Ghana Reference rate rises to 10.59% in July, ending months of decline

The Ghana Reference Rate (GRR) has climbed to 10.59 percent for July 2026, marking its first increase in several months and signalling a possible shift in lending conditions across the country's banking sector.

The Ghana Association of Banks (GAB) announced that the new benchmark rate takes effect from July 1, 2026, up from 10.02 percent in June. The increase ends a sustained downward trend that had fuelled expectations of lower borrowing costs for businesses and consumers.

The Ghana Reference Rate serves as the principal benchmark for pricing loans by commercial banks. It is determined using a formula that incorporates the Monetary Policy Rate, Treasury bill yields and the interbank lending rate.

The latest adjustment suggests that the recent easing in Ghana's interest rate environment may be slowing, with potential implications for the pace at which banks reduce lending rates.

Despite the increase, the July benchmark remains well below the levels recorded earlier this year, indicating that financing conditions are still considerably more favourable than they were at the beginning of 2026.

The reference rate declined consistently over the past few months, dropping from 14.58 percent in February to 11.71 percent in March, 10.06 percent in April, 10.03 percent in May and 10.02 percent in June. The downward trend reflected improving macroeconomic conditions, including easing inflation, greater exchange rate stability and softer money market conditions.

Market analysts believe the July increase is unlikely to trigger an immediate rise in lending rates. However, they caution that it could temper expectations of rapid credit easing as banks continue to consider funding costs, credit risk and prevailing market conditions when pricing loans.

For businesses and prospective borrowers, the latest Ghana Reference Rate suggests that although access to credit remains more favourable than it was earlier in the year, the journey toward lower borrowing costs may not be entirely smooth.

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