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Tanzania ETFs Explained

Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are a relatively new asset class on the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange. They give investors a way to own a diversified basket in a single trade. Here's what that means in plain English.

Information and education only — not investment advice.

What is an ETF?

An ETF (exchange-traded fund) is a fund that holds a basket of assets — often tracking an index or a theme (for example, gold) — and trades on the exchange like a single share. Buy one unit and you get fractional exposure to everything the fund holds, in one transaction, through your normal broker and CDS account.

How is an ETF different from a unit trust (like iTrust)?

Both pool money into a diversified basket, but they differ in how you access them:

So ETFs offer intraday, on-exchange trading; unit trusts offer simple manager-based subscription and redemption. We cover the unit-trust side on the Collective funds page.

Why do ETFs matter for a market like the DSE?

For a market where some individual shares trade thinly, an ETF can offer instant diversification and a way to get broad or thematic exposure without picking single names. As the asset class develops locally, it lowers the barrier to a diversified position.

What should I check before buying an ETF?

Where can I see the ETFs listed on the DSE?

The current list of DSE-listed ETFs — and what each one tracks — is on our ETFs page, kept in line with the exchange. (Because listings change, treat that page, and the DSE itself, as the source of truth rather than any fixed list in an article.)

Where to go next


Information and education only. Nothing here is investment, legal or tax advice or a recommendation. Fund details and listings change — verify against the DSE and each fund's documentation.

Sources: Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange (dse.co.tz); KCP Markets — ETFs & Funds.

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