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How VFEX Can Make Zimbabwe a Mineral Price-Setter, Not Just a Price-Taker

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For decades, Zimbabwe has played the role of price-taker in global mineral markets. Its lithium, gold, platinum, and chrome are priced in London, Shanghai, or New York, determined by trading floors thousands of kilometres away, reflecting supply and demand dynamics that have little to do with the quality of Great Dyke ore or the cost structures of local producers, Mining Zimbabwe can report.

By Rudairo Mapuranga

But a question is now being asked with increasing urgency by miners, financiers, and policymakers: Could the Victoria Falls Stock Exchange (VFEX) become the platform that finally gives Zimbabwe pricing power over its own minerals?

Zimbabwe is Africa’s largest lithium producer, yet its lithium prices are set in China. It holds the world’s second-largest platinum reserves, yet platinum pricing is dominated by London and New York. Its chrome grades outcompete every chrome-producing nation, yet chrome prices are referenced to benchmarks determined elsewhere.

This is not merely an academic grievance. When prices are set elsewhere:

Producers cannot hedge effectively, leaving them exposed to violent price swings.

Banks cannot lend confidently, unable to forecast future revenues.

Exploration remains underfunded, as junior miners cannot offer investors clear price visibility.

Value addition becomes harder to finance, as processing economics depend on input prices the producer does not control.

The CME Precedent: What Global Exchanges Are Doing

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange’s exploration of a neodymium-praseodymium (NdPr) rare earth futures contract offers a compelling case study. The driving force behind CME’s initiative is the same challenge Zimbabwe faces: banks are wary of providing finance because they cannot forecast future revenue, and producers cannot hedge potential price declines without futures markets.

CME has already successfully launched futures in lithium and cobalt—both critical to Zimbabwe’s mineral portfolio. These instruments allow miners to lock in prices, investors to gain exposure, and banks to lend against verifiable future cash flows.

The VFEX Opportunity: Building a Domestic Price Discovery Mechanism

The Victoria Falls Stock Exchange, established in 2020 as a US dollar-denominated competitor to international capital markets, is uniquely positioned to incubate a mineral pricing revolution.

What VFEX already offers:

A US dollar trading environment, eliminating currency risk for international investors.

A regulatory framework aligned with global standards.

Early successes in mining capital raising: Caledonia Mining has raised more equity on VFEX than on the NYSE. Karo Platinum raised US$36.8 million through its first bond listing. Invictus Energy raised US$19.5 million.

What VFEX could offer with a mineral commodities exchange:

Spot trading of physical minerals, establishing transparent, Zimbabwe-based reference prices.

Futures contracts allowing producers to hedge price risk and banks to lend against secured future production.

Mineral-backed securities tied to verified stockpiles (such as Sandawana’s 600,000-tonne lithium ore reserve).

Exploration funding instruments allowing EPO holders to raise capital against future discovery potential.

The Caledonia Precedent: Proof That Local Markets Work

Caledonia Mining’s success on VFEX is not just a fundraising story; it is proof of concept. The fact that a NYSE-listed miner raised more capital in Zimbabwe than in New York demonstrates that:

International investors are willing to access Zimbabwean mining through local channels.

The VFEX platform is credible and functional.

The appetite for Zimbabwean mineral exposure exists.

If Caledonia can raise equity for gold production on VFEX, why can other miners not raise capital for lithium, platinum, or chrome on the same platform, and eventually trade those minerals themselves?

Learning from China’s Model

China’s pricing dominance in rare earths and lithium is not accidental. It is the result of deliberate policy: creating domestic exchanges (Ganzhou Rare Metal Exchange, Baotou Rare Earth Products Exchange) that establish reference prices, then ensuring that global buyers reference those prices.

Zimbabwe cannot replicate China’s scale, but it can learn from its strategy. A VFEX Mineral Commodities Exchange would not need to replace London or Shanghai overnight. It would need to:

  1. Establish transparent, verifiable pricing for Zimbabwean minerals based on actual transactions.

  2. Build liquidity through mandatory reporting of export prices or incentives for local trading.

  3. Attract international participants by offering a credible, regulated, US dollar environment.

  4. Develop futures and hedging instruments over time as liquidity deepens.

The Exploration Funding Challenge

One of Zimbabwe’s most persistent mining challenges—chronic underfunding of exploration—could find resolution through VFEX innovation. With over 50,000 registered mining claims lying dormant due to lack of capital, the exchange could facilitate:

Mineral-backed bonds: Instruments secured against verified resources rather than production.

Royalty streaming vehicles: A domestic streaming company offering explorers upfront capital in exchange for future royalties.

Exploration SPVs: Special purpose vehicles listed on VFEX allowing retail and institutional investors to participate in exploration upside.

What Would It Take?

Transforming VFEX into a mineral pricing platform requires several building blocks:

Legal framework: Statutory Instruments 148 and 149 (2024) established commodity trading rules.

Regulatory capacity: VFEX and the SEC are ready to oversee new instruments.

Market participants: Miners, buyers, and investors are already active.

Physical infrastructure: Warehousing, assaying, and certification systems need development.

International recognition: Requires sustained credibility and transparency.

Finance Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube has explicitly positioned VFEX as a competitor to established resource capital markets. “We have to compete with Australia and Toronto,” Ncube said. “These are platforms where you raise capital for exploration.”

The next logical step is competing not just for capital, but for price discovery. If Zimbabwean minerals are traded on a Zimbabwean exchange, referenced in global contracts, and hedged through Zimbabwean instruments, the country ceases to be a passive supplier and becomes an active participant in the financial markets that determine its mineral wealth.

The Question for Today

The CME’s rare earth futures initiative demonstrates that global exchanges see the strategic value of critical mineral pricing. For Zimbabwe, the question is not whether to participate in this evolution, but whether it will do so as a price-setter or remain forever a price-taker.

The VFEX Mineral Commodities Exchange, if strategically developed and patiently built, offers a path to the former. It will not happen overnight. It requires coordinated effort from government, miners, financiers, and exchange authorities.

But as Caledonia, Karo, and Invictus have already proven: when Zimbabwe builds credible financial infrastructure, the capital—and the pricing power—will follow.

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