Somali National News Agency
So
Ar
Search
  • Home
  • Local News
    Local NewsShow More
    Somalia’s National Development Council Convenes to Accelerate 2025–2029 Transformation Plan
    December 4, 2025
    Somalia and Turkey Forge Closer Maritime Ties to Boost Port Infrastructure and Security
    December 4, 2025
    Somali Police Chief Attends Graduation of 23rd Darwish Police Unit in Djibouti
    December 4, 2025
    SoDMA Enlists Somali Islamic Scholars to Spearhead National Drought Response and Community Mobilization
    December 4, 2025
    President Hassan Sheikh Closes 6th Youth Leadership Summit, Declares Somalia Firmly on the Path to Progress and Prosperity
    December 4, 2025
  • World News
    World NewsShow More
    International Non-Profit Sector Forum opens in Riyadh with 1,500 specialists in attendance
    December 4, 2025
    Small innovations, big impact: How China leverages technology to enhance daily life
    November 28, 2025
    Dozens killed in DR Congo after bridge collapses at copper, cobalt mine
    November 17, 2025
    Four killed after two boats carrying migrants capsize off Libya’s coast
    November 16, 2025
    A car fleeing police slams into a bar in Florida, killing 4 and injuring 11
    November 9, 2025
  • Articles
    ArticlesShow More
    Capital Without Guardrails: The Dangerous Gap Between Investor Appetite and Regulatory Safety
    December 4, 2025
    Twenty Years of Service: Dr. Habeeb and the Journey of Mental Health Care in Somalia
    November 30, 2025
    Small innovations, big impact: How China leverages technology to enhance daily life
    November 28, 2025
    Johannesburg Summit Marks a Turning Point: Africa Hosts a G20 of New Realities and Resilient Multilateralism
    November 22, 2025
    Hormuud University, Somalia: Fifteen Years of Excellence
    November 14, 2025
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    America’s Tariff Weaponization: An Economic Analysis of 500% Tariffs and the Inevitable Bipolar Bifurcation
    October 19, 2025
    Somalia Unveils the Blueprint for a Modern and Sustainable Mogadishu
    December 21, 2024
    Djibouti Launches $57.4 Million Youth Entrepreneurship Project to Combat Climate Change
    November 25, 2024
    FM meets Minister of Investment of Saudi Arabia
    October 28, 2024
    President Hassan Sheikh Inaugurates New LPG Storage Center in Mogadishu
    May 12, 2024
  • Sports
    SportsShow More
    Somalia Falls to Oman in Penalty Shootout After Strong Performance in Arab Cup Qualifier
    November 26, 2025
    Somalia’s U-17 National Team Concludes CECAFA Campaign with a Strong Victory
    November 24, 2025
    Somalia, Sudan, Djibouti, South Sudan set eyes on FIFA Arab Cup
    November 24, 2025
    Somali Ambassador to Kenya Congratulates Dekadaha FC on Historic CAF Confederation Cup Victory
    September 28, 2025
    Somalia’s Dekadaha FC faces Sudan’s Alzamala Sports Club in Nairobi
    September 20, 2025
  • Tenders
    TendersShow More
Reading: Capital Without Guardrails: The Dangerous Gap Between Investor Appetite and Regulatory Safety
Share
Font ResizerAa
Somali National News AgencySomali National News Agency
  • SOMALI
  • ARABIC
Search
  • Home
  • Local News
  • World News
  • Articles
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Tenders
Follow US
©2023 || All rights reserved SONNA
Somali National News Agency > Blog > Articles > Capital Without Guardrails: The Dangerous Gap Between Investor Appetite and Regulatory Safety
Articles

Capital Without Guardrails: The Dangerous Gap Between Investor Appetite and Regulatory Safety

By Abdiqani Abdullahi
Last updated: December 4, 2025
8 Min Read
Share

MOGADISHU — Somalia is witnessing a financial awakening. For the first time in decades, the conversation in Mogadishu has shifted from aid to investment, driven by a diaspora hungry to rebuild. But a dangerous race is underway. While the Central Bank of Somalia meticulously prepares the official National Securities Exchange (NSES) for a 2026 trading launch, unregulated private actors are rushing to fill the vacuum, selling “shares” in a legal grey zone that lacks investor protection.

This article investigates the high-stakes interval between today’s appetite for capital and tomorrow’s regulatory framework. It argues that while the government’s partnership with the Nairobi Securities Exchange is a milestone, the current silence on unregulated trading risks a systemic crisis. We explore why the Central Bank must urgently bridge this gap, ensuring that Somalia’s return to the global financial stage is defined by integrity, not a “wild west” collapse that could spook investors for a generation.

Why Rules Matter

To understand the gravity of this moment, one must look back to the origins of modern finance. When the Dutch East India Company issued the world’s first shares in 1602, it was not merely to raise cash; it was a mechanism to manage the immense risk of high-seas voyages that no single merchant could bear alone. The invention of the stock market allowed for shared risk and shared reward, fueling an era of unprecedented global expansion.

Somalia stands at a similar precipice today. The nation’s “voyages” are now its massive infrastructure projects energy grids, fiber optic networks, and blue economy ventures. These industries have outgrown the “family and friends” funding model that sustained the private sector during the civil war. They require the deep pools of public capital that only a stock market can provide. However, the Dutch success was eventually underpinned by strict governance. Without a “referee” to enforce the rules, the hunger for profit inevitably attracts bad actors, turning a market into a casino where the house always wins.

The “Private Club” Illusion

In the current interim period before the NSES officially opens its trading floor in early 2026 private entities have emerged, hosting roadshows and selling shares to the public. For the eager investor, this presents a paradox: the opportunities feel real, but the safety nets are often imaginary.

The core of the problem lies in the legal distinction between a public exchange and a private platform. In a developed market, when an investor buys a stock, they are purchasing a federally protected asset. Their ownership is recorded in a Central Securities Depository (CSD), a digital vault often guaranteed by the state or heavily insured.

Currently, in Somalia’s unregulated sphere, many share offerings are legally nothing more than private contracts. Without a statutory regulator (the Capital Markets Authority) to enforce the rules, an investor’s “share certificate” is often just a receipt from a private company. If that company dissolves, or if its internal database fails, the investor has no recourse to a higher authority. They are not trading on a national market; they are effectively trading inside a private club where the platform owner acts as judge, jury, and executioner a conflict of interest that global financial standards strictly prohibit.

The Risk of “Dead Shares”

A critical, often overlooked danger for early investors is the issue of portability. The Federal Government has signaled its intent to align with international standards, evidenced by the strategic partnership signed between the NSES and the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) in late 2025. This partnership will bring world-class compliance and technology to Mogadishu.

However, this elevation of standards creates a trap for those buying into informal schemes now. When the official, government-sanctioned exchange begins trading, it will likely require strict financial disclosures and governance structures that early, informal companies may not meet. Investors holding shares purchased on private platforms today may find themselves holding “dead assets” shares that cannot be transferred to the official national exchange because the original paperwork was non-compliant. These investors could be left stuck in a closed loop, unable to sell their stake to the wider global market or institutional investors.

The Legal Vacuum and the Central Bank’s Mandate

Despite the delay in the full operationalization of the Capital Markets Authority, the landscape is not entirely lawless. The Central Bank of Somalia (CBS) possesses the legislative tools to police this grey zone, and the stability of the future market depends on its willingness to use them now.

Three existing statutes provide a litmus test for legitimacy that every Somali investor should apply. First is the Financial Institutions Law (Law No. 130 of 2012), which empowers the Central Bank to license and regulate any entity managing public funds. Any platform operating without a clear “No Objection” or license from the CBS is effectively bypassing the nation’s primary financial watchdog.

Second is the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism Act (Law No. 5 of 2016). This law requires rigorous “Know Your Customer” (KYC) protocols. In the rush to attract capital, unregulated platforms often skip these hurdles, accepting funds with little scrutiny. This not only puts the investor at risk of fraud but endangers the entire financial system by potentially mixing legitimate investment capital with illicit funds, inviting international sanctions.

Finally, the Company Law (Law No. 18 of 2019) provides the basic definition of a share. It mandates that companies distinguish between corporate funds and owner assets. In unregulated schemes, the line between the “exchange” money and the “company” money is often blurred a recipe for embezzlement that the Company Law was designed to prevent.

Trust is the Currency

The government’s timeline aiming for trading in 2026 has created a window of vulnerability. Nature abhors a vacuum, and in this six-to-twelve-month interim period, unregulated entities are racing to capture liquidity before the official gates open.

The Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank must consider issuing interim directives that clearly define what constitutes a “public offering” versus a “private placement.” Silence from the regulators is currently being interpreted as consent.

Somalia is on the verge of a financial renaissance. The move toward a stock market is the correct path for national development. But the foundation of a stock market is not software, roadshows, or glossy prospectuses, it is trust. If the government allows the “wild west” to persist unchecked, a major scandal could poison the public’s trust in equity markets for a generation. The time for the Central Bank to assert its authority is not 2026. It is now.

Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp Email Copy Link Print

MORE NEWS

Ode to Yan’an: How a Song Inspired Chinese Youth During Wartime

ArticlesCulture
August 19, 2025

From Zheng He to Xi Jinping: China and Somalia’s New Vision for Self-Reliance

Beijing, (SONNA): In an exclusive interview with the Somali National News Agency (SONNA), The Federal…

July 8, 2025

Turkish Red Crescent distributes food parcels in Somalia

MOGADISHU (SONNA):Turkish Red Crescent conducted food distribution in Mogadishu's Kahda district on Saturday. Red Crescent…

April 25, 2021

US imposes fresh visa restrictions on Ugandan officials over poll

NAIROBI (SONNA):The United States says it is imposing visa restrictions on “those believed to be…

April 17, 2021

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

Johannesburg Summit Marks a Turning Point: Africa Hosts a G20 of New Realities and Resilient Multilateralism

JOHANNESBURG SONNA — When the history of the twenty-first-century diplomacy is written, the 2025 G20 Summit in Johannesburg will likely…

Articles
November 22, 2025

Opinion: Leveraging Cooperation With China for Somalia’s Halal Industry Potential

Leveraging Cooperation With China for Somalia's Halal Industry Potential Somalia's Global Halal Market Potential The global Halal food industry is…

Articles
August 28, 2024

A Maine city that’s 90% White now has a Somali mayor

Maine (SONNA):Deqa Dhalac saw it in their faces when she started campaigning. Some people, she says, seemed scared to open…

ArticlesNews
December 8, 2021

Al-Shabaab militant leaders face uncertain future

Mogadishu(SONNA)-Al-Shabaab militant leaders faced uncertainty over their future as the group lost more than 200 fighters including senior commanders and…

ArticlesLocal News
December 26, 2022

Somali National News Agency established in 1964. It is one of the main pillars of the Ministry of Information, Culture, and Tourism.

  • Home
  • Local News
  • World News
  • Articles
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Tenders
  • SNTV
  • RADIO MOGADISHU
  • DALKA JOURNAL
  • TOURISM DEPARTMENT

Follow US: 

  • MoICT
  • VILLA SOMALIA
  • OPM SOMALIA

All rights reserved SONNA

©2023

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?