Zimbabwe’s new US-dollar bourse overtakes 132-year-old exchange

Zimbabwe’s new US-dollar bourse overtakes 132-year-old exchange

By Bloomberg News


Zimbabwe’s dollar-denominated stock exchange has eclipsed the country’s 132-year-old main bourse, propelled by the biggest listing in the nation’s history.

The Victoria Falls Stock Exchange, established during a currency crisis in 2020, has overtaken the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange by market value after tycoon Strive Masiyiwa transfered telecommunications infrastructure firm Econet InfraCo Ltd. to the platform at a $1 billion valuation on March 31. The listing accounts for almost a quarter of VFEX’s total capitalization.

VFEX’s 19 listings — many of which, like Econet InfraCo, migrated from the ZSE — were valued at about $3.79 billion as of Wednesday, surpassing the $3.4 billion market capitalization of 43 counters that trade in the local ZiG currency on the Harare-based stock exchange.

The transition isn’t a reflection of Zimbabwe’s economy suddenly expanding, but rather a structural reordering of its equity markets, Mary Musariri, an equities analyst at MMC Capital, said in response to emailed questions.

“VFEX has become the anchor for liquidity in hard currency, attracting foreign and institutional investors who value dollar stability and easier dividend repatriation,” Musariri said. That’s changed the investor base toward international capital, while the ZSE is increasingly dominated by retail and local-currency exposure, she said.

The shift is unfolding as global shocks — from the US-Israeli war with Iran to persistent currency instability at home — drive demand for dollar-based assets, reinforcing the appeal of offshore-style platforms like VFEX.

“The broader implication is that VFEX is becoming the benchmark exchange for Zimbabwe’s largest corporates, while the ZSE risks being relegated to a secondary role,” Musariri said. This leaves it more volatile and increasingly tied to a shrinking pool of heavyweight stocks, she said.

New Listings

The dollar-denominated exchange expects to attract at least four new listings this year, Chief Executive Officer Justin Bgoni said. “We are comfortable” with the pipeline and the new products coming to market, he said.

Still, Bgoni, who is also the CEO of the ZSE, said comparing the two stock exchanges is complex.

The “market cap for VFEX is bigger, but the ZSE has more listed entities,” he said. “We feel ZSE is undervalued and therefore has a strong upside. VFEX is growing so also has upside. We are hoping that both happen.”

The Next Africa newsletter will run every weekday. Sign up here for the newsletter, and subscribe to the Next Africa podcast on Apple, Spotify or anywhere you listen.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *