By Alex Ababio
Accra, Ghana — Ghana’s national currency, the Ghanaian cedi, is once again under pressure as the economy enters the typical first-quarter foreign exchange cycle — a period when importers rush for hard currency to replenish stocks, sending demand for dollars higher and straining local currency stability.
Databank Research’s latest fortnightly report reveals that this seasonal FX tension has produced a mixed set of signals in currency markets: while the cedi weakened on the interbank market, it showed surprising firmness in retail trading.
“Heightened first-quarter foreign exchange demand is beginning to weigh on the currency,” the report noted, capturing a microcosm of macroeconomic stress building in 2026.
Currency Breakdown: Interbank Weakness vs. Retail Stability
According to Databank, between late January and early February:
In the interbank market, the cedi lost roughly 0.9% of its value against the US dollar, closing around GHS 10.98 to the dollar at the mid-rate.
The local unit also depreciated against the British pound and the euro, with losses of about 1.31% and 1.08%, respectively.
However, the currency performed differently in daily retail FX markets:
At exchange bureaus, the cedi strengthened against the dollar by up to 1.71%, ending trade nearer GHS 11.70 per USD.
That divergence between official and headline market quotes reflects liquidity and segmentation dynamics: banks and forex dealers adjust quotes differently depending on flow conditions, while everyday bureau rates respond more immediately to public expectations.
Market watchers describe this performance as “three-steps-forward, two-steps-back” — symptomatic of an economy still grappling with the after-effects of broad structural adjustments.
Importers in Motion: The FX Pressure Cooker
Economists and trade sources confirm a familiar seasonal script: as the calendar flips into the first quarter, companies begin importing inventory to cater for the year ahead, spiking demand for dollars.
“Dollar demand has picked up as businesses move to restock for the year,” market insiders told MyJoyOnline, highlighting the mechanics behind the recent currency weakness.
This import-driven demand typically places upward pressure on the cedi, particularly when offsetting FX supply — from exports, remittances, or central bank intervention — remains thin. Analysts at Databank caution that such dynamics “may keep mild pressure on the currency in the near term.”
Bank of Ghana: Buffers, Policies, and Market Sentiment
Amid these seasonal headwinds, the Bank of Ghana (BoG) insists that external buffers remain supportive and that strategic interventions could mitigate sharp currency swings.
Over 2024–2025, Ghana’s external position saw major shifts:
Gold exports skyrocketed, generating an estimated US$20 billion in earnings — nearly double the year before — and anchoring foreign exchange inflows that help fund imports.
International reserves grew significantly, reported at approximately US$13.8 billion by end-December 2025, equivalent to around 5.7 months of import cover — a level above historic norms.
The Ghana Gold Board (GoldBod) was operationalised to formalise illicit gold flows and strengthen reserve accumulation. BoG Governor Dr. Johnson Asiama has repeatedly touted the programme as critical to “reshaping how Ghana captures value from its gold resources while strengthening external buffers.”
Still, the reserve strategy isn’t without controversy. Independent economists estimate cumulative losses exceeding GH¢7 billion related to gold purchase programmes, even as they concede the interventions helped moderate FX pressures.
In addition, the Monetary Policy Committee recently lowered the policy rate to 15.5%, reflecting easing inflation (down to 3.8% in January 2026, the lowest since a 2021 rebasing) and shifting macro priorities.
Some analysts interpret this rate cut as a broader pivot toward stimulating domestic demand, even as FX markets remain jittery.
Sub-Regional and Global Context
Ghana’s currency situation contrasts with developments across the region:
Nigeria’s naira, for example, strengthened by nearly 6% in recent periods, buoyed by central bank interventions and improved inflows.
Sub-Saharan Africa’s broader foreign exchange environment remains mixed, with central banks deploying varying tactics to guard reserves against commodity price swings and global risk cycles.
Despite these differences, forecasters like Fitch Solutions predict the cedi will still weaken by an estimated 8% against the dollar in 2026, albeit less than long-term historic averages, due to supportive commodity prices and reserve cushions.
Implications for Business and Investors
For import-dependent businesses, heightened FX demand in the early year means tighter liquidity management and cautious hedging strategies. Currency volatility affects everything from pricing to working capital needs.
Financial sector analysts caution:
“Market participants should expect continued importer-driven FX demand, and central bank interventions aiming to smooth volatility — but these pressures may persist through Q1 unless offset by stronger inflows.”
Corporate treasurers, foreign investors, and exporters are watching both the Bank of Ghana’s policy signals and the durability of FX inflows linked to gold, cocoa, services, and remittances — variables that could define exchange rate sustainability through mid-2026.
Looking Ahead: Expectations and Risks
Databank’s short-term forecast pegs the USD/GHS exchange rate to trade within the GHS 10.95–11.10 range in the coming weeks.
Yet risks abound:
Renewed seasonal dollar demand could breach this corridor if export receipts or remittances soften unexpectedly.
Policy shifts around forex intermediation — including planned BoG FX sales — could temporarily tighten local dollar availability.
Global shocks or shifts in capital flows might stress liquidity at a time when the fiscal impulse is modestly expansionary.
Economists also highlight Ghana’s dependence on a narrow set of export commodities, meaning any downturn in gold or cocoa prices could swiftly erode current account balances and strain the cedi anew.
Conclusion: Crossroads of Seasonal Economics and Structural Policy
The Ghanaian cedi’s mixed performance in early 2026 encapsulates a broader economic balancing act — one where seasonal demand pressures collide with structural policy reforms, external reserve dynamics, and evolving monetary strategies.
While fundamentals such as international reserves and commodity export inflows provide a buffer, seasonal FX demand and broader macroeconomic shifts will continue setting the backdrop for currency volatility — with significant implications for companies, consumers, and investors alike.
As one currency strategist put it:
“The question isn’t whether the cedi will fluctuate — it’s how strongly shocks travel through Ghana’s FX system and how swiftly policy and markets adjust.”

