Ndahani N. Mwenda (@ndahani_mwenda) 's Twitter Profile
Ndahani N. Mwenda

@ndahani_mwenda

Entrepreneur, Businessman, Financier, Investor, Author & Humanitarian #ProudlyTanzanian

ID: 3773238987

calendar_today25-09-2015 17:35:04

21,21K Tweet

5,5K Followers

324 Following

Ndahani N. Mwenda (@ndahani_mwenda) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"Taking no risks will be your biggest risk. You have to risk failure to succeed. You have to risk to heartbreak to love. You have to risk criticism for the applause. You have to risk the ordinary to achieve the extraordinary. If you live avoiding risk, you're risking missing out

"Taking no risks will be your biggest risk.
You have to risk failure to succeed.
You have to risk to heartbreak to love.
You have to risk criticism for the applause.
You have to risk the ordinary to achieve the extraordinary. 
If you live avoiding risk, you're risking missing out
Ndahani N. Mwenda (@ndahani_mwenda) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Companies with most cash on hand! 1. Berkshire Hathaway $ 334bn 2. Amazon $ 101bn 3. Alphabet/Google $ 95bn 4. Toyota $ 88.4bn 5. Volkswagen $ 88.2bn 6. Meta $ 77bn 7. Samsung $ 76bn 8. TSMC $ 74bn 9. Microsoft $ 71bn 10. Saudi Aramco $ 69bn #AskMwenda

Ndahani N. Mwenda (@ndahani_mwenda) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If they drain your energy, It's time to cut them off. Half of your success is about cutting off people around you who refuse to grow. #AskMwenda

Ndahani N. Mwenda (@ndahani_mwenda) 's Twitter Profile Photo

You're not right or wrong because a thousand people agree with you and you're not right or wrong because a thousand people disagree with you. You're right because your facts and your reasoning are right. ~ Benjamin Graham

Ndahani N. Mwenda (@ndahani_mwenda) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Nothing Is Free in this World No Pain, No Gain No Risk, No Reward No Loyalty, No Love No Trust, No Friendship No Discipline, No Result No Sacrifices, No Opportunities #AskMwenda

Zitto MwamiRuyagwa Kabwe (@zittokabwe) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Mr Mwigulu Nchemba, PhD Finance Minister, this is WRONG. It is a double taxation on the same income. When the company makes profit, the government charges a corporate rate of 30% and company retains 70% of the declared profit. Then the latter can either pay it to the shareholders

Mr <a href="/mwigulunchemba1/">Mwigulu Nchemba, PhD</a> Finance Minister, this is WRONG. It is a double taxation on the same income. 

When the company makes profit, the government charges a corporate rate of 30% and company retains 70% of the declared profit. Then the latter can either pay it to the shareholders