Smart Capital, Sustainable Returns

We engineer infrastructure as a dual-purpose vehicle: to generate superior financial returns and to structurally modernize Ghana's economy, creating a reliable gateway for strategic, sustainable capital into Africa.

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Core Strengths

The Ghana Advantage: Our Regional Command Center

Anchored in Ghana, we deploy deep local expertise to de-risk infrastructure investments and catalyze sustainable growth across Sub-Saharan Africa.

Maximizing ROI Through
Vertical Integration

We deliver end-to-end, high-return infrastructure projects across Sub-Saharan Africa, managing the full value chain from origination to execution.

Sustainable and Impact-Driven Mandate

We invest in high-impact, sustainable infrastructure that delivers strong financial returns while driving social, environmental, and economic growth across Sub-Saharan Africa.

Story Impact

Story Impact

Story Impact

Story Impact

Learn More

Africa is an opportunity, and Ghana is the gateway that protects your capital. At TFI Group, we build the fortress around your investment, ensuring your focus remains on growth, not volatility.

2002

Ten Forward International Japan Limited is esta­blished

2003?

The company pivots its successful products to focus on West African resources.

2004

The company acquires the exclusive Japan license for the ISOMAX Terra-Sol Energy Building Technology, a German building system aimed at reducing maintenance costs.

2007?

Ten Forward International Group is established in Accra, Ghana, to serve as the base for infrastructure development and investment across Sub-Saharan African economies.

2010?

The group establishes Volta Resources Limited, a minerals exploration and mining company in Ghana.

Q4 2022?

TFI Power Company begins implementing a major power project.

Q4 2022 (Approximate)

The initial phase of the 82 MW solar power plant is commissioned for operation.

TFI Group Timeline

TFI Group is focused on infrastructure developments and investments across Sub-Saharan Africa.

Capabilities

We don’t chase global trends; we build the African infrastructure that sets them. The future of strategic capital is here, and we are holding the blueprint.

Nana Kofi Sarfo Prempeh

Founder/Director

We face neither East nor West; we face forward.

Kwame Nkrumah

Ghana's first President, 1960-1966.

In the economy, it is the community, in its most natural and extended form, that must constitute the effective unit of production and consumption.

Léopold Sédar Senghor

Senegal's first President, 1960-1980.

We welcome foreign investment, but it must be investment that fits into the over-all national plan for industrialization and agricultural development.

Kwame Nkrumah

Ghana's first President, 1960-1966.

The level of civilization of a people is measured by the level of development of its productive forces.

Amílcar Cabral

Intellectual, Agronomist and Revolutionary,
Guinea-Bissau/Cape Verde

The core of the matter is that the growth of the modern sector depends upon the use of capital.

Sir W. Arthur Lewis

Saint Lucian/Ghana Economist,
Awarded the 1979 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences.

We must study and assimilate modern science and technology, but not to the point of forgetting that we, too, have a scientific and technological heritage.

Cheikh Anta Diop

Senegalese historian, anthropologist,
physicist, and politician.
Team

Management Team

Nana Kofi Sarfo Prempeh

Founder/Board Member

Stephen Adu

Board Member

Elom Fugar

Board Member

Daniel Levy

Executive Director

Natasha Swords

Investor Relations

Growth in Ghana

As of September 2025, the three major ratings agencies upgraded Ghana, Fitch B-, S&P B-/B, and Moodys Caa1, all with a positive bias. The economy expanded by 6.3% in the first half of 2025, Inflation declined from 23.8% at the end of 2024 to 8% in October 2025. In response, the Central Bank reduced the monetary policy rate by 650 basis to 21.5%, still high but declining at a high velocity. Debt to GDP ratio declined from 68.9% to 45% y/y. The treasury yield curve has collapsed by an average yield of 1692 basis y/y. Ghana's Eurobond prices have risen 17% year to date, and yields have declined by 300 basis. As of September 2025, gross international reserves had risen to US$11.4 billion or 5 months of import cover. Year to date, the currency appreciated 34%, 28% and 20.5% against the US Dollar, British Pound, and Euro respectively.

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