Answer: Fungibility is the ability of a good or asset to be interchanged with other individual goods or assets of the same type.In trading a financial instrument (stock or bond) is considered fungible if it can be exchanged (bought/sold) on one market/exchange and then sold/bought on another market/exchange. Full fungibility is when a financial instrument (stock/bond) can be sold/bought from one market/exchange into the other and vice versa.Partial fungibility is when shares can only move in one direction.
Answer: Currently there are three counters which are fully fungible on the ZSE which are Old Mutual Limited (OMU.zw) , PPC Limited (PPC.zw) and Seedco International Limited (SCIL.zw). There is at least a 51% limit of the listed shares that shall remain on the Zimbabwean Register.
Answer: Old Mutual Limited is the most liquid company because it is listed on many stock exchanges.
Answer: OMIR is an unofficial rate which is used by investors to compare share price movement of Old Mutual shares on ZSE,JSE and London Stock Exchange. This rate has no official connection with Old Mutual and is informally derived.
Answer: Fungibility on the ZSE is regulated by RBZ Exchange Control Guidelines and the current directive is Exchange Control Directive GR 699 of June 2016.
The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe: approves initial application by the issuer for their shares to be fully fungible and provides procedures and guidelines for trading in dual listed shares on the ZSE.
Zimbabwe Stock Exchange: Assesses and approves any application related to fungibility in line with RBZ Exchange Control Guidelines.Transfer Secretaries: Responsible for producing share certificates, issuing out transfer securities forms and removal request forms and advising the ZSE the shares that are being removed inwards and agree the running totals with the ZSE.
Listed Companies: Responsible for the initial application to the RBZ for the shares to be fungible up to 51% of the Exchange Control guidelines.
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