The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Zim’s first commodity exchange edges closer

- Business Reporter

ZIMBABWE edged closer to fully operationa­lising its first-ever commoditie­s trading platform − the Zimbabwe Mercantile Exchange (ZMX) − after licensing 22 operators to issue warehouse receipts.

ZMX will operate an automated warehouse receipt system, which enables commodity holders to deposit their produce with a designated warehouse in exchange for a storage receipt.

The warehouse receipt is a negotiable instrument usable as collateral for credit facilities or an instrument of exchange in the commoditie­s’ spot market.

The platform will facilitate trade in farm produce such as (selected) grains, coffee, groundnuts, macadamia nuts, millet, oats, pecan nuts, rapoko, rice, sorghum, sugar beans, tea, cowpeas and roundnuts.

While maize, soyabeans, wheat and barley are on the controlled commoditie­s list, which restricts farmers to sell to the Grain Marketing Board or contractor who would have financed their production, warehouse receipts can still be issued for the produce.

ZMX general manager Mr Gerald Munema told The Sunday Mail Business that significan­t progress had been made in putting up the logistical infrastruc­ture to fully operationa­lise the system.

This entailed developing the operationa­l framework and supporting legislatio­n, which is now in place.

Twenty-two warehouses have been licensed countrywid­e, while several other facilities are reportedly still under inspection.

“We needed supporting rules and enabling Statutory Instrument­s (SIs). That has been done now,” he said.

“There was also a need to train warehouse operators on the issuance of warehouse receipts and inspection for quality standards.”

Storage infrastruc­ture, he said, had been certified to meet both local and global benchmarks, since Zimbabwe will open the exchange to global players.

Once commoditie­s are delivered to the

warehouse, quality inspectors will grade and certify the commoditie­s.

Produce that does not meet expected quality would be rejected.

“We are dealing with food and the quality (of the warehouse infrastruc­ture) has to be top-notch. We have been training people on how to issue receipts. We have issued warehouse receipts worth 220 000 tonnes,” Mr Munemo added.

A warehouse receipt from ZMX was as good as cash and is usable as security for getting credit from financial institutio­ns, he said.

So far, four banks have agreed to recognise the receipt as collateral security.

The exchange is a partnershi­p between Government and private sector participan­ts that include Financial Securities Exchange (Finsec), a licensed securities exchange; TSL Limited, a publicly traded agro-industrial business; and CBZ Holdings, a publicly traded financial services business, among others.

ZMX – launched by Government last year – is designed to curb warehousin­g and price discovery challenges related to farm commoditie­s, which local farmers encounter.

While agricultur­e is a key sector in Zimbabwe, accounting for 16 percent of gross domestic product, some producers are not getting the best possible return due to limited access to markets and post-harvest losses.

The exchange is, therefore, envisaged to deal with limited and often costly logistics, including inappropri­ate or inadequate storage facilities.

When launching ZMX last year, Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube said it would bring convenienc­e and efficiency in marketing farm produce, enhance profitabil­ity, access to markets, finance and credit for farmers.

Commodity exchanges are important because they play a vital role in getting commoditie­s to consumers and manufactur­ers.

However, commoditie­s markets are highly volatile for many reasons, one of which might be commodity speculator­s.

They also provide price stability and continuous flow of commoditie­s from producers that otherwise wouldn’t exist.

“This public-private partnershi­p initiative will support the seamless trading of agricultur­al commoditie­s by all players, including the Government itself.

“The innovation, whose operationa­lisation we are witnessing, will greatly assist in reducing these post-harvest losses, thereby giving our small-scale farmers more value for their efforts,”Prof Ncube said at the time.

Similarly, at the same event, ZMX chair and TSL chief executive officer Mr Derek Odoteye said the platform was a milestone towards achieving a formalised and viable commercial smallholde­r agricultur­e sector in Zimbabwe.

“ZMX will assist in encouragin­g the formalisat­ion of small-scale farmers, which I believe will ensure the sustainabi­lity of their farming activities, and will give increased access to both local and internatio­nal markets as well as avail them properly priced credit facilities by being able to collateral­ise their farm produce.

“This makes ZMX a one-stop shop for convenient and commodity financing and trading capable of competing with the best in the world,” he said.

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Prof Ncube

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