AMINIA COMMODITY BOURSE embodies its Arabic name “AMINA” - meaning “Safe” - as the world’s most secure and elegant sanctuary for international natural resource trading. Here, in our sophisticated and protected environment, sovereign nations gather with complete confidence to conduct the most significant commodity transactions on Earth. AMINA serves as the trusted backer and guardian of global trade, providing an impeccably secure location where natural resources flow safely between nations. Every transaction is protected by our unwavering commitment to security, elegance, and trust. When the world’s most valuable resources change hands, they do so under the safe protection of AMINA.
AMINA BOURSE represents the cornerstone of OMNI Fund's trading infrastructure, serving as a fully regulated physical commodities trading platform headquartered in the Abu Dhabi Global Market. This state-of-the-art bourse leverages cutting-edge blockchain technology and AI-powered risk management systems to provide African commodity producers with unprecedented direct market access, transparent pricing mechanisms, and secure transaction protocols.
By eliminating intermediaries and reducing transaction costs, AMINA BOURSE addresses the continent's chronic $100 billion trade finance gap while establishing new standards for transparency and efficiency in global commodities trading. The platform facilitates billions of dollars in annual commodity transactions across precious metals, agricultural products, and strategic minerals, creating a bridge between African producers and international institutional investors.
Over the next 24 months, AMINA BOURSE will launch its revolutionary blockchain-powered commodities trading platform, transforming how African producers access global markets. Due to unprecedented demand from institutional investors and commodity producers, we're accepting early applications now. Secure your position in the future of transparent, AI-driven commodities trading and join the platform that's eliminating the Trillion Dollar trade finance gap."