Monday, February 29, 2016

Exim retail bond now trading on Dar bourse

DAILY NEWS Reporter
DEPUTY Minister for Finance and Planning Dr Ashatu Kijaji rings a bell to signal inaugural trading of Exim Bank retail bond at the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange in city at the weekend. (Photo by Staff Photographer)
THE country first Exchange Traded Retail Bonds (ETRBs) issued by Exim Bank, got listed on Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange (DSE) at the weekend.

The listing ceremony was graced by Deputy Finance and Planning Minister, Dr Ashatu Kijaji, who hailed the listing and urged other investors in the private sector to join.
“This retail bond is expected to facilitate development of a vibrant retail bond market and open doors for other private sector companies, government companies and municipal bodies to explore new methods to meet financing needs,” she said.
Mr Selemani Ponda, Chief Financial Officer, EXIM Bank Tanzania Limited said: “The six-year retail bond was not only a major development in Tanzania financial sector but also in East Africa, as Exim Bank became the first bank in East Africa to issue ETRBs.”
The Bond carries a coupon rate of 15.56 per cent per annum for a period of six years. Bond issue had received overwhelming response by retail investors and was oversubscribed by 95 per cent.
Exim Bank raised 19.95bn/- out of which around 14.97bn/- was retained and balance refunded back to the investors. The Bond will strengthen the capital base of the bank and will be used for on-lending purpose.
The Capital Market and Securities Authority (CMSA) Director, Mr Nicodemus Makama, said the Exim Bank retail bond listing on the DSE is historical, as it is the first exchange traded retail bond in the East African Community (EAC) and Southern Africa Development Corporation (SADC) regions.
It is expected to facilitate the development of a vibrant retail corporate bond market in these regions, he said. Further he added that the exchange traded retail bonds provide opportunities to small investors to invest in bonds in lower denomination, diversify their investments and trade in the bonds market thus providing needed liquidity and periodic cash flows.
DSE Chief Executive Officer Mr Moremi Marwa said the listing of the Exim retail bond brought to 15, the number of corporate bonds that have been issued by 10 firms and listed on the DSE.
Out of these 15, four are corporate bonds that are still outstanding and worth 57bn/-. Tanzania’s bonds market size is currently worth 4.56tri/-, equivalent to six per cent of the Gross Domestic Product, out of which 99 per cent is made up Government Bonds while 1 per cent corporate bonds.
It has a trading turnover averaging 350bn/- per annum with a liquidity level of seven per cent. “These statistics clearly indicate that our bonds market is in the lower end relative to other markets, even by the sub-Sahara Africa (SSA) standards,” said Mr Marwa

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