Africa-Press – Ghana. Promark Elite Ltd has launched the 2026 Digital Assets Summit Africa (DASA) in Accra, with a call on stakeholders within the digital assets space to partner and sponsor initiatives toward building the continent’s future economy.
Digital assets are valuable items stored electronically, ranging from personal files such as photos and documents to complex financial instruments including cryptocurrencies, NFTs and tokenised assets managed on blockchains.
Mr Peter Frimpong-Manso, Chief Executive Officer of Promark Elite Ltd, said the summit, slated for September 29–30, 2026, would be held on the theme: “From Policy to Prosperity: Scaling Digital Assets for Investment, Jobs, and Economic Growth in Africa.”
He said strategic partnerships with governments and regulatory bodies would ensure compliance, while collaboration with the financial sector and infrastructure partners would drive connectivity and digital adoption.
Highlighting the need for cooperation with blockchain, fintech and RegTech innovators, Mr Frimpong-Manso said stakeholders could collectively build the future of digital assets, mobilise investment ecosystems and promote research with academia and civil society.
The Summit is expected to attract more than 500 delegates, including policymakers, regulators, financial institutions, development partners, academia, media, youth and startup innovators, Development Finance Institutions, venture capitalists and institutional investors.
Reflecting on DASA 2025, he said the summit recorded strong continental participation from policymakers, global blockchain networks, fintechs and investors, focusing on unlocking Africa’s digital economy through innovation, tokenisation, CBDCs, regulation, cross-border payments and inclusion.
The 2026 edition, he said, would translate high-level digital asset policy into investment frameworks and promote the expansion of tokenisation of real-world assets to unlock liquidity while showcasing digital finance tools that create jobs and inclusion.
Key focus areas include scalable finance infrastructure and data centres, unlocking value in real-world assets, directing capital to African enterprises and creating entrepreneurship opportunities.
He said DASA’s vision was to position Africa as a globally competitive digital finance powerhouse aligned with Agenda 2063 and the Africa Continental Free Trade Area’s (AfCFTA) digital trade aspirations.
The summit also seeks to increase regulatory clarity across African markets, boost institutional investor interest and drive AfCFTA-led integration of payments and capital flows.
Mr Frimpong-Manso called on stakeholders to partner or sponsor DASA 2026 to engage policymakers, showcase innovation and drive investment.
He added that for the first three years of operations, the summit might be hosted in Ghana before moving to other parts of Africa and eventually to the global front.
Promark Elite Ltd, organisers of DASA, is an African-owned company committed to curating platforms that bring together thought leadership, innovation and strategic partnerships to advance sustainable growth.
Ms Catherine Nortey, the Head of Sales of WeWire, a Canadian licensed Money Services Business, and partners of Promark on DASA, said her organisation saw the need to partner DASA because they fully shared the idea of enlightening people on Digital Assets.
“Because we are also working to have direct connection between digital assets we want to help push the global economy forward. For this reason we partnered DASA,” she added.
She noted that WeWire existed in Ghana, Canada, UK, Dubai, Nigeria, US, Mauritius, and Cameroon.
WeWire facilitates fast, secure, and frictionless cross-border business payments.
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