The article is written by Delali Herman
Agbo, CEO of EcoCapital Investment Management Limited.
Introduction
Money market instruments
are the backbone of any well-functioning financial system. They provide
short-term funding to issuers, preserve capital for investors, and serve as the
benchmark for pricing risk across the economy. In Ghana, however, the money market
outside government Treasury bills remains weak, inconsistently applied, and
poorly enforced. This gap has distorted investment decisions, weakened
financial intermediation, and limited credit flow to productive sectors.
For Ghana’s capital market
to mature, it is imperative that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
and the Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE) enforce the proper issuance of money market
instruments by banks and corporates, rather than allowing substitutes such as
underpriced fixed deposits to dominate institutional portfolios.
Understanding the Money Market
The money market refers to
the segment of the financial market where short-term debt instruments typically
with maturities of up to one year are issued and traded. These instruments are
designed primarily for capital preservation, liquidity, and predictable
returns. Common examples include Treasury bills, commercial paper, fixed
deposit (certificates of deposit), bankers’ acceptances, and repurchase
agreements.
Among these instruments,
Treasury bills occupy a unique position. Backed by the sovereign, they are
considered risk-free and therefore form the base rate of the economy. All other
short-term instruments should logically be priced at a premium above Treasury
bills to compensate investors for additional credit and liquidity risk.
How Money Market Instruments Are Issued
In a properly regulated
environment, issuing a money market instrument follows a clear and disciplined
process. The issuer—whether a bank or a corporate entity must first meet
defined eligibility requirements, including regulatory licensing, adequate
capitalization, and sound governance structures. The instrument is then
structured with transparent terms covering tenor, pricing, repayment
obligations, and disclosure of risks.
Regulatory approval by the
SEC is a critical step. This ensures that offering documents meet disclosure
standards and that investors are adequately informed. Once approved, the
instrument can be issued to the investing public, distributed through licensed
intermediaries, and reported or listed through recognized market infrastructure
such as the GSE. Ongoing disclosure, settlement discipline, and timely
repayment complete the cycle.
This process is what
differentiates a true money market instrument from informal or bilateral
deposit arrangements.
The Current Distortion in Ghana’s Market
Despite existing
regulatory frameworks, banks in Ghana have largely avoided issuing formal money
market instruments. Instead, they rely heavily on fixed deposits, many of which
are priced below prevailing Treasury bill rates. Institutional investors particularly
pension funds continue to place significant funds in these deposits even though
they carry higher risk than government securities.
The result is a structural
distortion. Banks mobilize cheap deposits and reinvest them in Treasury bills,
earning risk-free arbitrage profits. Meanwhile, small and medium-sized
enterprises, manufacturers, agribusinesses, and infrastructure projects struggle
to access financing. Capital circulates within the financial system without
reaching the productive economy.
Why Enforcement by SEC and GSE Is Critical
The SEC and GSE play a
central role in restoring balance to the system. Enforcing the issuance of
proper money market instruments would introduce transparency, standardization,
and accountability into short-term funding markets. Unlike fixed deposits, money
market instruments require clear disclosure, defined pricing mechanisms, and
regulatory oversight, which collectively protect investors and improve market
confidence.
Enforcement would also
restore rational risk pricing. When banks and corporates are required to issue
money market instruments, they must price them above Treasury bills to attract
investors. This eliminates the incentive for easy arbitrage and forces issuers
to deploy funds into productive lending to maintain profitability.
More broadly, a vibrant
money market deepens the capital market by improving price discovery, creating
a short-term yield curve, and strengthening monetary policy transmission.
The Importance of Clear Money Market
Guidelines
Clear and consistently
enforced guidelines for money market issuance benefit both regulators and
market participants. For investors, they reduce uncertainty and mis-selling
while improving comparability across instruments. For issuers, they provide a
predictable framework for accessing short-term funding. For regulators, they
enhance oversight of systemic risk and funding flows.
Importantly, clear
guidelines ensure that pension and institutional investment rules are applied
in spirit rather than form. When regulations require allocation to bank money
market instruments, those instruments must actually exist in a structured, regulated
format—not be substituted with underpriced deposits.
Impact on Fund Managers’ Asset Allocation
Decisions
A properly functioning
money market would significantly improve fund managers’ investment decisions.
With access to transparent, diversified short-term instruments, fund managers
can manage liquidity more efficiently, reduce excessive concentration in government
securities, and improve risk-adjusted returns.
Money market instruments
also allow better matching of short-term liabilities without forcing premature
liquidation of long-term assets. Ultimately, this strengthens fiduciary
outcomes for pension contributors and other investors.
Broader Economic Implications
The development of a
genuine money market has far-reaching implications for the economy. When banks
can no longer rely on arbitrage between deposits and government securities,
they are compelled to lend to SMEs and real-sector projects. This stimulates job
creation, boosts productivity, and accelerates economic growth. Financial
intermediation improves, and capital begins to flow where it is most needed.
Conclusion
Money market instruments
are not optional financial products; they are essential infrastructure for a
balanced and efficient financial system. Without firm enforcement by the SEC
and the GSE, Ghana’s market will remain skewed toward government borrowing and
passive banking profits.
By enforcing proper money
market issuance, regulators can restore pricing discipline, improve fund
managers’ asset selection, protect investors, and redirect capital toward
productive economic activity. A transparent and well-regulated money market is
not merely a financial reform rather it is a national development imperative.
Then again, the development
and enforcement of a transparent money market framework is critical to
restoring balance in Ghana’s financial system and ensuring that capital flows
to sectors that drive real economic growth. Investors, pension trustees, and
fund managers must also take an active interest in understanding how money
market instruments work, how they should be priced, and how they fit into sound
portfolio construction. Members of the investing public who require detailed,
professional guidance on money market instruments, portfolio allocation, and
regulated investment options are encouraged to contact EcoCapital Investment
Management Limited for further information and advisory support. As a licensed
investment manager with deep expertise in Ghana’s capital markets, EcoCapital
remains committed to promoting informed investing and supporting the long-term
growth of the economy.

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