Every year, Zimbabwe’s diaspora remits well over a billion US dollars to family back home. Most of this capital flows into consumption items such as groceries, school fees, and bricks-and-mortar property. While essential, these allocations represent a missed opportunity: the chance to deploy that capital into Zimbabwe’s capital markets, where it can compound into generational wealth while simultaneously driving national growth.
Zimbabwe boasts one of Africa’s longest-standing stock exchanges. Established in 1894, the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange has anchored the country’s capital markets for more than a century. It currently hosts over 45 listed companies spanning sectors such as telecommunications, financial services, consumer staples, and mining. Core benchmarks include the ZSE All Share, Top 10, Industrial, and Mining indices, all offering institutional-grade visibility into market movements. The launch of the Victoria Falls Stock Exchange in 2020 as a subsidiary of the ZSE was a strategic intervention designed to attract international investors through a US dollar-denominated market. It operates within a special economic zone and has emerged as a credible platform for diaspora investors seeking to hedge currency risk while retaining exposure to Zimbabwe’s growth trajectory.
Contrary to the persistent myth that stock markets are an elite playground, the exchange represents one of the most efficient vehicles for wealth accumulation. Acquiring shares in listed corporates makes diaspora investors equity participants in businesses that are central to the Zimbabwean economy. As these firms generate earnings, investors benefit not only from dividend flows but also from capital appreciation as valuations expand. This dual income stream—yield and capital gains—is the cornerstone of portfolio growth in any functioning equity market.
The effect extends beyond personal portfolios. Equity inflows from abroad furnish listed companies with working capital and expansion finance, enabling investment in new plant, job creation, and export-oriented production. This is the multiplier effect at its purest form: wealth creation for investors, productive capital for companies, and wider economic development for the nation. It also provides Zimbabwe with scarce foreign exchange inflows, strengthens the financial system, and broadens the shareholder base in line with global governance standards.
The practical hurdles that once made it difficult for non-residents to invest have diminished significantly. The ZSE adopted its Automated Trading System in 2015, moving away from open outcry, and has since rolled out tools such as the View-Only Terminal, allowing investors to track trades in real time. The Victoria Falls Stock Exchange provides settlement in hard currency and a simplified repatriation framework. Both exchanges have invested in digital solutions that reduce friction, ensuring diaspora investors can open accounts, fund them electronically, and execute trades through licensed brokers with minimal delay. Brokerage portals now provide visibility into live market prices, order book depth, portfolio tracking, and performance dashboards, putting diaspora investors on the same footing as their domestic counterparts.
Consider the example of a Zimbabwean nurse in the United Kingdom or a teacher in South Africa. Instead of remitting the entirety of their income for immediate consumption, they could allocate a portion through a VFEX account into counters such as mining equities or consumer goods firms. Over time, they benefit from dividend distributions in hard currency and long-term capital gains as companies expand balance sheets and earnings per share. Simultaneously, Zimbabwean corporates receive capital that allows them to expand factories, penetrate regional markets, and employ more citizens. This is the archetypal win-win: a diaspora portfolio accrues value while Zimbabwe’s productive base broadens.
Market data underline the opportunity. As of August 2025, the VFEX recorded a market capitalisation of approximately USD 1.45 billion and daily turnover averaging USD 211 000 across 64 trades. The ZSE, despite volatility linked to currency reforms, has historically hosted some of the region’s largest listings. Econet Wireless Zimbabwe, for example, achieved a market capitalisation of USD 3.2 billion at its peak in 2018, before correcting to around USD 785 million in early 2024. Mining companies such as Bindura Nickel Corporation and Caledonia Mining provide exposure to global commodity cycles, while financial services groups like CBZ Holdings anchor the domestic credit market. These counters offer a spectrum of risk-return profiles suitable for diaspora investors with varying appetites.
Reallocating even a modest share of diaspora remittances could unlock vast potential. If just ten per cent of annual inflows were diverted to the capital markets, that would represent upwards of USD 100 million per year in additional liquidity. Such an injection could fund new listings, encourage initial public offerings, deepen the secondary market, and facilitate the development of new products such as exchange-traded funds and corporate bond listings. It would also create the scale needed for Zimbabwe to align with pan-African indices, boosting visibility among global frontier market funds.
The timing is critical. Zimbabwe’s exchanges have modernised, diaspora savings are significant, and the appetite for alternative investment vehicles is rising as remittance recipients confront inflationary pressures. The bridge between diaspora wealth and national development is already built in the form of the ZSE and VFEX. What remains is for the diaspora to cross it.
The stock market is more than a forum where shares change hands; it is an institutional mechanism that channels capital to its most productive uses. For Zimbabwe’s diaspora, it represents both a personal opportunity to build durable wealth and a patriotic act of nation-building. The question is not whether Zimbabwe’s markets can absorb diaspora funds—they can. The question is whether the diaspora will seize the opportunity at this moment of alignment between need and possibility.
Written by Justin Bgoni is the Chief Executive Officer of the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange and leads the Victoria Falls Stock Exchange. A Chartered Accountant with more than 24 years of international experience, he holds a Bachelor of Accounting Science from the University of South Africa and a Master in Applied Finance from Victoria University of Wellington. His prior appointments include management consulting at McKinsey & Company and serving as Chief Financial Officer at the New Zealand Stock Exchange. He currently sits on the boards of the Investment Protection Fund and the National Venture Capital Company of Zimbabwe, and chairs the Capital Markets Association of Zimbabwe.







