Audio By Carbonatix
The outlook of the Ghana cedi will depend on whether Ghana reaches an agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and obtain funding in the months ahead.
According to Fitch Solutions November 2022 West Africa Monitor Report, though it expects the cedi to remain on a depreciatory trajectory in the immediate term, the outlook depends on whether Ghana reaches an agreement with the IMF for a programme.
“Although we expect that the cedi will remain on a depreciatory trajectory in the immediate term, the outlook depends on whether Ghana will reach an agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and obtain funding in the months ahead. In July 2022”.

The country announced in July 2022, it was seeking support from the IMF to address the present economic challenges.
Fitch Solutions pointed out that though it believes that the two parties will reach a deal in the first quarter of 2023, there are downside risks to this view which would have negative implications for the cedi.
It stressed that the reason the Ghana cedi has suffered rapid depreciation this year is due to downgrades of its credit rating by the international rating agencies.
This is on the back of the country’s poor fiscal economy as a result of high-interest payments, rising debt levels and large fiscal deficit, forcing foreign holders of Ghana’s bonds to sell off.
Fitch Solutions concluded that with Ghana being unable to tap international capital markets, the country's foreign exchange reserves fell to 3.4 months of import cover in June 2022, which will continue to limit the Bank of Ghana's ability to defend the exchange rate over the coming months.
“With Ghana being unable to tap international capital markets to finance the deficit, the country's foreign exchange reserves have fallen to $7.7 billion (3.4 months of import cover) in June 2022, from $9.8 billion in January 2022, which will continue to limit the Bank of Ghana (BoG)'s ability to defend the exchange rate over the coming months”.
Meanwhile, the cedi is still going for ¢14.60 to a dollar this morning, November 17, 2022. It is also still selling at ¢16. 65 pesewas to one pound.
Latest Stories
-
Police hunt gunmen after fatal robbery attack on Mobile Money vendor
3 hours -
Speaker Alban Bagbin donates 16,584 uniforms, commissions two classrooms at Nadowli-Kaleo
3 hours -
Sweety Aborchie Writes: The Half-Built Staircase, Women, Power, Politics (Issue 4)
3 hours -
See the areas that will be affected by ECG’s planned maintenance on Tuesday, June 9
4 hours -
KMA orders immediate evacuation ahead of Santasi-Asokwa Interchange construction
4 hours -
I’ll be the first Ashanti Regional Chairman to become NPP National Chairman – Wontumi
4 hours -
I’m willing to sacrifice everything for NPP’s 2028 victory – Wontumi
4 hours -
I had to tell my children we’re renovating the house – Father reveals after court-ordered eviction displaces his family
4 hours -
GES releases Academic Intervention Fund for schools
4 hours -
Canada issues strict food import rules ahead of FIFA World Cup 2026
4 hours -
No one can campaign more than me – Wontumi declares readiness to unite and lead NPP
4 hours -
Permit audit step in right direction but not enough – Structural engineer
4 hours -
‘We want power, not English lessons’ – Chairman Wontumi
4 hours -
Kotoko appoint former Dutch goalkeeper Stanley Menzo as Technical Director
4 hours -
Wontumi says challenges have prepared him to lead NPP to victory
5 hours