The Bank of Ghana (BoG) is emphasizing the importance of managing market expectations to sustain the cedi’s recent stability. Governor Dr. Johnson Pandit Asiama noted that the cedi’s strong performance in 2025 was driven by improved confidence and a stronger external position, but warned that going forward, sentiment and perceptions will play a bigger role.
The cedi has been remarkably stable in 2025, reflecting improved confidence and a strong external position. While recent pressures appear largely seasonal, expectations will now play a central role in sustaining stability,” Dr. Asiama said at the 128th Monetary Policy Committee meeting.
The BoG is shifting focus from structural factors to confidence, communication, and policy credibility to maintain currency stability. Ghana’s improved external buffers and current account performance have helped anchor the cedi, but the central bank is aware that negative expectations could quickly reverse gains.
Dr. Asiama stressed that managing expectations will be critical in 2026, and analysts say clear policy signals, disciplined fiscal management, and transparent communication are key to preventing speculative pressures. The BoG’s emphasis on expectations highlights its intent to guard credibility as a frontline defense for currency stability, especially under Ghana’s IMF-supported program

