1. What exactly is a securities exchange?
A securities exchange is an organized marketplace where buyers and sellers meet to trade financial instruments — primarily stocks (shares of company ownership) and bonds (loans to companies or governments). Think of it as a central market with clear rules, independent oversight, and a record of every transaction.
Without an exchange, trading is mostly private and hard to trust. You cannot easily verify fair prices or confirm settlement. The exchange fixes that by centralizing price discovery and settlement.
Quick analogy
A securities exchange is to stocks what the Merkato is to physical goods — but with a referee, electronic scales, and a receipt that is legally binding and stored forever.
2. The birth of the ESX
For most of its history, Ethiopia had no formal stock exchange. Companies raised money through private placements, bank loans, or informal share sales, which left ordinary citizens with limited access.
The Ethiopian Securities Exchange (ESX) was established under the Capital Markets Proclamation (No. 1248/2021) and launched in 2024. It is owned jointly by the Ethiopian government and private shareholders, regulated by the Ethiopian Capital Market Authority (ECMA), and operates from Addis Ababa.
Founded
2024
Regulator
ECMA
Market type
Equities + Fixed Income
3. What can you trade on the ESX?
The ESX launched with a focus on the instruments Ethiopian companies and the government actually use to raise capital. Here is what is available and what is coming:
| Instrument | Status | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Equities (stocks) | Live | Shares of listed Ethiopian companies — you become a part-owner. |
| Government bonds | Live | Long-term debt issued by the Ethiopian government. |
| Treasury bills (T-bills) | Live | Short-term government paper with 28, 91, 182 and 364-day maturities. |
| Corporate bonds | Live | Debt issued by private Ethiopian companies. |
| ETFs | Coming soon | Baskets of securities tracking an index. |
| Derivatives | Future | Futures and options for hedging. Not yet launched. |
4. Who regulates the ESX?
The Ethiopian Capital Market Authority (ECMA) is the independent government body responsible for licensing, supervising, and enforcing rules across Ethiopia's capital markets. ECMA licenses:
- The exchange itself (ESX)
- Brokers and investment advisers (like Kashup)
- Fund managers and custodians
- Securities issuers (companies listing on the exchange)
5. How the ESX works — order flow explained
When you tap "Buy" inside Kashup, here is what happens behind the scenes:
You place an order
You enter the stock, quantity, and price type (market or limit) in the Kashup app.
Broker review
Kashup sends eligible order requests through licensed brokers, trading members, and approved market systems where applicable.
Order matching
The ESX's central order book matches your buy order with a willing seller at the best available price.
Trade confirmation
You receive an instant notification and the trade appears in your portfolio.
CSD settlement (T+2)
The Central Securities Depository (CSD) settles the trade within 2 business days — transferring shares and cash between both parties' accounts.
6. Why the ESX matters for ordinary Ethiopians
Before the ESX, if an Ethiopian wanted to invest in Safaricom Ethiopia or Commercial Bank of Ethiopia (CBE) equity, there was no formal mechanism. Share sales happened privately, prices were opaque, and disputes had no regulatory resolution.
Transparent pricing
Every trade is publicly visible. The ESX publishes real-time price data so you always know what a stock is worth today.
Protection from fraud
ECMA licensing and CSD custody means your shares are held securely in your name — not by a middleman who could disappear.
Wealth building at any income
With fractional and goal-based investing through Kashup, you can start with as little as ETB 100.
Diaspora access
Ethiopians abroad can now invest in homeland companies through the Kashup Diaspora module with cross-border compliance built in.
7. How to access the ESX through Kashup
You do not need to contact a broker directly or walk into a bank. Kashup handles your digital KYC, CSD account opening, and live order routing through a single app.
Download Kashup and create your account
Complete Wardya digital identity verification (takes under 5 minutes)
Fund your Kashup wallet via bank transfer, Telebirr, or mobile money
Browse the Markets tab — search any listed stock or bond
Place your first trade