Audio By Carbonatix
Total investment assets of the insurance industry declined slightly, according to the 2024 Financial Stability Review.
The decline reflected market volatility, portfolio rebalancing, and cautious investment postures following the Domestic Debt Exchange Programme.
According to the report, the life segment continues to dominate the industry’s investment holdings, accounting for approximately GH₵6.7billion, compared to GH₵3.1 billion held by the non-life segment.
The report pointed out that increased allocations to listed stocks, fixed deposits, and investment properties signal a search for yield and greater asset diversification. However, these shifts also introduce new risk considerations, particularly equity price volatility and property valuation uncertainty in an evolving macroeconomic environment.
“From a financial stability perspective, the evolving investment strategy reflects both strength and fragility. On the one hand, the reduced concentration in government securities enhances resilience to sovereign risk. On the other hand, increased exposure to equities and real estate heightens vulnerability to market cycles, especially under adverse economic scenarios”, the report stressed.
NIC’s Role in Guiding Assets Diversification Remains Crucial
On the other hand, the report said the NIC’s role in guiding the asset diversification and the search for yields of the insurance industry remains crucial.
By strengthening investment guidelines and embedding risk-based capital incentives, it said the NIC ensures that investment decisions enhance long-term solvency and financial stability.
“Additionally, as insurers adapt to the IFRS 17 era, where asset-liability matching and fair value measurement gain prominence, their investment decisions will no longer be purely a search for good returns but will become central to demonstrating both solvency strength and policyholder protection”, it alluded.
Ultimately, the report concluded that the insurance industry’s ability to balance yield generation with risk resilience will be a key factor in the industry’s ability to contribute meaningfully to Ghana’s overall financial stability.
Latest Stories
-
Kenya school fire kills at least 10 students, media say
11 minutes -
Don’t cry urgency – Majority Chief Whip warns NPP over LGBTQ bill debate
18 minutes -
We can pass it by Friday – Dafeamekpor signals rapid move on LGBTQ bill
31 minutes -
We are not reenacting anything – Majority Chief Whip defends swift LGBTQ bill push
43 minutes -
LGBTQ bill will be passed in weeks, not months Majority Chief Whip Dafeamekpor
57 minutes -
Thai court acquits opposition politician accused of royal insult
1 hour -
Google worker charged with using internal data to make $1.2m on bets
1 hour -
The world’s carmakers are struggling to compete with China
1 hour -
Oil prices jump after US launches new attacks on Iran
1 hour -
French Open: Jakub Mensik collapses on court as heatwave continues
1 hour -
‘Magician’ Gael Monfils exits final French Open
1 hour -
Robertson close to Spurs move after Liverpool exit
2 hours -
Pochettino defends not phoning axed US players
2 hours -
India’s ‘unsafe’ 70ft Messi statue to be moved
2 hours -
Crystal Palace win Conference League with sperb victorty over Rayo Vallecano
2 hours