Business News of Monday, 12 November 2018

Source: thebftonline.com

Capitalisation needless if cedi continues to depreciate - Dr. Atuahene

Dr. Richmond Akwasi Atuahene, Banking analyst Dr. Richmond Akwasi Atuahene, Banking analyst

The 2019 budget must spell out the strategy to address the cedi’s depreciation, otherwise, the banks’ recapitalisation exercise will eventually become pointless, Dr. Richmond Akwasi Atuahene; a banking analyst has said.

“For the banks, they will be interested in stability of the currency. Over the past decade, the cedi has depreciated by 233 percent. In December 2009, it was GHC1.43 to US$1; today it is close to GHC5. So, there is a correlation between the banks’ capitalisation and depreciation of the currency.

“So, the point we are making is that, to make the banks viable, government should tell us what strategy it is putting in place to address the local currency’s persistent depreciation. Government must come out with short-term, medium-term and long-term approaches to addressing the situation,” he told the B&FT in an interview.

The Bank of Ghana has set a deadline of December 31, 2018 for commercial banks in the country to raise their minimum capital to GHC400million; an amount some banks are struggling to raise.

According to Dr. Atuahene, if government does not immediately employ a long-term solution to address the currency’s depreciation, banks’ capital will shrink – thereby creating the need for another recapitalisation programme in the not-too-distant future.

“Until we have enough foreign currency, the cedi will not be stable. And once the cedi is not stable, it makes capital of the banks lose its value – because, once there is a persistent depreciation, you destroy the currency. So, there is need for us to have a stable currency to support the banks’ capital.



“If the currency issue is not addressed, in three or four years’ time the banks recapitalisation will be rendered useless. There is a lot of empirical literature to back this. Any country that does not have a stable currency will always ask for recapitalisation, but in less than no time it devalues – making the capitalisation useless,” he said.

He further stated that one main strategy to make the currency stable is to have an export-driven economy; something he says the country has competitive advantage over, given its abundant natural resources which can be processed and exported.

The banking industry, however, is not the only sector suffering from the effects of cedi depreciation. The Ghana Union of Traders Associations (GUTA) has also expressed worry about the weakening local currency, as it argues its members have seen their capital and gains shrink in the past few months.

The Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, will present the 2019 budget on November 15, 2018. He has hinted that the budget will provide information on the issuance of a US$50billion century bond, which he believes will eventually stabilise the cedi and possibly strengthen it.