Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Narrow base cools economic impact of hot Ghana bourse

By Matthew Mpoke Bigg and Kwasi Kpodo

ACCRA (Reuters) - Ghana's bourse is up more than 50 percent so far this year, but the reluctance of key companies to list in the West African market may be blunting its economic impact.

The country is the world's second biggest cocoa producer and the continent's number two gold miner after South Africa. It began producing oil in 2010 and investors, accordingly, have paid increasing attention.

But only 34 companies are listed on the primary market and that lack of participation deprives firms of access to capital that could generate growth, employment and tax revenue.

At the same time, few small- and medium-sized companies list because they are wary of the scrutiny it would entail, regulators and bourse authorities said in interviews.

"We have been successful to some extent but we still have not become very visible in the development of the economy. To be able to do that we need to get more companies raising money using the capital market," said Ekow Afedzie, deputy managing director of the Ghana Stock Exchange.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), for example, wants to see high-profile companies such as Coca Cola, Vodafone and oil company Kosmos Energy list locally as well as the national Agricultural Development Bank (ADB)

But it is the bond market that, to date, is seen as a more attractive source of capital for some companies, along with private sources of finance.

Afedzie said commitment by policy makers would drive the stock market, arguing that government was still reluctant to release its stake in major companies such as the ADB, which has delayed plans to list.

SEC Director General Adu Antwi, meanwhile, argues that government of President John Mahama should institute a local content policy under which all companies operating in certain sectors would be required to list some of their shares.

LARGE GAINS

The bourse's most prominent companies include one of Africa's largest miners, AngloGold Ashanti, Tullow Oil Ghana, which operates the Jubilee oil field and Pan-African lender Ecobank.

So Ghana's share market has been doing very well. It yielded returns in 2012 of 23.8 percent led by the financial sector.

So far in 2013, the exchange is up 52.6 percent, spurred by a boom in Ghana's economy which enjoyed a rise in GDP to 15 percent in 2011 after oil came onstream, making it Africa's fastest growing.

But a comparison with other indexes in the continent shows s the relative lack of size of the exchange.

Ghana's stock value represented 0.3 percent of GDP in 2011 behind Kenya at 2.6 percent, Nigeria 1.7 percent, and Mauritius' 4.6 percent but ahead of Tanzania and Uganda both at 0.1 percent, according to World Bank figures.

"There is always the effort to get more companies to list but we haven't succeeded so far. Some people don't want to list. They don't want their books to be made open," said Emmanuel Dankwa, board chairman of Ghana's SEC.

Still, less than one percent of the economic value of the three main sectors of Ghana's economy - agriculture, industry and services - are captured on the bourse, according to government data.

As a result of the lack of participation, domestic banks are looking beyond the exchange to absorb capital.

Accra-based Databank said it invested in a string of other African capital markets for its private equity fund, said Daniel Tetteh, an executive director at Databank, adding that the problem for investors was widespread.

"The main challenge for the foreigners is that our market is small. The store is sweet but some of them (fund managers) are managing huge amounts of money," Tetteh said in an interview.

"You can't commit just a small portion to a market because they don't make a significant impact on your portfolio."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/narrow-cools-economic-impact-hot-ghana-bourse-075958728.html

nascar daytona 2012 kasey kahne angelina jolie right leg saving face academy award winners best picture 2012 oscar winners

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.