Workers arrange maize at a depot in Eldoret, Kenya. Farmers in the
country should benefit from the East Africa Exchange through access to
structured agricultural and financial markets. PHOTO | FILE
By KABONA ESIARA
In Summary
- The regional commodity exchange had planned to extend its operations to Uganda at the same time as Kenya as it seeks to consolidate its operations in the East African Community.
- This delay will lock out Uganda's smallholder farmers from access to structured agricultural and financial markets.
- EAX manages warehouses, warehouse receipt systems, grain cleaning and collateral management services and also deploys a Nasdaq electronic trading platform. Ugandan authorities are pushing for a partnership where the two parties would share revenues.
The East Africa Exchange has delayed setting up operations
in Uganda due to the country’s recent General Election. This delay will
lock out smallholder farmers from access to structured agricultural and
financial markets.
The regional commodity exchange had planned to extend its
operations to Uganda at the same time as Kenya as it seeks to
consolidate its operations in the East African Community.
The Ugandan commodity value chain is driven by traders and
village agents who are known to reduce farmers’ profit margins to
increase their own.
The Kampala middlemen transport maize and sell it at $0.21 per kg, while the same maize is traded at $0.32 per kg.
To reverse this trend, Ugandan authorities and the Rwanda-based
EAX officials started negotiations but when Uganda went into elections,
the talks were shelved.
“We should resume the negotiations with Ugandan authorities soon
because the election period is over,” said Alfah Kadri, EAX manager.
EAX manages warehouses, warehouse receipt systems, grain
cleaning and collateral management services and also deploys a Nasdaq
electronic trading platform. Ugandan authorities are pushing for a
partnership where the two parties would share revenues.
Uganda is the only country of the original Northern Corridor states where EAX has not set up its operations.
Last month, EAX opened four warehouses in Eldoret in Kenya.
The EAX enables farmers to benefit from a financing scheme,
based on a collateral management model, where full protection is
provided for financial institutions who in turn lend on favourable
terms, including accepting the farmer’s grain as the sole collateral for
advancing loans.
In Rwanda, where the exchange started operations in 2015,
lenders’ appetite for the warehouse receipt system has been growing,
boosted by futures contracts — a tool used on the commodity market to
offset risk exposure.
As a result, this year, at least $100 million is expected from
six lenders to finance 50,000 futures contracts, up from the $72 million
in 2015 — a development that has eased funding for the agriculture
sector.
The lenders have also expanded their loan books to fund the downstream agricultural value chain — from production to marketing.
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