against the portfolio
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Streetinvestor2: 8:08am On Dec 15, 2025
nosa2:
Finally somebody willing to engage on this. Lets review the effect of the policy, aside from creating a boom for the palm oil guys what is the policy doing to the other sectors of the economy? Think about that and you will begin to see the probability of the protection being removed and why I have been saying what I have been saying.
Why do u think the policy is bad for the palm oil sector. And how is it affecting other sector
We have this policy on sugar with backward integration attached. We have it on rice though government approved the importation of puddles for a short period to crash the price locally.
I think it is good policy that should be sustained and backward integration should be added. Then government should allow even export on it.I think thr is restriction on export because some Asian Countries did same..We cannot allow our country to be dumping ground for substandard palm oil like I saw in the past in railways then in kaduna. That was what indomie company in kaduna was buying because it was cheaper but the oil was completely rubbish from my own physical check. Then why the bigger guys will continue to make good margins. The majority locals don't have efficiency in the milling process. The way they start is equally how many close shop in short period. Then this big guys have alot of revenue coming from revenue mix in the industry because of capacity and funding for the machines needed to create different products out. Like in my lga,many Mills I use to know have shut down for different reasons. Mostly related to power supply. Then the few local production just serve the few people who really want quality hand prepared oil to cook.
And this quality comes with extra cost if u go for it.Do you know thr is huge money being made from karnel oil presently mostly cold compress
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by crownprince2017: 9:17am On Dec 15, 2025
emmanuelewumi:
The over 1000% growth in the portfolio income is due to reinvestment, portfolio rebalancing and leverage by borrowing against the portfolio
How come u were still in Dunlop n other n not sold before they become dead. I was just wondering.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by halaha: 9:19am On Dec 15, 2025
Hello! I'm holding individual banking stocks alongside equity mutual funds that probably already have heavy exposure to these same banks. Thinking of selling the individual positions to simplify and avoid redundancy. Does this strategy make sense in practice, or am I overlooking something? I would really appreciate perspectives from anyone who has consolidated their portfolio this way
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by emmanuelewumi(m): 9:22am On Dec 15, 2025
crownprince2017:
How come u were still in Dunlop n other n not sold before they become dead. I was just wondering.
No buyer for the past 15 years or thereabout.

Dunlop and Standard Allied Assurance ( but was recently rebranded and renamed)
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by ppogba: 9:52am On Dec 15, 2025
emmanuelewumi:
No buyer for the past 15 years or thereabout.

Dunlop and Standard Allied Assurance ( but was recently rebranded and renamed)
Give the job to LOCO.

Those ones fit sell anything.
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by KarlTom: 10:00am On Dec 15, 2025
Ding grin
Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by nosa2(m): 10:03am On Dec 15, 2025
Streetinvestor2:
Why do u think the policy is bad for the palm oil sector. And how is it affecting other sector
We have this policy on sugar with backward integration attached. We have it on rice though government approved the importation of puddles for a short period to crash the price locally.
I think it is good policy that should be sustained and backward integration should be added. Then government should allow even export on it.I think thr is restriction on export because some Asian Countries did same..We cannot allow our country to be dumping ground for substandard palm oil like I saw in the past in railways then in kaduna. That was what indomie company in kaduna was buying because it was cheaper but the oil was completely rubbish from my own physical check. Then why the bigger guys will continue to make good margins. The majority locals don't have efficiency in the milling process. The way they start is equally how many close shop in short period. Then this big guys have alot of revenue coming from revenue mix in the industry because of capacity and funding for the machines needed to create different products out. Like in my lga,many Mills I use to know have shut down for different reasons. Mostly related to power supply. Then the few local production just serve the few people who really want quality hand prepared oil to cook.
And this quality comes with extra cost if u go for it.Do you know thr is huge money being made from karnel oil presently mostly cold compress
Here I was thinking you understood the policy.
1 2 3 ... 9883 9884 9885 9886 9887 9888 9889 ... 10699 Reply

Nigerian Stocks To Buy - 2025 Best Performing StocksFree Stock Market Pick Alert For All Investors Globally!!!Dangote Resumes As President Of Nigerian Stock Exchange234

Viewing this topic: Mpeace(m), lexy2lexy, hancock(m), gwinedev, MadmaxX489, dedoz, InvestorHalal and 21 guest(s)