@fut_emomentos: Brasil Vs Japão Copa Do Mundo - #brasil #football #japan #futebol

Futemomentos
Futemomentos
Open In TikTok:
Region: BR
Monday 29 June 2026 10:00:00 GMT
144913
2468
18
158

Music

Download

Comments

nelsinho09720
nelsinho09 :
Coitado do zico 😂😂😅😅 ele só pensou q iria ganhar 😅 com essa seleção era quase q imbatível 😂
2026-06-29 11:24:47
2
3bduoh
3bduoh :
الظاهر كان فعلا ظاهره
2026-06-29 22:07:09
0
francksousa075
Franck Sousa :
Parece a de hoje
2026-06-29 21:36:48
0
merquides.junior
Merquides Junior :
aqui tinha alegria de jogar e de ver o jogo também, agora essa seleção de hj não dar mas medo pra outras seleçãoes
2026-06-29 20:40:01
0
mssy_lira
Méssy_Lira 🤠🐎 :
2006 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
2026-06-29 23:11:17
0
tiago.rodrigues3290
T.Rodrigues :
dava gosto de ver os caras jogando ... só fera !!!!! os caras tinham sintonia
2026-06-29 21:23:28
0
emerson.takassaki
Emerson Takassaki :
isso é ganha fácil não é essa seleção de hoje
2026-06-29 20:49:25
0
psicologo.brunoroca
Bruno Roça Pereira :
época de ouro
2026-06-29 20:36:45
0
ernandes454
@ernandesjosedasilvasilva :
melhor seleção de todos os tempos e melhor narração não tem igual
2026-06-29 20:47:33
0
carlosgg27
Carlos :
a diferença é que não tem mais Ronaldo fenômeno, gaúcho, Kaká, Rivaldo, hoje temos raphinha Vini Jr Paquetá
2026-06-29 14:43:31
0
ingenierodealimentossc
Ingeniero de Alimentos :
Será un partido espectacular
2026-06-29 10:10:03
0
user5343261340340
Dani :
antes ahora son tic toker y modelos de pasarela ya no hay jugadores en brasil
2026-06-29 13:49:15
3
robertoguedesjr
beto13 :
comemorando o gol do inimigo.....pode fazer seu trabalho mas comemorar o gol aí foi a mais
2026-06-29 22:37:29
0
assis.silva234
Assis Silva :
a diferença é grande deles para os jogadores de hoje
2026-06-30 00:00:55
0
roisermix33
Wilfredomix :
cuando Brasil daba miedo..... 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
2026-06-29 20:05:44
0
renatodejesusrodr
renatodejesusrodr :
zico comemorando o gol do Japão é massa 😂😂😂😂
2026-06-29 20:44:38
0
marcerlosilvestre
marcerlosilvestre :
😳😳😳
2026-06-29 21:28:17
0
ivanilsonneves35gmail.c6
Ivanilson Santos Santos :
🇧🇷⚽🏆⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅👊👊
2026-06-29 22:20:40
0
To see more videos from user @fut_emomentos, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Step 1: Pick my industry. I'd focus on niches people always need: • Financial services • Fin tech or blockchain technology  Step 2: Build my target list. I'd go to MSME(.com) and filter for: • $500k-$1M asking price • $100k+ yearly cash flow • 5+ years in business Then I'd list 20-30 businesses that fit. • AI and LLMs  • Service-based businesses These survive recessions because they solve real problems. Step 3: Start Emailing/calling owners. For each business on my list… I'd call the owner directly and ask: • Why are you selling? • How long have you owned it? • Who runs day-to-day operations? I want to make sure someone’s not running away from problems I don’t need. Step 4: Get CAC pre-approved. Before making any offers, I'd visit CAC(.gov) and apply with a lender. Banks I'd use: • Zenith Bank  • GTBank  • ACCESS Bank  I'd bring: • Tax returns • 3 years of W-2s • Personal financial statement Step 5: Review the financials. Once I find 3-5 solid businesses, I'd hire a CPA to audit the numbers. I'd look for: • Consistent revenue growth • Stable profit margins • No red flags If the seller can't produce clean financials, I walk. Step 6: Make my offer. I'd calculate 1.5-2X the seller's yearly earnings. Example: • Business makes $100k/year • I offer $150k-$300k Then I negotiate from there. The key is leaving enough room for profit after debt payments. Step 7: Structure the deal. Here's how I'd finance it: • 80% CAC loan (from the bank) • 10% seller financing (paid over time) • 10% down payment (me or investor) This means I could potentially buy a $100k business with just $10k down. Step 8: Find my investor. If I don't have $10k sitting around, I'd find a private investor to cover the down payment. In return, I'd give them 10-15% equity. On a business making $150k/year, they'd earn $22.5k annually. That's a 115% return in year 1. Step 9: Run the numbers. Before closing, I'd use my deal calculator to verify the math works. Example on a $100k business making $150k/year: • Loan payments: $15k/year • Investor share: $22.5k/year • GM salary: $35k/year I'd still pocket $70k+/year. Step 10: Close the deal. Once everything checks out, I'd close. Day 1 priorities: • Review all systems • Meet the entire team • Confirm the GM stays (or hire one) • Start implementing small improvements The business should run without me within 90 days. Step 11: Improve operations. Most of these businesses are stuck in 1995. I'd immediately: • Build a website • Set up social media accounts • Optimize their pricing • Implement better systems Even small changes can increase cash flow by 10-20%. Step 12: Repeat the process. Once my first business is running smoothly, I'd do it again. Use the cash flow from business 1 to fund the down payment for business 2 This is how I built my portfolio to 2+ businesses
Step 1: Pick my industry. I'd focus on niches people always need: • Financial services • Fin tech or blockchain technology Step 2: Build my target list. I'd go to MSME(.com) and filter for: • $500k-$1M asking price • $100k+ yearly cash flow • 5+ years in business Then I'd list 20-30 businesses that fit. • AI and LLMs • Service-based businesses These survive recessions because they solve real problems. Step 3: Start Emailing/calling owners. For each business on my list… I'd call the owner directly and ask: • Why are you selling? • How long have you owned it? • Who runs day-to-day operations? I want to make sure someone’s not running away from problems I don’t need. Step 4: Get CAC pre-approved. Before making any offers, I'd visit CAC(.gov) and apply with a lender. Banks I'd use: • Zenith Bank • GTBank • ACCESS Bank I'd bring: • Tax returns • 3 years of W-2s • Personal financial statement Step 5: Review the financials. Once I find 3-5 solid businesses, I'd hire a CPA to audit the numbers. I'd look for: • Consistent revenue growth • Stable profit margins • No red flags If the seller can't produce clean financials, I walk. Step 6: Make my offer. I'd calculate 1.5-2X the seller's yearly earnings. Example: • Business makes $100k/year • I offer $150k-$300k Then I negotiate from there. The key is leaving enough room for profit after debt payments. Step 7: Structure the deal. Here's how I'd finance it: • 80% CAC loan (from the bank) • 10% seller financing (paid over time) • 10% down payment (me or investor) This means I could potentially buy a $100k business with just $10k down. Step 8: Find my investor. If I don't have $10k sitting around, I'd find a private investor to cover the down payment. In return, I'd give them 10-15% equity. On a business making $150k/year, they'd earn $22.5k annually. That's a 115% return in year 1. Step 9: Run the numbers. Before closing, I'd use my deal calculator to verify the math works. Example on a $100k business making $150k/year: • Loan payments: $15k/year • Investor share: $22.5k/year • GM salary: $35k/year I'd still pocket $70k+/year. Step 10: Close the deal. Once everything checks out, I'd close. Day 1 priorities: • Review all systems • Meet the entire team • Confirm the GM stays (or hire one) • Start implementing small improvements The business should run without me within 90 days. Step 11: Improve operations. Most of these businesses are stuck in 1995. I'd immediately: • Build a website • Set up social media accounts • Optimize their pricing • Implement better systems Even small changes can increase cash flow by 10-20%. Step 12: Repeat the process. Once my first business is running smoothly, I'd do it again. Use the cash flow from business 1 to fund the down payment for business 2 This is how I built my portfolio to 2+ businesses

About