THE Bank of Ghana (BoG) has announced plans to sell up to US$1 billion to the market and businesses in January 2026 as part of its Foreign Exchange Intermediation Programme.
The plan was contained in a wire communication to market operators.
According to the central bank, the auctions would be guided by its recently approved Foreign Exchange Operations Framework.
The Bank of Ghana said the move marked the operationalisation of measures under the FX Operations Framework and would be aligned with the objectives of its reserve accumulation programme.
It added that the FX intermediation programme was expected to help dampen volatility in the foreign exchange market when the need arises, particularly under the Domestic Gold Purchase Programme.
In November, the Bank of Ghana announced that its Board had approved a new Foreign Exchange Operations Framework to clarify the objectives and principles guiding its FX operations.
According to the regulator, the framework reinforces its commitment to macroeconomic stability under the inflation-targeting regime and a flexible, market-driven exchange rate system.
The framework is designed to achieve three main objectives: support reserve accumulation to provide buffers against external vulnerabilities; reduce excessive short-term volatility in the FX market without undermining exchange-rate flexibility; and intermediate FX flows in a market-neutral manner using inflows from the Gold Purchase Programme or export surrender requirements.
This means the Bank of Ghana will channel FX inflows into the market in an orderly, transparent and non-directional manner.
info@businessghana.com
