GHANA WEATHER

Bank of Ghana reports GH₵10.4 billion loss for 2023

Bank of Ghana losses GHS 10.4bn in 2023 financial year  reserves remain strong despite donor support delays
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
WhatsApp
Pinterest
Facebook
Twitter
WhatsApp

By: Franklin ASARE-DONKOH

Tongues are waggling on the streets of Ghana as the country’s central bank is said to have incurred a staggering GH¢10.4 billion lost during the 2023 financial year.

The loss dashes hopes of a recovery in the balance sheet of the central bank after a record GH¢60.8 billion loss in 2022 resulting from an impairment of GH¢48.4 billion on government securities held by the bank.

This gargantuan lost posted by Bank of Ghana in a second year running was contained its 2023 Annual Report and Financial Statements.

According to the report the bank’s operating income increased to GH¢8.8 billion from 2022’s GH¢5.97 billion primarily from interest on the securities held by the bank. 

Total operating expenses were GH¢19.2 billion. The major operating expense was the cost of open market operations which is up almost five-fold to GH¢8.37 billion compared to 2022. The cost of open market operations (OMO) refers to the interest the Bank of Ghana pays on BoG bills issued to commercial banks. 

Also prominent was a GH¢4.3 bilion net exchange loss in foreign securities held by the bank. “Impairment losses on securities held was only GH¢595 million compared to the significant impairment charge in 2022.

The bank’s negative equity, which is a measure of how much liabilities the bank has over the assets it holds, increased to GH¢66.4 billion from the GH¢55 billion recorded in 2022,” Portions of the report stated 

Technically, a situation in which an entity’s liabilities exceeds its assets is known as insolvency. The BoG however stresses that it has policy solvency because its total income generated of GH¢8.8 billion is adequate to cover open market operations cost of GH¢8.37 billion.

The bank also announced a significant increase in gold holdings from GH¢2.6 billion in 2022 to GH¢14 billion in 2023 this is part of the Domestic Gold Purchase Programme (DGPP) which was launched in June 2021.

The policy involes the purchase of refined gold from mining firms and unrefined gold from local gold aggregators for onward refining. The gold reserves according to central bank stood at 571,339.46 ounces as at the end of 2023.

More Stories Here

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT