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The Motley Fool November 8, 2011 Aimee Duffy |
An OPEC Nation in Trouble Nigeria suffers at the hands of Big Oil's double-edged sword. Shell is not the only oil company to recently experience threats of violence there. |
The Motley Fool October 22, 2011 Aimee Duffy |
5 Stocks for Cashing In on East Africa's Energy Boom Eni, Anadarko, and others find the sweet spot in East Africa. |
Food Processing October 2011 |
Africa: The World's Next Great Economic Story Coca-Cola Co.'s Alexander Cummings recently spoke to Stanford University's Institute for Economic Policy Research and African Leadership Academy about Africa's growing economic power. |
Finance & Development September 2011 |
Harnessing Diasporas Africa can tap some of its millions of emigrants to help development efforts. |
The Motley Fool August 3, 2011 Andrew Dominguez |
South African Gold Stocks: Is Nationalization a Threat? Could the extensive, multi-national South African mining industry face nationalization? |
BusinessWeek June 16, 2011 Carol Matlack |
Looking for Gold in the Distant Past New mining technology and high prices are making it profitable to reopen old mines. Production costs are lower than in South Africa. |
The Motley Fool June 7, 2011 Shubh Datta |
Wal-Mart's Ready for Africa Wal-Mart gets the go-ahead to complete its $2.4 billion merger with African retailers Massmart. |
BusinessWeek June 2, 2011 Cohen & Lourens |
South African Miners' New Legal Option Some of the world's biggest gold mining companies may pay a total of up to $100 billion for their apartheid-era treatment of miners. |
CIO April 1, 2011 Fred O'Connor |
Africans Use Mobile Phones for Roles Beyond Communicating In a continent with limited infrastructure, phones serve as income boosters, a teaching tool and wallets. |
Financial Planning May 1, 2011 Donald Jay Korn |
On the Frontier What about investing in the next layer of BRICs-which might include stocks from Bangladesh, Romania, Ivory Coast and Cambodia? These frontier markets might develop into tomorrow's emerging economies. Or sink into oblivion. |
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