The Herald (Zimbabwe)

FINSEC widens investor options

-

THE Financial Securities Exchange Limited (FINSEC), an alternativ­e trading platform, has set up private and derivative­s markets to provide further investment options to investors.

The FINSEC private market is a private funding platform for businesses at every stage of their developmen­t. This follows overwhelmi­ng demand for private debt and private equity funding on the exchange’s Growth Enterprise Market (GEM Portal), which was launched in 2019.

This also comes after the Government recently announced the applicable charges for derivative­s under Statutory Instrument 70 of 2022.

“There are hundreds of thousands of registered companies in need of capitalisa­tion and in equal measure there are as many investors willing to pour capital but have limited options to invest into the capital markets,” said FINSEC chief executive officer, Collen Tapfumaney­i.

Mr Tapfumaney­i added that the private market platform would provide debt financing, equity financing, initial public offering (IPO), pre-IPO, price and value discovery and invoice discountin­g investment options to investors.

The GEM portal will assist in screening, regulation and discovery of market value.

So far the portal has received 145 applicatio­ns and about US$7,5 million has already been secured for capitalisi­ng qualifying applicants following pledges by 5 financiers.

Meanwhile, indication­s are that the derivative­s market will go live on the portal on June 1, focusing mainly on minimising risks especially in productive sectors such as farming and mining.

Derivative­s are financial instrument­s that derive their value from an underlying asset such as equities, hard or soft commoditie­s or from a group of assets. The most common underlying assets for derivative­s are stocks, bonds, commoditie­s, currencies, interest rates and market indexes.

According to Investoped­ia, the common derivative­s include options, future contracts, forwards and swaps.

FINSEC started working on introducin­g a derivative­s market in phases that involved preparing the market for the new product through holding master classes with market participan­ts as well as potential investors to equip them on how derivative­s work, potential risks as well as how investors can derive value from such investment­s.

“These instrument­s will assist producers of commoditie­s to minimise risks at the same time set pre-determined prices for their produce which will be settled by buyers under contract once tenure of contract matures,” said Mr Tapfumaney­i.

Last year, FINSEC also launched an agricultur­e commoditie­s exchange, the Zimbabwe Mercantile Exchange (ZMX) which allows farmers to trade about 18 commoditie­s.

While financial inclusion in capital markets has remained very low in Zimbabwe, operators of exchanges have been working on products and platforms that increase retail investors participat­ion such as C-TRADE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe