Audio By Carbonatix
About 94% representing (about ¢3.7bn) of the ¢3.9 billion Tier 2 pension contributions placed in government securities may be affected by a probable Debt Restructuring Programme.
A debt restructuring will mean the yield-to-maturity of government bonds and bills will be extended or better still the ‘haircut’ policy enforced. This will potentially affect the return on investments for some investors.
In financial markets, a haircut refers to a reduction applied to the value of an asset. For example, if an asset – such as holdings of a particular government bond – is worth ¢1 million but is given a haircut of 20%, it means it is treated as though it has a value of only ¢800,000.
Joy Business understands that the government will make a decision soon on how to restructure the country's debt after the completion of a Debt Sustainability Analysis (DSA) by the International Monetary Fund.
Should this happen, the maturing periods of these securities will be affected.
Almost the entire pension funds of Tier 2 contributors have been invested in the Government of Ghana instruments, particularly bonds. This is because government securities are classified essentially as risk-free.
However, the current fiscal challenges facing the economy, particularly ballooning debt and unsustainable interest payments raise some concerns.
The government yesterday announced a 5-Member Consultative Committee chaired by astute banker, Albert Essien, to lead discussions with the financial services industry and other stakeholders to provide industry-wide inputs and transmit industry concerns on debt management strategy to the Ministry of Finance and the Bank of Ghana.
The group will also examine views from financial sector players to deal with issues in the sector before reaching a deal with the IMF for an economic programme.
Joy Business is learning that the group is different from the credit committee that will also engage the Fund.
Latest Stories
-
I wish legal education reforms were referred to GBA first – Sam Okudzeto raises concern over new law
30 minutes -
Govt secures GH¢3.1bn in 7-year bond auction
35 minutes -
Gov’t welcomes Burkina Faso’s move to resume tomato exports to Ghana
36 minutes -
Brand culture, staff drive GCB Bank’s record 2025 Profit – MD
1 hour -
ADB posts GH¢367m profit after tax as capital adequacy ratio hits 27.17%
1 hour -
GBA should have been consulted – Sam Okudzeto questions passage of Legal Education Bill
1 hour -
IFEST backs post-results SHS selection policy, calls for thorough testing
2 hours -
Tamale Central Hospital casual workers resume strike over unpaid salaries
2 hours -
Mnangagwa praises Ghana’s key role in Zimbabwe’s independence struggle
2 hours -
Sibi Central CHPS overstretched – Health Director demands urgent upgrade
2 hours -
IDEG advocates independent body for constitutional reforms
2 hours -
Industry left to struggle – Minority caucus exposes crisis in oil palm sector
2 hours -
GIFMIS ‘no longer fit for purpose’ for road sector records – Agbodza
2 hours -
GEA calls for bipartisan push to align education with development
2 hours -
SME funding in Ghana is economic charity, not a growth strategy – Joe Jackson
2 hours
