Commodity EXEleni announced the formation of a private-public investment consortium to finance the establishment of the Ghana Commodity Exchange (GCX).
Investment conglomerate partners include Ghana’s top financial institutions including, Data Bank Agrifund Manager Ltd, Ecobank Ghana Ltd, UT Bank Ghana Ltd, as well as IFC, 8 Miles Fund and eleni, with minority stakeholding by the Government of Ghana.
The consortium partners and the Government of Ghana have jointly signed a Letter of Intent with the aim of completing the investment process by April 2014 and launching the GCX over a 12 month period through early 2015.
A second consortium is also in formation for a large-scale investment in warehouse and logistics infrastructure and equipment in eight delivery sites around Ghana as a strategic eco-system partner to the GCX.
In his second State of the Nation Address delivered on February 25, President John Dramani Mahama announced that as part of efforts to create an orderly, transparent and efficient marketing system for Ghana’s key agricultural commodities to promote agricultural investment and enhance productivity, the Government had committed itself to the establishment of a Ghana Commodity Exchange (GCX) and associated Warehouse Receipt System (WRS).
It is expected that the establishment of the Ghana Commodity Exchange will position it as a West Africa regional hub for commodity trading activities.
The GCX will start with spot and future trading of primarily agricultural commodities, including maize, soybeans, paddy rice, palm oil, groundnuts, among others and will introduce other key agricultural and non-agricultural commodities in what is envisaged as a future regional trading platform.
“This exchange will undoubtedly have a transformative impact on our economy and we are very pleased to be backing it, stated Samuel Ashitey Adjei, MD of Ecobank Ghana Ltd. “Following on the success of the Ethiopian model, the African commodity exchange momentum is real.