AfDB concludes first Pan-African training for regulators of derivatives, commodities exchanges
BY EDMUND SMITH-ASANTE
The African Development Bank (AfDB), has concluded a one-week, pan-African training workshop for African regulators of derivatives and commodities exchanges in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire.
The workshop, which ended on May 10, 2013, provided participants
representing 30 African countries with strategic and technical skills to assist
African securities and capital markets authorities develop legal and regulatory
frameworks for derivatives and commodities exchanges.
At the opening ceremony, Job Essis N’Guessan, who represented the Ivoirian Minister of Commerce, stressed the importance of commodities and derivatives markets, especially after the global food crisis of 2007 and the global financial crisis of 2008.
He stated that as the environment in Africa is becoming increasingly
conducive to investment, there is need to make sure that investor interest translates
to an improvement in Africa’s ability to develop itself.
On behalf of the official representation of the AfDB’s Headquarters in
Côte d’Ivoire (ROSA), Chief Country Programme Officer, Sidi Drissi, described
the training session as being in support of the African Union’s 2005 Arusha
Plan of Action and Declaration on African Commodities, which highlight the
importance of efficient financial and commodity markets as a prerequisite for
equitable, inclusive and sustainable development.
“Having well-trained regulators are important for the proper functioning
of markets,” he declared.
For participants from Kenya, this training comes at a particularly
opportune moment, as the country is poised to license a Futures and Derivatives
Exchange by August 2013.
Sharing his views on the training, Luke Ombara, Acting Director of
Regulatory Policy and Strategy at Kenya’s Capital Markets Authority (CMA),
stated: “The training exposed us to other aspects of futures and derivatives
regulation that we will be grappling with once the CMA has licensed the
successful applicants for establishment of Futures Exchange, notably contract
creation, licensing and monitoring of market intermediaries, clearing and
settlement and market manipulation.”
Keith Mukami of Bourse Africa Limited, another participant at the
training workshop, described the sort of capacity building that the workshop
provided as “the cornerstone to building sustainable and well regulated African
commodity markets in the long term.” He found it very encouraging to “witness
and participate in AfDB’s efforts to building African commodity markets.”
The training workshop, the first in a series of trainings on market regulations,
was jointly organised by the African Development Institute and the NEPAD,
Regional Integration and Trade Department, both of the AfDB.
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