Blacks in Business: Profiles of Black Entrepreneurs

↓R↑LYB

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We haven't had a thread highlighting black business leaders that have been extremely successful on an international level so I figured I'd start one. First Up is Kase Lawal, Chairman of CAMAC International

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Name: Dr. Kase Lawal
Company: CAMAC Group
Industry: Energy/Oil
Headquarters: Houston, TX
Nationality: Nigerian
Market Cap: 985 million
Stock Symbol: CAK (NYSE)
Website: http://www.camac.com/

http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/africa/05/18/kase.lukman.lawal/index.html

Nigerian-born entrepreneur Kase Lawal is the epitome of the American dream. Arriving to the US a young, idealistic student, Lawal has carved a name for himself in one of the most competitive industries in the world: Oil.

Now head of a multi-billion dollar empire, his Houston-based company, CAMAC, is one of the largest black-owned businesses in the U.S., generating over $2 billion dollars a year.


Founded nearly 25 years ago, Lawal built CAMAC (which stands for Cameroon-American) from a small agriculture business into a global oil company. But it's taken a lot of hard work, determination and guts to get him to the top.

Born and raised in Ibadan, Nigeria in 1954, Lawal became interested in America and its civil rights movement during his teens. After finally persuading his father, a local politician, to send him to university in America, Lawal headed to Georgia and then Houston, where he attended the Texas Southern University.

After graduating with a Bachelor of Science in chemical engineering in 1976, Lawal, like many of his classmates, started out as a graduate in the energy industry. First as a chemist for Dresser Industries (now Halliburton) and then as a chemical engineer with Shell Oil Refining Co.

During this time he met his wife, Eileen through a mutual friend and had his three children.

Now married and settled, it wasn't long before the innovative young Nigerian started to implement his business ideas.

In 1986 he established CAMAC, a company trading agricultural commodities such as sugar, tobacco and rice. In the early 90s he made the leap into the energy sector after the Nigerian government started to develop its energy market.

With his knowledge of Nigeria and his Houston address, Lawal was ideally positioned to attract major oil companies. In 1991 CAMAC made a deal with the oil giant Conoco, agreeing to jointly operate and share production from any Nigerian discoveries.

This turned out to be Lawal's big break.

With his political contacts, local market knowledge and now with the backing of a major oil firm, Lawal's Houston-based company became an instant player in the energy industry.

As Lawal told CNN: "That partnership I believe was the cornerstone of the CAMAC that you know today. Subsequently with that credibility and the advantage of partnering with Conoco, we were also able to partner with BP and also with Statoil of Norway and currently we have made a partnership with Eni, the largest Italian company, which is one of the top five oil companies in the world."

Now CAMAC has offices in London, Johannesburg, Lagos and Port Harcourt, Nigeria and is involved in oil exploration, refining and trading.

He was awarded the USAfrica Business Person of the Year in 1997 and in 2002 CAMAC was named the largest African-American owned company on the Black Enterprise 100s list.
 

KOohbt

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I wish I could sit in a room and really pick the brains of someone like that.
 

Cynic

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Put us on to game then. How would I get in contact with a billionaire?

Hound them till they yield...whether you show up at their office or send a letter everyday/week or call their assistant everyday

This is how I met Simon Herb and others
 
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KOohbt

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Hound them till they yield...whether you show up at their office or send a letter everyday/week or call their assistant everyday

This is how I met Simon Herb and others
thanks for the advice i might fukk around and do this
 

↓R↑LYB

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Hound them till they yield...whether you show up at their office or send a letter everyday/week or call their assistant everyday

This is how I met Simon Herb and others

Be a stalker brehs
 

↓R↑LYB

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ALIKO-DANGOTE.jpg


Name: Aliko Dangote (Worlds richest Black person)
Net Worth: 21.6 billion
Company: Dangote Group
Industry: Cement/Manufacturing
Headquarters: Lagos, Nigeria
Nationality: Nigerian
Stock Symbol: DANGEM (NSE)
Website: http://www.dangote-group.com

http://www.blackentrepreneurprofile.com/profile-full/article/aliko-dangote/

Aliko Dangote, is Nigeria's first billionaire and richest black person in the world, with an estimated net worth of $25 billion dollars (March 2014). Forbes magazine ranks him as the 23th richest person in the world.

Mr. Dangote is the founder of the Dangote Group, which has operations in Nigeria and several other countries in West Africa. Dangote Cement is Africa’s largest cement manufacturer, with over 26,000 employees in Nigeria.

The company is constructing cement plants in Ethiopia, Zambia, South Africa, Senegal, Cameroon, the Republic of Congo, and several other African countries. He announced plans last fall to construct plants in Iraq and Burma.

Mr. Dangote plans to sell a 20 percent interest in his cement business on the London Stock Exchange by the end of 2014, pricing it at a value of $35 billion to $40 billion. If he succeeds, his company will be the world’s most valuable cement producer.

Mr. Dangote began his career as trader at age 21 with a loan from his uncle; He went on to built his Dangote Group into conglomerate with interests in sugar, flour milling, salt processing, cement manufacturing, textiles, real estate, haulage and oil and gas.

The Dangote Group dominates the sugar market in Nigeria, as he is the major sugar supplier to the country's soft drink companies, breweries, and confectioners. The Nigerian sugar refinery, located at the port of Lagos, is the second-largest in the world.

Dangote Group has moved from being a trading company to Nigeria's largest Industrial group, including Dangote Sugar Refinery (the most capitalized company on the Nigeria Stock Exchange, valued at over $3 billion with Aliko Dangote's equity topping $2 billion), Africa's largest Cement Production Plant: Obajana Cement, Dangote Flour amongst others.

Mr. Dangote plans to build a $8 billion oil refinery facility that would process 450,000 barrels per day of petroleum mainly for domestic consumption. Despite being one of the world’s top oil producers, Nigeria does not refine its own oil.

Mr. Dangote holds a business degree from Egypt’s Al-Azhar University in 1977.
 
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