Bond Exchange of South Africa explained

Bond Exchange of South Africa Limited
Type:Public company
Fate:Purchased by Johannesburg Stock Exchange
Successor:JSE Limited
Defunct:2009
Location City:Johannesburg
Location Country:South Africa
Products:Bond Exchange

The Bond Exchange of South Africa (BESA) was a South African bond exchange based in Johannesburg.[1] [2] [3] It was acquired by the JSE Limited in 2009, and rebranded as the JSE Debt Market.The entity, now through the JSE Limited, operates and regulates the debt securities and interest rate derivatives markets in South Africa.Prior to its acquisition it was constituted as a public company.

History

BESA was granted its exchange license in 1996 and over the next twelve years was responsible for the development of the bond market in South Africa. As an exchange, BESA was in the business of providing a range of platforms and services to address the needs of capital market participants, be it issuers, market makers, traders or investors.

In December 2007, BESA converting from a mutual association to a public company. This was followed by a rights issue which was concluded in October 2008, injecting fresh capital into the business and introducing new strategic partners to the exchange. With demutualisation and capitalisation achieved, BESA focused attention on furthering capital market infrastructure in South Africa through the introduction of projects such as;

By 2008 the South African bond market was a leader among emerging-market economies. Turnover reported on BESA in 2008 reached R19.2 trillion. Given listed debt securities of R825 billion nominal. However the local bond market was still dominated by securities issued by the South African government, with local government, public enterprises and major corporations accounting for the rest of the debt issuers active in the market. The number of borrowers and listed bonds as well as the market capitalisation had all risen sharply, at December 2008 BESA had listed some 1,102 debt securities, issued by 100 sovereign and corporate borrowers, with a total market cap of R935 billion.

In 2009 the Johannesburg Stock Exchange acquired the BESA for R240 million and rebranded as the JSE Debt Market.[5]

Rules and protections

As the direct regulator of the bond market, BESA operated within the framework of the Securities Services Act 2004 of South Africa and a set of rules and directives approved by the Financial Services Board (FSB). BESA's rules and directives served as a tool for regulating both issuers and trading participants. Extensive rules also applied to trading participants, with BESA undertaking active surveillance over all aspects of market activity as well as requiring compliance with a variety of best-practice standards.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Moves to make bond trading fairer to you . iol.co.za . 2011-10-30 . 2013-08-20.
  2. Web site: BESA & JSE welcome approval of merger by competition authorities . https://archive.today/20130820235222/http://www.moneyweb.co.za/moneyweb-south-africa/besa--jse-welcome-approval-of-merger-by-competitio . dead . 2013-08-20 . 2013-08-20 .
  3. Web site: HM Revenue & Customs: Designation of the Bond Exchange of South Africa as a recognised stock exchange for tax purposes . Hmrc.gov.uk . 2008-10-14 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081010125245/http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/fid/bond-exch-s-africa.htm . 2008-10-10 .
  4. Web site: NASDAQ OMX and Bond Exchange of South Africa Limited Establish BondClear . Nasdaq.com . 2008-10-14.
  5. Web site: JSE Debt Market . July 22, 2014 . JSE Limited.