Myanmar will open its first major stock exchange next week after months of delays, authorities said today, as the long-cloistered economy slowly opens up.
Initially slated for October, the Yangon Stock Exchange (YEX) will now be launched on December 9, according to a statement by the Securities and Exchange Commission of Myanmar.
Its debut was pushed back until after the breakthrough November 8 elections, won handsomely by Aung San Suu Kyi’s opposition party.
Suu Kyi’s supporters hope her party’s landslide win will hasten the pace of economic liberalisation in the formerly junta-ruled country.
Approval for the bourse was given by Maung Maung Thein, the chairman of the securities and exchange commission, according to state-backed newspaper The Global New Light of Myanmar. About five firms will be listed on the YEX to start with, the official was quoted as saying.
Myanmar is one of just a handful of countries without a stock market.
In 1996, Japanese firm Daiwa Securities and a state bank set up the Myanmar Securities Exchange Centre, but this allowed over-the-counter sales of shares in just two firms, a Myanmar timber company and bank.
The workings of a bourse remain a mystery to most ordinary people, a nation where many keep their money at home and the banking system is still in its infancy after decades of state control over the economy.
A version of this article appears in print on December 02, 2015 of The Himalayan Times. (Source of The Himalayan Times)
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