Dar es Stock Exchange chief executive Moremi Marwa. PHOTO | FILE
By JAMES ANYANZWA
In Summary
- The Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange has opened up its ownership to the public, allowing individual and institutional investors, including stockbrokers, to acquire up to a 20 per cent shareholding in the 20-year-old bourse.
- The share offer and its eventual self-listing on the exchange marks the culmination of the demutualisation process — which included the change in the legal status of the bourse from a private company limited by guarantee to a public company limited by shares.
- DSE chief executive Moremi Marwa told The EastAfrican that no special privilege would be given to the trading participants and that their level of shareholding in the demutualised exchange would depend on their level of interest in the IPO, the level of subscription and the allotment results.
The Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange has opened up its ownership
to the public, allowing individual and institutional investors,
including stockbrokers, to acquire up to a 20 per cent shareholding in
the 20-year-old bourse.
The share offer and its eventual self-listing on the
exchange marks the culmination of the demutualisation process —
which included the change in the legal status of the bourse from a
private company limited by guarantee to a public company limited by
shares.
The DSE restructured and converted to a public company limited by shares in June last year.
During the demutualisation process, 20 institutions that acted
as guarantors with an undertaking to contribute money in the event the
bourse was wound up, agreed to be allotted one share each to enable
re-registration and change of name of the exchange from Dar es Salaam
Stock Exchange Ltd to the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange Public Ltd
Company (Plc).
These institutions included eight of the current 11 stockbrokerage firms trading on the DSE.
DSE chief executive Moremi Marwa told The EastAfrican
that no special privilege would be given to the trading participants and
that their level of shareholding in the demutualised exchange would
depend on their level of interest in the IPO, the level of subscription
and the allotment results.
“There is no special privilege that has been afforded to
stockbrokers — their quantum of shares and percentage of shareholding
will depend on their level of interest through share purchase
application in the IPO process relative to the overall subscription — as
it is for any investor interested in a stake in the DSE, their
ownership will depend on the level of subscription and the allotment
results,” said Mr Marwa.
In 2014, the Nairobi Securities Exchange completed its
demutualisation process, which included change of name, change of its
legal status, an IPO and eventual self-listing.
But, unlike the DSE, 21 stockbrokers on the NSE allotted
themselves 100 shares each representing 4.76 per cent shareholding in
the bourse, resulting in their combined shareholding of 99.96 per cent.
After the re-registration of NSE as a company limited by shares
the stockbrokers agreed to offload to the National Treasury and Capital
Markets Authority’s Investor Compensation Fund a shareholding of five
per cent each.
The stockbrokers then sold 66 million shares to the public in 2014, reducing their combined stake to around 56 per cent.
These trading participants were given a three-year window to reduce their shareholding in the bourse to below 40 per cent.
Mr Marwa, however, said DSE is not owned by any of its licensed
trading members and until the start of the demutualisation process, the
bourse was a mutual entity limited by guarantee with no shareholders and
share capital.
“Our long-term objective is to have a more vibrant stockmarket
with diverse financial and risk management products and services,” he
said, adding, “We will therefore continue to pursue this objective by
ensuring that we have a conducive legal and regulatory framework, a
capable and accessible infrastructure to accommodate diverse products as
the public is encouraged and motivated to use the stock market for
capital raising, investment and risk management purposes.”
A demutualised DSE is expected to play a significant role in
attracting local and foreign capital to finance public and private
enterprises.
The DSE is offering 15 million new shares to the public,
accounting for 30 per cent of the company’s authorised shares capital of
50 million ordinary shares.
The funds will be used to upgrade the bourse’s core operating
system, introduce new products and services and finance the company’s
day-to-day operations.
The offer opened on May 16, and closes on June 3.
The offer opened on May 16, and closes on June 3.
The new shares will be self-listed and start trading on the DSE on July 12.
DSE has 23 listed companies as at March 30, and its
demutualisation will make it the third Exchange in Africa after
Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) and the NSE to separate its ownership
from the trading rights.
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