Ethiopian Capital Markets Authority (ECMA) has unveiled draft rules for a landmark Investment Protection Fund that prioritises compensation for small private investors while explicitly excluding large corporations and institutional players — a move designed to build public trust in the nascent financial sector.
Announced during a stakeholder forum on the draft regulation — grounded in Article 103 of Capital Market Proclamation No. 1248/2013 — the fund covers losses from broker negligence, fraud or insolvency, but not market fluctuations. Sirak Solomon, ECMA’s senior legal advisor, emphasised its focus: safeguarding everyday savers channeling hard-earned bank deposits into shares for their children’s future or rainy days.
“Small investors can’t afford lengthy court battles like big firms,” Sirak stated. “This fund protects their life savings from service provider failures.”
The fund targets the vulnerable “transition period” — from handing cash to a broker until shares hit the market. If a broker misappropriates funds, diverts money improperly or collapses, compensation kicks in swiftly, bypassing litigation.
Crucially, it excludes investment losses from price drops. “We avoid the word ‘guarantee’ — market risk is yours alone,” ECMA clarified. Examples of covered claims: brokers pocketing payment without buying securities. Uncovered: bonds tanking due to economic shifts.
Maximum payout caps at 100,000 birr per investor — mirroring bank deposit insurance — sufficient for most retail participants in Ethiopia’s emerging market. “Lose 30,000 birr? Full recovery. Lose 5 million? Capped at 100,000,” Sirak illustrated.
To recover payouts, ECMA introduces “whistleblower fees” rewarding tips on hidden or stolen broker assets. Detailed operations — payment processes, compensation committee rules — fall to flexible ECMA directives, avoiding repeated cabinet approvals for minor tweaks.
Excluding giants signals to corporate Ethiopia: no government backstop. Institutional investors must rigorously vet brokers and banks, fostering market discipline.
For ordinary citizens, the fund marks a trust-building milestone. By shielding small savers — not tycoons — from broker misconduct, ECMA aims to lure depositors from banks to stocks, fuelling capital market growth.
As Ethiopia builds its exchange and disclosure regimes, this retail-first safety net underscores social equity: the little guy’s savings matter more than boardroom bets. With rules finalised, public uptake could redefine how Ethiopians grow wealth beyond fixed deposits.






