What Is the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange (DSE)?
The Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange (DSE) is Tanzania's national stock market — the place where shares in listed companies, government and corporate bonds, and other securities are bought and sold. If you've ever wondered where "the Tanzanian stock market" actually is, this is it.
Information and education only — not investment advice.
What does the DSE do?
A stock exchange is a regulated marketplace that connects two groups: organisations that need capital (companies raising money by selling shares, or the government raising money by issuing bonds) and investors who want to put money to work. The DSE provides the platform, the rules, and the price transparency that let those trades happen fairly.
It was incorporated in 1996 and began trading in 1998. Today it lists equities (company shares), Treasury and corporate bonds, and newer instruments like exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
What is listed on the DSE?
Three broad things:
- Equities — shares in listed companies, including Tanzania's biggest banks, its brewer, cement makers, a telco and an investment company. Some large cross-listed companies headquartered elsewhere in East Africa also trade here.
- Bonds — government Treasury bills and bonds (the way the state borrows in shillings), plus some corporate bonds.
- Funds — a small but growing set of exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
You can browse the Tanzanian listed names we cover on the companies page.
Who regulates the DSE?
The exchange operates under the Capital Markets and Securities Authority (CMSA), Tanzania's securities regulator. Trades are settled through a central depository, and only licensed brokers can place orders on the exchange — which is why individual investors buy and sell through a broker rather than directly.
How do prices move on the DSE?
Prices move with supply and demand, like any market — but the DSE is thinner than large global exchanges. Outside the banking counters, daily trading volumes can be light, and large "block" trades drive much of the headline index movement. That means prices can be stable for stretches and then jump on a single big trade.
How is the DSE's performance measured?
By indices. The headline DSEI (All Share Index) covers every listed company including cross-listed foreign names; the TSI (Tanzania Share Index) covers only domestic companies. They can tell different stories — which we explain in DSEI vs TSI.
How do I start following or investing?
Start by reading. Follow the free daily Brief for the market in plain English, browse company profiles, and when you're ready, see how to buy shares on the DSE.
Information and education only. Nothing here is investment, legal or tax advice or a recommendation. Verify current facts with the DSE (dse.co.tz) and CMSA.
Sources: Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange (dse.co.tz); Capital Markets and Securities Authority (cmsa.go.tz).