- Moody’s revises Ghana outlook to positive as domestic financing improves
Moody’s has revised Ghana’s outlook to positive from stable, offering a fresh vote of confidence in the country’s improving domestic financing conditions even as it kept the sovereign’s long-term rating unchanged. The move signals that, in the agency’s view, Ghana’s funding position is becoming less fragile, though far from fully repaired.
The decision comes as Ghana continues to emerge from what many describe as its most severe economic crisis in decades. Moody’s said the outlook change was driven by an easing in domestic financing pressures, aided by lower borrowing costs, monetary easing, and an improved fiscal position. It added that the resumption of domestic bond issuance, if sustained, should gradually reduce rollover risk.
That judgement matters because rollover risk has been one of the central fault lines in Ghana’s post-default recovery story. The country suspended new domestic bond issuance in 2023 after its debt default, effectively shutting off part of its normal funding channel. According to Reuters, Ghana lifted those restrictions in March 2026 and went on to issue its first seven-year domestic bond in April, marking an important step in rebuilding confidence in the local debt market.
That balance in Moody’s assessment captures Ghana’s present reality: conditions have improved and Ghana may be stabilising, but it is still doing so in a world of volatile oil prices, fragile external conditions, and lingering debt sensitivities. This inference is based on Moody’s outlook revision alongside its decision to hold the rating at Caa1.
A positive outlook can help reinforce the narrative that the country is moving back towards a more normal financing environment, particularly if fiscal consolidation holds and domestic debt-market access continues to deepen. It also strengthens the government’s argument that the macroeconomic repair process is beginning to gain traction. The Finance Minister Cassiel Ato Forson, told parliament last November that Ghana was poised for sustained growth in 2026.
For investors, the message is more measured. Moody’s is effectively saying that Ghana’s direction of travel has improved, especially on the domestic financing side, and the country has won a little more confidence.
