Tag: Ghana forex

  • BoG’s FX intermediation cut back sparks concerns amidst Cedi volatility

    BoG’s FX intermediation cut back sparks concerns amidst Cedi volatility

    The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has scaled back its foreign exchange intermediation efforts, planning to sell up to US$800 million in December, down from previous months.

    This decision follows a period of significant intervention, with the central bank injecting an estimated US$10 billion into the market between January and November 2025 to stabilize the cedi.

    The BoG’s has attributed the decision to reduced FX demand during the festive season, when market activity typically slows down. The central bank has already auctioned US$100 million on December 2 and another US$100 million on December 4, with plans for twice-weekly auctions open to licensed banks. However, this has raised concerns among market players, with some warning that it could lead to cedi volatility.

    Oil market players call for intervention

    “We need the Bank of Ghana to intervene to stabilize the forex market,” said Duncan Amoah, Executive Secretary of the Chamber of Petroleum Consumers (COPEC). “The swoop on black market forex dealers has had a very dire impact, triggering sharp rate jumps within hours.”

    The cedi has appreciated 31% year-to-date against the dollar, trading at GH¢11.42 to the dollar as of December 10, 2025. However, the recent crackdown on black market dealers has led to a surge in rates, with the dollar selling at around GH¢12.30 on the open market.

    Amoah warned that if the BoG doesn’t intervene, the situation could worsen, pushing fuel prices up. “The fuels market will respond immediately,” he said. “Ghana’s petroleum market needs about US$400 million, and if the open market behaves the way it is doing, they may not be able to hold prices further.”

    The BoG’s new Foreign Exchange Operations Framework aims to support reserve accumulation, reduce excessive short-term volatility, and intermediate FX flows in a market-neutral manner. However, market players are urging the central bank to take swift action to address the current volatility.

    “The managers of the economy have done a tremendous job, but there’s a danger if they don’t intervene properly,” Amoah said. “The situation is not desirable, and authorities need to assess the full impact of the arrests.”

    New FX Framework

    In November, the Bank of Ghana announced that its Board had approved a new Foreign Exchange Operations Framework to clarify the objectives and principles guiding its FX operations.

    According to the regulator, the framework reinforces its commitment to macroeconomic stability under the inflation-targeting regime and a flexible, market-driven exchange rate system.

    The framework is expected to deliver three core objectives:

    – Support reserve accumulation to provide a buffer against external vulnerabilities.

    – Reduce excessive short-term volatility in the FX market by addressing disorderly conditions without undermining exchange-rate flexibility.

    – Intermediate FX flows in a market-neutral manner, using inflows from the Gold Purchase Programme or export surrender requirements.

    This means the Bank of Ghana will channel FX inflows into the market in an orderly, transparent, and non-directional manner.

    The Bank says future interventions will follow a “structured discretion-under-constraint” approach. This ensures interventions do not target specific exchange-rate levels but instead address market failures, including the absence of hedging tools.

    “Reserve accumulation and intermediation objectives will be achieved through transparent and well-communicated operations,” the Bank noted in its recent statement.

    Seasonal trade mount pressure on Cedi

    Apparently, seasonal demand for foreign exchange is once again putting pressure on the Ghanaian cedi as import-dependent businesses move to secure dollars, pounds and euros ahead of the peak Christmas trading period.

    The annual surge in fourth-quarter demand has intensified competition for limited forex supply, unsettling traders who rely on predictable access to foreign currency to restock goods for the festive season.

    As at last week, the impact is already visible across the market. While the interbank rate quotes the dollar at GH¢11.43, the pound at GH¢15.21 and the euro at GH¢13.28, retail pricing tells a markedly different story.

    At forex bureaus, the dollar was selling at around GH¢12.30, with the pound and euro trading at GH¢16.40 and GH¢14.40 respectively.

    The widening spread between official and retail rates has become a key signal of tightening conditions, reflecting growing competition among importers and increasing pressure on dealers struggling to meet demand.

    The central bank maintains that it is closely monitoring liquidity pressures and stands ready to deploy additional monetary policy tools to contain volatility as the festive season approaches. But the coming weeks will be crucial because the balance between seasonal demand and policy response is likely to determine how the cedi ends the year.

     

    By Adnan Adams Mohammed

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Mould explains Bank of Ghana’s role in government debt payment

    Mould explains Bank of Ghana’s role in government debt payment

    A recent social media post has sparked debate on whether the Bank of Ghana’s (BoG) use of its reserves to pay Government of Ghana (GoG) debt can be classified as market intervention.

     

    According to Alex Mould, a finance and energy expert, such transactions are not market intervention, but rather a simple lending process.

     

    “When GoG debt is in US dollars, BoG’s payment of the debt using its reserves is not market intervention,” Mould explains. “However, if GoG debt was in cedis and BoG sold forex to lend cedis to GoG, it could be considered market intervention plus lending.”

     

    Mould highlights that if GoG used its own cedis from the treasury to buy USD from BoG, it should not be considered market intervention, but a pure forex transaction between a bank and its client. Additionally, mopping up cedis by selling dollars (forex) to the open market is seen as market intervention.

     

    “BoG’s role in the forex market is to manage its reserves and facilitate international transactions,” Mould notes. “The bank does not create forex, but rather obtains it through exports, international loans/grants, and interbank market participants.”

     

    In its normal course of operations, BoG exchanges forex from exporters for cedis and sells forex for international current account operations. The bank’s intervention in the forex market occurs when it sells or buys forex to influence the exchange rate outside of its day-to-day needs as a market participant.

     

    “The circa US$10 billion in question can only be attributed to BoG’s total forex sales over the period, not its interventions,” Mould concludes. “This clarification highlights the importance of understanding BoG’s role in managing the country’s forex reserves and facilitating government transactions.”

  • Gross Int’l Reserves fall to US$5.9bn

    The Bank of Ghana has said Ghana’s gross international reserves fell to US$5.9 billion as of the end of February 2023.

     

    It is enough to provide import cover for 2.8 months, the Governor, Dr Ernest Addison, told journalists at the central bank’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

     

    He said: “For the year 2022, the overall balance of payments recorded a deficit of US$3.6 billion”, noting: “The capital and financial account recorded a net outflow of US$2.1 billion (2.9 percent of GDP), mainly on account of lower FDI flows and significant portfolio reversals”.

     

    These, Dr Addison noted, together with the current account deficit of US$1.5 billion (2.1 per cent of GDP), resulted in the deficit of the overall balance”.

     

    “As a result, Gross International Reserves for 2022 declined by US$3.5 billion to US$6.2 billion. Net International Reserves, which adjusts Gross reserves for the Heritage and Stabilization funds as well as other encumbered funds also declined by US$3.7 billion to settle at US$2.4 billion by December 2022”, he reported.

     

    Dr Addison indicated: “Gross International Reserves further declined to US$5.9 billion at the end of February 2023, providing cover for 2.8 months of imports of goods and services. However, Net International Reserves improved to US$2.6 billion, reflecting a slight decline in encumbered funds”.