The Botswana Stock Exchange (BSE) breached the P1 trillion mark in total market capitalisation for the first time in its history, a milestone that on the surface projects the image of a broad and liquid capital market.
A closer examination, however, shows the milestone was driven almost entirely by price movements in just two instruments: Anglo American and the NewGold ETF — the only counters to record gains on the day of the milestone.
The Exchange closed at approximately P1.1 trillion in total market capitalisation, comprising equity market capitalisation of P974.7 billion, ETF market capitalisation of P41.6 billion and debt market capitalisation of P42.2 billion, according to the bourse.
Anglo American’s share price rose P56.06 to close at P737.52, while the NewGold ETF gained P25.04 to P613.54 per unit.
No other listed instrument recorded a price movement during the session, underlining the extent to which the trillion-pula milestone depended on gains in the two counters rather than broad-based market activity. The BSE had previously stated that in the first quarter, its size was helped by foreign counters.
The concentration is even more pronounced when Anglo American’s dominance on the Exchange is taken into account.
The global mining group carries a market capitalisationof P868.8 billion, representing 89.1 percent of total equity market capitalisation and 82.1 percent of the total market capitalisation of all listed instruments on the Exchange.
The BSE described the milestone as evidence of the “sustained growth, resilience, and increasing maturity of Botswana’s financial ecosystem”, adding that it reflected “rising investor confidence” and “deepening participation of market stakeholders.”
The Exchange also said total market capitalisation now stands at approximately 2.5 times Botswana’s gross domestic product and noted that the BSE has been recognised as Africa’s third-largest stock exchange by market capitalisation.
In commentary accompanying the announcement, BSE Chairperson Neo Mooki described the development as “a powerful signal of what Botswana can achieve”, adding that a deeper market would help attract new listings, improve price discovery and mobilise capital more efficiently.