- IMF cash further strengthens market liquidity as Ghana’s cedi strengthens again
Ghana’s cedi has tightened its grip on stability in the final weeks of the year, supported by stronger US dollar liquidity after fresh International Monetary Fund inflows hit the Bank of Ghana’s account. Market indications show the currency strengthening to about GH¢11.42/$, from roughly GH¢11.51/$ a week earlier, as hard-currency supply improved across the interbank market and key dealer channels.
The renewed firmness follows the IMF Executive Board’s completion of the fifth review of Ghana’s US$3bn, 39-month Extended Credit Facility, unlocking an immediate disbursement of about $365.48m, which hit the BoG account today.
In a foreign exchange market that has historically priced scarcity and uncertainty, the timing of the inflow is crucial: it enters at a point when seasonal import demand typically rises and when dealers and corporates closely monitor the availability of dollars for settlements.
A move of nine pesewas may appear modest, but it carries information. In Ghana, foreign exchange is not only a price printed on a screen; it is a signal of liquidity conditions, policy credibility, and market psychology. When the cedi strengthens during the peak import season, a period when demand for dollars usually increases, it suggests that supply is improving faster than demand and that the market is clearing with less strain than it has in recent years.
The story is as much about expectations as it is about volumes. The cedi tends to weaken sharply when businesses fear that dollars will become difficult to access and therefore rush to buy ahead of immediate needs. That front-loading behaviour, often reinforced by rumour and uncertainty, can create self-fulfilling pressure on the currency. By contrast, when banks can meet customer demand without scrambling, and when the market believes FX supply will remain available and relatively predictable, spreads tighten and hoarding incentives decline.
This is why IMF inflows often have an outsized impact relative to their headline size. They do not simply add dollars to the system; they strengthen the perception that the central bank’s capacity to manage liquidity has improved. In practical terms, an improved liquidity environment means dealers are more willing to quote tighter prices, corporates are less compelled to over-hedge, and the market becomes less vulnerable to sudden, sentiment-driven spikes.
Recent pricing patterns are consistent with that narrative. Bank of Ghana market data show the currency trading in the low-11 range in mid-December, with an interbank closing mid-rate of GH¢11.49/$ on December 19. A Reuters regional FX note earlier in December placed the cedi around 11.46 and warned that festive-season demand could still test the market. Yet the common thread is that the currency has oscillated within a comparatively narrow band and dealer pricing increasingly suggests that stability is becoming liquidity-led rather than scarcity-driven.
The IMF’s assessment of Ghana’s broader macro conditions offers additional support. The Fund points to stronger fundamentals through 2025: growth outperformed expectations through September, inflation returned within the central bank’s target range, and the external sector strengthened on the back of robust gold and cocoa exports. It also notes that international reserve accumulation exceeded programme targets and that the cedi appreciated over the review period. Such commentary, when paired with actual disbursements, tends to reinforce the market’s belief that policy anchors are holding.
Still, policy mechanics matter as much as macro headlines. The Fund highlights a “structured foreign exchange operations framework” aimed at smoothing excessive volatility while building buffers. In market terms, this is about predictability, clearer rules around interventions, steadier supply management, and fewer surprises. When official inflows are paired with a framework that signals discipline, the market’s base case shifts away from “dollars will disappear” toward “dollars will circulate”.
A firmer cedi also feeds into the inflation story. Even modest appreciation can lower import costs at the margin and reduce exchange-rate pass-through into prices, reinforcing disinflation and creating additional room for the Bank of Ghana to calibrate its easing cycle. But the warning is equally clear: currency stability can reverse quickly if fiscal discipline weakens, if inflation expectations re-accelerate, or if pent-up dollar demand returns in size.
For now, the cedi’s renewed strengthening is best read as a sign that the market is clearing more smoothly. Dollars are circulating more freely, spreads are less anxious, and pricing is increasingly shaped by supply rather than fear.
