Ghana’s capital market continues to show remarkable resilience and upward momentum despite persistent macroeconomic pressures, according to fresh data from the Bank of Ghana’s November 2025 Summary of Economic and Financial Data.
Both the GSE Composite Index and the GSE Financial Stock Index recorded substantial gains, supported by rising investor confidence and impressive market valuations.
The Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE) Composite Index closed October 2025 at 8,385.4 points, up sharply from 4,888.5 points in December 2024. This represents a dramatic 71.5% year-to-date growth, signalling one of the strongest annual performances in recent years.
Although the pace of monthly gains has moderated since the extraordinary spikes seen in June and July—where monthly increases hit 743.8 and 338.1 points respectively—the market’s cumulative growth remains robust. The October gain of 217.0 points reflects continued investor interest, especially in high-performing non-financial stocks.
Market capitalization also surged, rising from GHS 111.4 billion in December 2024 to GHS 166.5 billion in October 2025. This represents a 49.6% increase year-to-date, showing that valuations are rising in line with demand and improved corporate earnings.
Financial Stocks Maintain Strong Momentum
The GSE Financial Stock Index experienced significant growth as banking sector confidence improved following sustained monetary tightening and balance-sheet strengthening. The index rose from 2,380.8 points in December 2024 to 4,193.9 points in October 2025, marking an impressive 76.2% year-to-date increase.
Monthly performance also reflected renewed bullish sentiment, with October alone posting a remarkable 394.6-point increase, one of the highest recorded in 2025.
The market capitalization of financial stocks grew accordingly, rising from GHS 26.3 billion in December 2024 to GHS 53.6 billion in October 2025—a 104% year-to-date expansion, signalling a strong revival in the financial services sector.
Analysts attribute this surge to improving profitability in major banks, declining non-performing loan ratios, and investor expectations of monetary policy easing in early 2026.
Fixed Income Market Remains Steady Despite Rate Pressures
While the equity market surged, the Ghana Fixed Income Market (GFIM) showed mixed performance due to ongoing interest rate adjustments and elevated government borrowing.
Volume traded increased from 16.4 billion GHS in October 2024 to 29.1 billion GHS in October 2025, reflecting strong appetite for government securities and short-term papers.
Value traded also rose steadily to 25.9 billion GHS, up significantly from 17.0 billion GHS in December 2024.
The number of trades, however, fluctuated sharply. After peaking at 50.1 thousand trades in January, activity fell to 11.9 thousand by September before rebounding slightly to 15.5 thousand in October. This volatility reflects investor repositioning in response to changing yields.
The strong trading volumes mirror high government issuance to manage liquidity and refinance maturing debts amid fiscal consolidation efforts.
Investor Confidence on a Strong Upward Trajectory
The latest capital market data indicates a broad recovery across Ghana’s financial landscape. Equities continue to outperform due to strong corporate earnings, improved macroeconomic conditions, and renewed foreign investor participation. At the same time, fixed income activity remains robust, supported by attractive yields and active primary market issuance.
Market watchers expect both segments to remain vibrant into 2026 as inflation slows, monetary policy stabilises, and investor sentiment strengthens ahead of the new fiscal year.
The Bank of Ghana’s latest data underscores one key reality: Ghana’s capital market is bouncing back strongly—defying earlier economic turbulence and positioning itself for sustained growth in 2026.
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