04/06/2026
The Deputy Director-General, Operations of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Mr. Mensah Thompson, has outlined the Commission’s plans to establish a regulatory framework for commodity-backed digital assets as part of efforts to deepen Ghana’s capital market and expand access to investment opportunities.
Mr. Thompson made the remarks during a panel discussion on “The Future of Commodity-Backed Financing in Ghana: Strengthening Financial Stability, Trust, and Systemic Resilience” at The Money Summit 2026, organised by Business and Financial Times in Accra.
Speaking on the potential of asset tokenisation, he explained that technologies such as blockchain could enable assets including gold, real estate and other commodities to be digitally fractionalised, allowing broader participation by investors while creating new avenues for capital formation.
“The biggest conversation is custody. We must ensure that the underlying assets are properly safeguarded, independently verified and supported by strong systems that preserve trust and market integrity,” Mr. Thompson stated.
He further indicated that the SEC, working closely with the Bank of Ghana, GoldBod and other stakeholders, is developing regulatory frameworks to govern the issuance, custody and trading of tokenised assets, with strong safeguards for investor protection, transparency and financial stability.
The proposed framework is expected to support innovative financing models, deepen Ghana’s capital market and expand access to capital for businesses and investors.