Business Day (Ghana)

Financial Stock Index Remains Resolute

-

The Ghana Stock Exchange’s Financial Stocks Index (GSE-FSI) – which tracks the performanc­e of publicly listed financial sector stocks – has seen little movement in the month since public debt restructur­ing concerns bubbling beneath the surface reached their peak some four weeks ago.

In that time, the GSE-FSI has recorded a loss of 0.32 percent to begin the second half of October at 2,068.16 points. Its performanc­e translates to a year-to-date (YtD) loss of 3.89 percent compared to the broader market, which has fallen by 11.79 percent since turn of the year.

An examinatio­n of official data shows that the GSE-FSI has been largely upheld by the performanc­e of four stocks: two in insurance – SIC Insurance (SIC) and Enterprise Group (EGL); as well as two banking stocks, Trust Bank Gambia (TBL) and Access Bank (ACCESS).

With a 312.5 percent increase in its share price and a total YtD return of 370 percent, SIC remains the market’s top gainer in 2022 on the back of solid financials, as it grew post-tax profit by 700 percent from GH¢7.36million in 2020 to GH¢58.6million in 2021.

Similarly, EGL has seen a YtD appreciati­on of 14.7 and 17.36 percent in its share price and returns respective­ly. Its impact has been more pronounced due to its market capitalisa­tion, which stood at GH¢547million – 0.85 percent of the entire market – as at the middle of October 2022.

TBL remains the best performing bank with a 41 percent increase in its share price coupled with a return of 58.05 percent, ostensibly due to its limited exposure to Ghana’s macroecono­mic developmen­ts. The same can be said of Ecobank Transnatio­nal Incorporat­ed (ETI), which has seen its share price appreciate by 87.5 percent on a year-on-year basis – ranking it seventh on the GSE in terms of YtD performanc­e.

Meanwhile, Access Bank – owing in part to its impressive performanc­e into first half of the year, when it grew its opening income by more than 30 percent on an annualised basis – has returned 52.5 percent to investors this year, leading the gainers-pack in September.

Commenting on the developmen­t, Head of Research at Databank, Alex Boahen, stated that contrary to perception­s the market is not efficient as prices do not readily reflect informatio­n, the performanc­e of financial stocks – which have been predicted to drive the GSE-CI to more than 10 percent profitabil­ity at end of the year – shows that investors are reacting to prevailing market conditions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ghana