News

Stocks rally as finance minister vows professional leadership at BSEC
24 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

The Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) extended its rally for a fourth consecutive session today (23 May), as investor confidence strengthened following Finance and Planning Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury's pledge to ensure professional and skilled leadership at key financial institutions.

Speaking at a policy symposium in the capital, Finance and Planning Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury announced a complete ban on political appointments in the financial sector, including the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC).

He said the government would appoint only professional and competent individuals to key regulatory positions in a bid to restore investor confidence and strengthen corporate governance.

The announcement boosted market sentiment, triggering a broad-based rally and adding significantly to market capitalisation, according to market insiders.

The benchmark DSEX index rose 64 points, or 1.22%, to close at 5,328. Over the past four trading sessions, the index has gained a cumulative 125 points.

The blue-chip DS30 index also advanced strongly, climbing 34 points to finish at 2,030.

Market breadth remained positive, with 217 issues advancing, 117 declining, and 60 remaining unchanged.

Total market capitalisation at the premier bourse increased by Tk5,400 crore in a single day, while turnover rose 4% to Tk902 crore.

The minister also said the government would prioritise improving auditing standards and financial disclosure requirements to rebuild market credibility and attract foreign institutional investors.

According to EBL Securities' daily market review, the market opened strongly from the first trading bell, supported by aggressive buying in large-cap banking and telecom stocks.

The brokerage house said expectations of meaningful reforms, early signs of domestic macroeconomic stabilisation, and easing geopolitical tensions around the Strait of Hormuz – which had earlier dampened investor risk appetite – helped sustain the rally ahead of the Eid holidays.

Banking and telecom stocks led the gains, with major index contributors including BRAC Bank, Grameenphone, Robi Axiata, Square Pharmaceuticals, and City Bank.

Sector-wise, engineering stocks dominated turnover, accounting for 15.7% of total transactions, followed by pharmaceuticals at 15.4% and general insurance at 12.9%.

The cement sector posted the highest gain, rising 3.3%, followed by services at 2.8% and banking at 2.1%. The information technology sector was the only major laggard, declining 1.9%.

Several loss-making companies also featured among the day's top gainers, indicating renewed speculative activity among some investors. Meghna Cement Mills topped the gainers' list with a 9.86% rise, followed by Emerald Oil Industries, Aramit Cement, Regent Textile Mills, and Sena Insurance.

On the losing side, Daffodil Computers shed 9.36%, followed by Premier Leasing & Finance, Apex Spinning & Knitting Mills, and CAPM BDBL Mutual Fund 01.

In terms of liquidity, Asiatic Laboratories emerged as the most traded stock, followed by NCC Bank, RD Food, Mir Akhter Hossain, and Jamuna Bank.

The upbeat mood also spilled over to the Chittagong Stock Exchange (CSE), where key indices posted sharp gains. The Selective Categories' Index (CSCX) rose 81 points to 9,131, while the All Share Price Index (CASPI) gained 138 points to close at 14,838.

However, turnover at the port city bourse fell 20% to Tk24 crore.

ADB flags Bangladesh debt pressures before LDC graduation
24 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

Bangladesh’s public debt rose to around 41 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in fiscal year 2024-25, with rising domestic borrowing and weak revenue mobilisation increasing fiscal pressure ahead of the country’s graduation from least developed country (LDC) status in 2026, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said.


In a report titled Bangladesh at a Crossroads of Reforms, released earlier this month, the Manila-based lender said Bangladesh faces a moderate risk of both external and overall debt distress, with limited capacity to absorb shocks in the near term.
The ADB said the risks stem from structural weaknesses rather than a sharp deterioration in headline debt indicators.
Bangladesh’s tax-to-GDP ratio remains among the lowest among lower-middle-income economies, while persistent weaknesses in fiscal governance, public expenditure management and debt administration continue to undermine economic stability, the report said.
The lender warned that Bangladesh’s graduation from LDC status in November 2026 would gradually reduce access to concessional financing and trade support measures, increasing the need for stronger domestic revenue mobilisation and improved fiscal governance.

Domestic debt accounted for 55.6 percent of the country’s public and publicly guaranteed debt stock in FY25, increasing rollover and debt-servicing pressures amid weak revenue collection and a bank-dominated investor base. External debt made up the remaining 44.4 percent.

The report said external debt remained largely concessional and below solvency thresholds, although risks have increased following downward revisions to export data for FY2023 and FY2024.


Rising domestic borrowing is also increasing debt service-to-revenue pressures and strengthening sovereign-bank linkages, amplifying crowding-out risks for private sector credit and contingent liabilities, the ADB said.

Stress tests showed that disaster-related shocks pose the biggest long-term threat to Bangladesh’s debt sustainability.
Bangladesh’s tax-to-GDP ratio stood at 7.5 percent, constrained by weak compliance systems, fragmented administration and heavy reliance on manual processes.

Although reforms such as the Income Tax Act 2023 and expanded digital tax services have been introduced, the ADB said tax administration still relies heavily on manual systems and fragmented databases. Revenue collection often falls more than 15 percent short of targets because of unrealistic projections and institutional weaknesses.

The report also highlighted weaknesses in debt management systems and warned that state-owned enterprises are creating additional fiscal risks as liabilities and government guarantees continue to rise.

The lender said these vulnerabilities are increasing Bangladesh’s overall fiscal risk exposure at a critical stage of its economic transition.

ADP spending rate ticks up
24 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

The rate of development spending improved marginally in the first ten months of the current fiscal year 2025-26, but the amount of money spent during the period was actually lower compared to a year earlier.

Spending under the Annual Development Programmes (ADP) stood at Tk 86,516 crore during the July-April period, or 41.41 percent of the total revised allocation, according to data released yesterday by the Implementation Monitoring and Evaluation Division (IMED). In April alone, spending rose 5.22 percent.

The ten-month execution rate is slightly higher than the 41.31 percent achieved during the same period of FY25 but is Tk 6,908 crore less in absolute terms.

The revised ADP allocation for FY25 stood at Tk 2.16 lakh crore, while it was Tk 2.08 lakh crore for FY26.

The marginal uptick in the execution rate does little to reverse a multi-year slide in budget implementation.

The 10-month ADP execution rate stood at 49.26 percent in FY24, 50.33 percent in FY23, and 54.57 percent in FY22.

In FY25, the full-year development spending hit a historic low, with only 68 percent of the revised ADP implemented, the weakest performance since FY1976-77.

The decline in the actual money spent reflects the disruption of a mid-year political transition following the uprising, which prompted several project directors and contractors to step away from their positions. Economic uncertainty compounded the slowdown.

The Health Services Division has performed the worst, implementing only 22.15 percent of its July–April target despite rising concerns over healthcare access.

With two months left in the fiscal year, analysts say Bangladesh is on course for another year of weak ADP execution.

The shortfall may also dent revenue collection by the National Board of Revenue, which collects advance income tax and VAT from implementing agencies. However, lower execution could also help contain the budget deficit and reduce government borrowing from the banking sector.

Among top-allocated ministries, the Ministry of Science and Technology’s execution rate stands at 80 percent, driven largely by the Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant expenditures.

The Energy and Mineral Resources Division follows at 68 percent, and the Ministry of Agriculture at 62 percent.

Meanwhile, despite the sluggish implementation trend, the new BNP-led government has announced an ambitious development budget of Tk 3 lakh crore for the upcoming FY27.

Tk 60,000cr stimulus for private sector
24 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

Bangladesh Bank yesterday announced a Tk 60,000 crore stimulus package aimed at reviving the struggling private sector amid slowing growth and persistent inflation concerns.

Announcing the package at a press briefing at the central bank headquarters, BB Governor Md Mostaqur Rahman said the initiative was designed to address industrial disruption and financial sector vulnerabilities while supporting employment generation.

The package has two main components.

The first is a Tk 41,000 crore refinancing fund to be mobilised from banks with surplus liquidity through long-term deposits of at least three years at a 10 percent interest rate. Under the arrangement, Bangladesh Bank will provide refinance at 4 percent interest, while the government will subsidise the remaining 6 percent.

The second component is a Tk 19,000 crore fund sourced directly from the central bank’s own resources with a government guarantee.

Under the overall scheme, large borrowers will be able to access loans at around 7 percent interest, while smaller loans may carry slightly higher rates because of administrative and operational costs. Detailed implementation guidelines will be issued through upcoming circulars, the central bank said.

A major portion of the refinancing fund -- Tk 20,000 crore -- has been allocated for reopening closed factories, making it the single largest allocation. Another Tk 10,000 crore has been earmarked for agriculture and rural economic activities.

The cottage, micro, small and medium enterprise (CMSME) sector will receive Tk 5,000 crore, while Tk 3,000 crore each has been allocated for export diversification and the North Bengal Agricultural Hub initiative.

The Tk 19,000 crore BB-funded portion will support 10 targeted schemes, including pre-shipment export financing, CMSME support, overseas employment financing, startup funding, and youth-focused employment programmes.

This is the largest stimulus package since the then government provided Tk 2,37,679 crore under 28 separate programmes to ensure a quick economic recovery from the fallout of the Covid-19 pandemic.

According to the governor, the latest package is expected to generate more than 25 lakh jobs across industries, SMEs, agriculture, exports, startups, and youth employment initiatives.

Mostaqur said Bangladesh’s GDP growth has slowed significantly over the past three years, falling from 5.8 percent to 4.2 percent and likely declining further to around 3.7 percent.

He attributed the slowdown to disruptions in industries including garments, textiles, steel, ceramics, information technology, and broader manufacturing.

He also pointed to mounting stress in the financial sector, including a sharp rise in classified loans, declining depositor confidence, and high borrowing costs that have discouraged SME expansion.

The governor further cited capital flight and alleged illicit financial outflows, saying financial irregularities had weakened the banking system and intensified liquidity pressures.

Despite the central bank’s optimism, bankers and economists have expressed concern over the package’s design, funding structure, implementation feasibility, and possible inflationary impact.

Mashrur Arefin, chairman of the Association of Bankers, Bangladesh (ABB), described the package as “an excellent plan” but said effective implementation would be crucial.

He questioned the sourcing of the fund, arguing that banks’ surplus liquidity is already largely invested in treasury bills and bonds. He also noted that banks need to maintain some idle funds for day-to-day operations, limiting their ability to participate.

Mashrur suggested that instead of relying solely on bank deposits, Bangladesh Bank could inject liquidity by lowering the repo rate against treasury bills and bonds or reducing the cash reserve ratio (CRR).

According to him, such measures would make the package more workable and allow banks to lend at the intended 4 percent spread.

He also acknowledged that the initiative could fuel inflation, but said boosting employment and economic activity was also necessary under current conditions.

Syed Mahbubur Rahman, managing director of Mutual Trust Bank, also supported the intent but warned that implementation would be difficult.

He said banks are unlikely to lend to closed or failed factories because of the high risks involved. Restarting such units would require operational restructuring, management changes, workforce rehiring, and resolution of underlying financial and operational problems.

If revival efforts fail, banks risk losing their funds entirely, he said.

Mahbubur said credit growth has slowed to around 4.7 percent not because of a liquidity shortage, but due to a lack of viable borrowers. He also cited structural bottlenecks -- including inadequate infrastructure, weak law enforcement, and energy shortages -- as major constraints on investment.

Even operational factories are struggling because of gas shortages and rising electricity and energy costs, he said, adding that unresolved Covid-era stimulus loans continue to burden the banking sector.

He warned that because Bangladesh Bank would eventually recover refinance funds from commercial banks when schemes mature, the package could add further pressure on lenders already grappling with high default rates.

Responding to journalists’ questions at the briefing, the governor clarified that the package does not involve printing new money, but rather reallocating idle liquidity already present within the banking system.

He said some banks have excess liquidity while others face shortages, and the objective is to channel idle funds into productive sectors through refinancing mechanisms.

Mostaqur also said Tk 6,000 crore from the Tk 19,000 crore central bank allocation had already been deployed from BB’s surplus funds. He said the central bank earns around Tk 20,000 crore annually in profit, allowing it to finance the initiative without triggering inflation through money creation.

The governor also acknowledged weaknesses in previous stimulus programmes, particularly during the Covid-19 period, when a small number of large business groups reportedly received a disproportionate share of funds.

He said stricter monitoring and safeguards would be introduced this time to prevent concentration of benefits and improve accountability.

Mostaqur further admitted the depth of the banking sector crisis, saying a significant amount of banking funds had been lost through irregularities, loan scams, and financial mismanagement.

Many of these bad loans, he said, were not traditional defaults caused by business failure, but funds siphoned off without adequate collateral.

As part of the overall package, Bangladesh Bank also announced a Tk 500 crore fund from corporate social responsibility (CSR) resources to support creative industries. Unlike the stimulus loans, this fund will not require repayment.

Economists, however, remained cautious.

Abdur Razzaque, chairman of Research and Policy Integration for Development (RAPID), said the package appeared well-intentioned but lacked sufficient evaluation and consideration of alternatives.

He argued that controlling inflation should remain the top priority and warned that such stimulus measures could intensify price pressures and increase public hardship.

He also noted that stimulus alone does not guarantee improvement in underperforming sectors and that global experience shows such measures can sometimes fuel inflation and create additional macroeconomic imbalances.

Zahid Hussain, former lead economist of the World Bank’s Dhaka office, described the package as a countercyclical measure typically suited to periods of weak demand and low inflation.

However, he said Bangladesh currently faces a more complicated situation, with slowing growth alongside persistently high inflation.

Under such conditions, he warned, additional stimulus may not necessarily increase output and could instead push prices up faster than production if supply-side constraints remain unresolved.

Cabinet Committee approves three more LNG cargoes from spot market
24 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

The government yesterday (23 May) approved separate proposals for procuring three cargoes of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the spot market and importing 70,000 metric tonnes of fertiliser to ensure uninterrupted energy and fertiliser supply across the country.

The approvals came at the 23rd meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Government Purchase for 2026 held at the Cabinet Division conference room at the Secretariat.

Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury presided over the meeting.

The committee recommended approving a proposal from the Energy and Mineral Resources Division to purchase three LNG cargoes from the international spot market through international quotation collection under Rule 105(3) (Ka) of the Public Procurement Rules, 2025.

The LNG cargoes are scheduled to arrive on 15–16 June, 21–22 June and 25–26 June this year, corresponding to the 23rd, 24th and 25th consignments.

The total procurement cost, including Advance Income Tax (AIT), has been estimated at Tk2,330.82 crore.

Under the proposal, two cargoes will be procured from Posco International Corporation of South Korea and one cargo from TotalEnergies Gas & Power Ltd of the United Kingdom.

The committee also recommended approving a proposal from the Ministry of Industries to import 30,000 metric tonnes of bagged granular urea fertiliser under the 15th lot from Karnaphuli Fertiliser Company Limited during the 2025–26 fiscal year.

The total procurement cost for the urea fertiliser has been fixed at Tk254.52 crore, while the price per metric tonne was set at $688.375, including a Free on Board (FOB) price of $683.375 and a bagging charge of $5.

Officials said the fertiliser would be procured from KAFCO to maintain a stable fertiliser supply for the country's agricultural sector.

Meanwhile, the committee recommended another proposal from the Ministry of Agriculture to import 40,000 metric tonnes of DAP fertiliser under the 12th (optional fourth) lot from OCP Nutricrops of Morocco under a state-level agreement with Bangladesh Agricultural Development Corporation.

The proposed procurement cost for the DAP fertiliser import has been estimated at Tk434.66 crore, with the price set at $881.67 per metric tonne.

BSEC review to become mandatory before court approval in corporate restructuring
24 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

The role of the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC) and stock exchanges is set to become more prominent in mergers, acquisitions, demergers and other corporate restructuring activities involving listed companies under a new draft regulation.

The securities regulator today (23 May) published the draft "Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (Corporate Restructuring) Rules, 2026" and invited opinions, suggestions and objections within two weeks of publication.

According to the draft rules, listed companies will have to submit merger or demerger schemes to the BSEC and stock exchanges for review before seeking court approval.

BSEC said listed companies frequently engage in mergers, demergers, amalgamations, acquisitions and other restructuring activities, which require proper valuation, adequate disclosures and greater market transparency, particularly to protect minority shareholders.

Speaking to The Business Standard, BSEC Director and Spokesperson Abul Kalam said companies would first need board approval for any restructuring proposal before approaching the court.

"The approved draft scheme must then be submitted to the BSEC and the stock exchanges. After incorporating the observations of the regulator and exchanges, companies will have to obtain shareholders' approval before going to court," he said.

He added that the proposed rules would not curtail the authority of companies or courts, as the BSEC and stock exchanges would act as observers in the process.


According to the draft, any listed company undertaking restructuring with another listed or non-listed entity must submit the draft scheme to the commission and relevant stock exchange within 30 days of board approval, along with prescribed documents.

Boards of directors will also be required to record opinions on the rationale for the restructuring, fairness of valuation, adequacy of disclosures, impact on minority shareholders, potential share dilution, related-party transactions and market integrity concerns.

The rules also require disclosure of independent directors' opinions and explanations regarding compliance with securities laws, regulations and listing conditions.

After receiving observations from the regulator and stock exchanges, companies will have to place the revised scheme before shareholders and creditors for approval through a special resolution. Companies must also disclose price-sensitive information and announce a record date.

The restructuring process will remain subject to court approval, although the BSEC may become a party to court proceedings if necessary.

The draft rules also prescribe extensive disclosure requirements for restructuring schemes, including transaction consideration in cash, shares, assets or securities; share swap ratios; transfer of liabilities; tax obligations; contingent liabilities; employee status; provident fund and gratuity arrangements; and measures to protect minority shareholders.

Companies must additionally disclose whether the restructuring could lead to a backdoor listing or reverse takeover, along with the benefits accruing to sponsors and controlling shareholders, the extent of dilution for public shareholders and the valuation methodologies used.

One of the most significant provisions relates to valuation requirements. Companies undertaking restructuring must appoint independent valuers from among audit firms enlisted with the commission or registered merchant bankers.

However, those firms or merchant bankers cannot act as statutory auditors or corporate advisers to the companies involved in the restructuring.

The valuer must certify that the valuation, exchange ratio or swap ratio is fair and reasonable and does not prejudice any class of shareholders or creditors. The valuation also cannot be determined solely on the basis of market price.

The draft rules make it mandatory to apply at least two absolute valuation methods and two relative valuation methods.

For absolute valuation, the rules mention methods such as Discounted Cash Flow (DCF), Dividend Discount Model (DDM), Residual Income Model (RIM) and Asset-Based Model.

For relative valuation, the draft includes Price-to-Earnings (P/E), Price-to-Book (P/B), Price-to-Sales (P/S) and EV/EBITDA-based methods.

The draft further states that the discount rate used in valuation cannot be lower than the yield on 10-year treasury bonds. Revenue growth assumptions also cannot exceed the company's average growth rate over the previous five years unless justified by capacity expansion under a Balancing, Modernisation, Rehabilitation and Expansion (BMRE) project.

Companies will also have to obtain no-objection certificates from banks, financial institutions, bondholders, secured creditors and holders of Islamic Shariah-based securities.

The draft rules include a detailed checklist of documents, including audited financial statements for the past five years, asset revaluation reports, physical inspection reports, land documents, loan papers, tax records, VAT returns, related-party transaction details, inventory statements, bank statements and due diligence certificates.

The rules also require approval of restructuring schemes by at least 75% of general shareholders, excluding sponsors, directors and shareholders holding 5% or more shares.

Germany's AMANN Group plans fresh investment, factory expansion in Bangladesh
24 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Germany-based industrial sewing and embroidery thread manufacturer AMANN Group plans to expand its factory operations and make fresh investments in Bangladesh, the company's Chief Executive Officer Markus Nicolaus said at a meeting with Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) leaders in Dhaka.

The announcement came during a bilateral meeting between BGMEA President Mahmud Hasan Khan and an AMANN Group delegation at the BGMEA Complex in Uttara recently, according to a press release issued yesterday (23 May).

The meeting discussed the capacity of Bangladesh's readymade garment sector, current challenges in the international market and future investment strategies. BGMEA Director Md Hasib Uddin was also present.

Mahmud said Bangladesh's apparel sector was recovering after a slowdown in exports earlier this year caused by global economic uncertainty.

"Bangladesh's readymade garment industry is now going through a major transformation. We are putting strong emphasis on product diversification. But our current goal is not only to increase export volume, but also to produce higher-value garments," he said.

He said AMANN Group could support Bangladesh's apparel sector not only as a thread supplier but also as a strategic business partner.

Mahmud said many reputed German brands were still not sourcing from Bangladesh and requested AMANN to present Bangladesh's transformed apparel industry and production capacity to those brands.

Announcing the company's factory expansion plan in Bangladesh, Markus Nicolaus said Bangladesh's readymade garment sector had strong future potential.

"We are closely observing which other sectors here may attract new investment. There are major investment opportunities, especially in Bangladesh's high-tech textile sector," he said.

He said AMANN wanted to serve the premium segment and meet demand from high-end international brands through its products.

The AMANN delegation asked about global and local risk factors in the apparel sector, Bangladesh's labour standards, current US tariff policy and its impact on international trade.

The meeting also discussed the country's port, energy and logistics infrastructure and future development plans.

AMANN Group operates in Bangladesh through AMANN Bangladesh Ltd.

BERC cuts jet fuel price by Tk39.57 per litre
24 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

The Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission (BERC) has further reduced jet fuel prices in May following a series of sharp adjustments in recent months, amid fluctuations in the international oil market.

In a press release issued today (23 May), the energy regulator announced a cut of Tk39.57 per litre in aviation fuel prices, with the revised rates taking effect from midnight.

Under the latest revision, the price of Jet A-1 fuel for domestic flights has been reduced from Tk205.45 per litre to Tk165.88 per litre, inclusive of duty and VAT.

For international flights operated by local and foreign airlines, the price has been lowered from $1.3385 per litre to $1.0823 per litre, excluding duty and VAT.

The latest reduction follows another downward adjustment on 7 May, when BERC cut jet fuel prices by Tk22.35 per litre. Before that, the regulator raised prices by nearly Tk25 per litre on 7 April, while on 24 March aviation fuel prices saw a steep hike of around Tk90 per litre.

According to the commission, jet fuel prices are revised monthly under a market-based pricing mechanism linked to international benchmark rates.

The regulator said the revised prices were determined based on the average Platts rate of Jet A-1 fuel between 5 May and 21 May, the US dollar exchange rate used in BPC's LC settlement process, and prevailing diesel prices in the domestic market.

BERC also considered changes in coastal tanker and pipeline transportation charges before finalising the new rates.

ADP implementation limps just over 40pc in ten months of fiscal
24 May 2026;
Source: The Financial Express

The implementation of the Revised Annual Development Programme (RADP) recorded a slow pace during the first ten months (July-April) of the current 2025-2026 fiscal year, hitting an execution rate of 41.41 percent.

According to the latest report released by the Implementation Monitoring and Evaluation Division (IMED) of the Ministry of Planning, government agencies spent Tk 86,516.08 crore out of the total RADP allocation of Tk 2,08,935.53 crore earmarked for the fiscal year, UNB reports.

This performance indicates a notable slowdown in project execution compared to previous fiscal years, highlighting persistent challenges in administrative momentum and development spending following recent structural and political changes.

An analysis of the IMED data reveals a consistent downward trajectory in both RADP allocations and execution rates over the last few fiscal years.

In the current FY 2025-2026, out of a reduced RADP allocation of Tk 2,08,935.53 crore, the ten-month expenditure stands at Tk 86,516.08 crore, reflecting an execution rate of 41.41 percent.

During the same July-April period of FY 2024-2025, the expenditure was Tk 93,424.83 crore against an allocation of Tk 2,26,166.88 crore, yielding an implementation rate of 41.31 percent.

In FY 2023-2024, the implementation rate stood significantly higher at 49.26 percent with an expenditure of Tk 1,25,315.68 crore out of a Tk 2,54,391.64 crore allocation.

For FY 2022-2023, the execution rate was 50.33 percent with Tk 1,19,064.39 crore spent out of Tk 2,36,560.67 crore.

In FY 2021-2022, the 10-month implementation reached 54.57 percent, with an expenditure of Tk 1,19,829.74 crore out of Tk 2,19,601.91 crore.

The monthly progress for April also reflected a sluggish development drive.

In April 2026 alone, the government managed to implement only 5.22 percent of the development budget, translating to an expenditure of Tk 10,908.84 crore.

This single-month progress is slightly higher in percentage than the previous year's performance, where April 2025 recorded a 4.66 percent implementation rate with a spending of Tk 10,530.75 crore, but it remains heavily constrained compared to historical trends. Planning Ministry officials cited multiple structural issues contributing to the slower release and utilisation of development funds this fiscal year.

The primary setbacks include the ongoing rigorous review of development projects to realign national priorities, which has temporarily paused funds for several major initiatives.

Furthermore, administrative reshuffles, delays in appointing new project directors, and strict compliance checks on new procurements have extended execution timelines.

The exit or inactivity of several contracting firms following political transitions late last year has also left numerous physical infrastructure projects partially stalled.

With only two months left in the current fiscal year (May and June), ministries and execution agencies face tremendous pressure to fast-track their pending bills and accelerate construction phases if they are to prevent large sums of development funds from returning unutilized.

World Bank document shows 27 countries seeking to ensure access to crisis funds
24 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Twenty-seven countries have moved since the Iran war started to put in place crisis instruments that could quickly access funding from existing World Bank programmes, according to an internal document viewed by Reuters.

The World Bank document did not name the countries or the total amount of funds potentially being sought. The World Bank declined to comment.

The document showed that three countries had approved new instruments since the Middle East conflict began on 28 February while the others were still completing the process.

The war and resulting disruption of global energy markets have hit global supply chains and prevented vital fertiliser shipments from reaching developing countries.

Officials in Kenya and Iraq have confirmed they are seeking rapid financial support from the World Bank to deal with the war's fallout, such as surging fuel prices hitting the African nation and a massive drop in oil revenue for Iraq.

The 27 countries are among 101 that had access to some form of pre-arranged financing instrument that they could tap in a crisis, including 54 that signed up to the Rapid Response Option, which allows countries to use up to 10% of their undisbursed financing.

World Bank President Ajay Banga last month said the bank's crisis toolkit would allow countries to draw on pre-arranged contingent financing, existing project balances and fast-disbursing instruments to access an estimated $20 billion to $25 billion.

He said the bank could also reorient parts of its portfolio to bring the total to $60 billion over six months, with further longer-term changes possible to bring the total to around $100 billion.

At the time, the head of the International Monetary Fund, Kristalina Georgieva, said she expected up to a dozen countries to seek $20 billion to $50 billion in near-term assistance from the global lender. But few requests have been logged, according to three sources familiar with the matter.

"Countries are definitely in wait-and-see mode," said one of the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Kevin Gallagher, director of the Global Development Policy Centre at Boston University, said countries were more willing to seek World Bank funds than negotiate with the IMF because IMF programmes generally require austerity measures that could compound the social unrest already seen in countries like Kenya.

Govt turns to repurposing project loans as budget support shortfall looms
24 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Amid economic stress triggered by the Middle East war, the government had set a target of securing at least $3.2 billion in budget support from development partners, but the response has so far reached only about half of expectations.

As an alternative, authorities have begun repurposing the remaining funds through loans from ongoing development projects that are not immediately required.

Officials at the Economic Relations Division (ERD) said repurposing could unlock more funds than traditional budget support, allowing flexibility for critical spending for energy and food.

A letter sent by the Finance Division on 12 April asked the ERD to take steps to secure the $3.2 billion. However, the government has so far received assurances of $1.665 billion, ERD officials said.

This includes $1 billion from Asian Development Bank (ADB), $315 million from Japan, $250 million from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), and $100 million from Opec.

The government is also working on repurposing around $1.6 billion from development projects, officials said, adding the process is ongoing and the figure is likely to get higher.

An ERD senior official told The Business Standard that low-impact and slow-moving projects are being reviewed for repurposing, in consultation with development partners.

The reallocated funds will be channelled into short-term, one-year interventions in energy, food security and social protection. This, officials said, will help address immediate pressures while improving disbursement efficiency and ensuring more effective use of external loans.

ADB providing $1 billion support

ERD officials said the government had sought the full $1 billion in budget support from the ADB for the current fiscal year, which is now being received. Officials added that two budget support agreements are set to be signed on Monday in the presence of the ADB president.

Under the Second Strengthening Social Resilience Program, the ADB will provide $250 million as budget support. Under the Strengthening Economic Management and Governance, the ADB will extend a further $750 million.

ERD officials also said that $250 million will be reallocated from projects that have long remained stalled in implementation and disbursement.

WB prioritising repurposing

Amid shifting priorities in external financing, the World Bank is leaning more towards loan reallocation rather than fresh budget support for Bangladesh in the current fiscal year.

According to ERD sources, the government had formally sought at least $500 million from the lender under the Green and Climate Resilience Development Policy Credit. However, no final decision on budget support has been received so far.

A senior ERD official said Bangladesh is unlikely to receive budget support this fiscal year. Instead, the focus has shifted to repurposing unused pipeline loans.

A review of ongoing World Bank-financed projects shows that around $1.835 billion could potentially be mobilised through faster disbursement and reallocation for urgent needs.

Of this, a $785 million contingency fund has already been created under the Rapid Response Option (RRO) and Contingent Emergency Response Project (CERP) framework by reallocating funds from eight projects.

These include $239 million from the Gas Sector Efficiency Improvement and Carbon Abatement Project, $30 million from the Jamuna River Sustainable Management Project-1, $60 million from the Learning Acceleration in Secondary Education Operation, $15 million from the Road Safety Project, $95 million from the Resilient Urban and Territorial Development Project, $140 million from the Chattogram Water Supply Improvement Project, $74.4 million from the Regional Waterway Transport Project-1, and $134.6 million from the Environmental Sustainability and Transformation Project.

Officials said the government has decided to use this money under the CERP mechanism, which allows rapid deployment of funds for emergency imports of food, fuel and medicines.

The facility remains valid for up to six years, with individual activities limited to one year. Necessary omnibus amendments will be made to existing financing agreements, while the Finance Division will prepare the implementation framework.

The CERP mechanism allows unused funds from ongoing projects to be quickly redirected during sudden crises, without requiring lengthy new project approvals.

Separately, the government is set to introduce for the first time a $250 million emergency Investment Project Financing (IPF) facility, designed for rapid use similar to the RRO-CERP.

ERD sources said the $250 million IPF is not new borrowing, but a consolidation of cancelled or unused allocations from World Bank projects scheduled to close in FY26.

AIIB to provide $250m against $750m request

The government had sought $750 million in budget support from the AIIB. However, the lender has agreed to provide $250 million under the "Strengthening Economic Management and Governance" programme.

An additional $350 million is set to be reallocated from an ongoing AIIB-financed project. The funds will be diverted from the "Sylhet–Tamabil Road to a 4-Lane Highway" project.

ERD officials said disbursement under the road project has remained stalled for a long time due to complications in land acquisition. As a result, the government has decided to restructure the loan and repurpose the unused funds.

Japan trims support to $315m from $500m

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (Jica) initially agreed to provide $500 million in budget support in the current fiscal. The amount has since been reduced to $315 million.

Finance officials said the loan will be used in line with IMF recommendations. The support is expected to help increase social protection spending, strengthen revenue management.

Meanwhile, the government is set to receive $100 million in budget support from the Opec Fund (OFID) to help meet urgent financial pressures. However, requests for $200 million from France and $150 million from Germany remain uncertain, according to ERD sources.

ERD data show Bangladesh received a record $3.44 billion in budget support in FY25 from development partners. This compares with $2.03 billion in FY24, $1.767 billion in FY23, $2.597 billion in FY22 and $1.09 billion in FY21.

BB bars banks with under Tk2000cr paid-up capital from declaring cash dividends
24 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Bangladesh Bank has issued new directives for commercial banks regarding the declaration and distribution of cash dividends to shareholders, apparently to enhance the financial capacity of banks and reinforce the overall capital base of the banking sector.

Banks with a paid-up capital of less than Tk2,000 crore will not be allowed to declare any cash dividends, according to a circular issued by the central bank today (23 May).

Also, the banks that meet all statutory requirements and qualify to distribute profits can pay a maximum of 50% of their total declared dividends in cash.

The directives will come into effect from 31 December 2026.

The central bank clarified that while these new measures introduce stricter caps, all other existing instructions from previous relevant circulars, including the DOS circular issued on 13 March 2025, will remain fully effective.

No bank except BRAC Bank allowed to offer cash dividends

Under the new directives, only BRAC Bank will be allowed to declare cash dividends. Meanwhile, although National Bank has paid-up capital above the required target, it will not be able to provide dividends due to its high volume of non-performing loans.

A review of the data shows that among the currently well-performing banks in the capital market, none of the top-ranked banks in various indices, including The City Bank, Eastern Bank, Mutual Trust Bank, Prime Bank and Dutch-Bangla Bank, will be able to declare cash dividends.

Mashrur Arefin, managing director and CEO of City Bank, told TBS that the move has merit from a financial stability perspective, as some banks distributed high cash dividends despite weak capital positions.

He, however, expressed concern that the policy treats both strong and weak banks equally, which could negatively affect the stock market and investor confidence.

Mashrur said shareholders of well-managed banks deserve cash returns when banks perform consistently well, questioning why the Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) was not considered a key factor, arguing that banks with stronger CAR positions, such as 17-18% instead of the minimum 12.5%, should be allowed to provide cash dividends.

He also said he is waiting to see how tax regulations align with the new policy.

The move to strengthen banks' capital base is positive, as some weak banks previously paid excessive cash dividends despite poor financial conditions, said Syed Mahbubur Rahman, managing director and CEO of Mutual Trust Bank.

A better approach would have been linking dividend approvals to the CAR, a practice followed in many countries, he said, notifying that Bangladesh's banking sector remains undercapitalised by global standards, while bank shares often fail to reflect actual performance.

Preventing well-capitalised banks from paying cash dividends could further weaken the stock market and reduce incentives for investors supporting financially stable institutions, added Syed Mahbubur.

Mexico, EU to lower tariffs in bid to grow non-US trade
24 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

The European Union and Mexico will on Friday sign a deal reducing tariffs on each other's goods as both seek to lessen their dependence on trade with the United States.

The expansion of an accord dating to 2000 comes as Mexico fights hard to preserve a three-way free trade agreement with the United States and Canada, which is crucial to all three economies.

The EU is Mexico's third-largest trading partner, lagging far behind the United States and China.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has stressed the importance of "opening other horizons" at a time when both Mexico and the European Union are grappling with US President Donald Trump's tariff offensive.

The updated agreement to be signed by Sheinbaum and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen during the eighth EU-Mexico Summit removes most remaining barriers to trade and investment.

It facilitates trade in auto parts, a sector particularly affected by Trump's tariffs.

"Mexico wants to reduce its dependence on its northern neighbor, but also on Asian, or rather, Chinese, supply chains, and in Europe we are pursuing the same objectives," an EU official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

On a visit Thursday to Mexico City, the EU's foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, said the deal would create new opportunities for "both economies to compete globally" and build on the momentum of the past decade, which has seen a 75-percent leap in EU-Mexican trade.

Earlier this week, the European Union moved to end a trade standoff with Trump by agreeing to implement a deal signed last year with the United States, which sets tariffs on most European goods at 15 percent.

Average US tariffs on Mexican goods are a quarter of that -- with many avoiding levies altogether under the USMCA (United States, Mexico, Canada) agreement.

The lower tariffs enjoyed by Mexico will benefit the European Union, according to Sergio Contreras, president of the Mexican Business Council for Foreign Trade.

Mexico will be "the point of convergence, the platform for the European Union and North America to come together," he said.

Nvidia posts record $81.6b quarterly revenue
23 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

Chip giant Nvidia on Wednesday posted record quarterly revenue of $81.6 billion, blowing past Wall Street forecasts as insatiable demand for its artificial intelligence hardware powered another blockbuster quarter.


The results for the first quarter of fiscal 2027, ending April 26, marked an 85 percent jump from the same period a year ago and a 20 percent rise from the prior quarter, underscoring Nvidia’s status as the primary beneficiary of a global AI infrastructure buildout.

Net profit surged to $58.3 billion, more than tripling from $18.8 billion in the year-earlier period.

Nvidia’s data center business, which sells the processors powering AI systems at tech giants and technology companies worldwide, was the engine behind the quarter’s performance.

Data center revenue, which includes Nvidia’s key graphics processing units (GPUs), hit a record $75.2 billion, up 92 percent from a year ago.

A GPU is a specialized computer chip originally designed to render video game graphics at high speed, but Nvidia has since made it the engine powering artificial intelligence.

That pivot has made Nvidia the world’s most valuable company, on the back of huge demand for its AI hardware.

Demand for Nvidia products seems insatiable despite recurring talk on Wall Street that the AI spending spree could come to a halt.

Since its February earnings report, Nvidia has disclosed a $10 billion investment in Anthropic, a major deal with Meta, and a commitment to AI company CoreWeave targeting five gigawatts of AI facilities by 2030.

For the current quarter, Nvidia projected revenue of $91 billion, representing a further acceleration in growth.

Crucially, Nvidia said it was not assuming any data center revenue from China in its outlook, where its core product has been caught up in a geopolitical dispute between Beijing and Washington.

Nvidia boss Jensen Huang this week said he expected China to eventually open its market to high-end US chips that can train and run artificial intelligence systems.

The superpowers are in a fierce race for AI supremacy, and Nvidia’s H200 chip had until recently been barred from sale in China by Washington over national security concerns.

However, there is no sign that Chinese tech companies are buying them, as Beijing ramps up domestic chip development in a bid to challenge US dominance in the sector.

Investors shrugged off the results in the earnings report, with Nvidia shares down more than one percent in after-hours trading.

Rich nations topped $100 b climate finance goal again in 2023, 2024: OECD
23 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Wealthy countries topped their $100 billion annual climate finance goal for poorer nations for the third straight year in 2024, the OECD said today (21 May), but questions are growing over their ability to meet a new larger pledge.

Developed nations had long fallen short of their commitment to mobilise $100 billion a year by 2020, finally hitting the target for the first time in 2022 after the deadline was extended to 2025.

The money is aimed at helping developing countries, which are least responsible for global warming, invest in renewable energy and cope with the worsening impacts of climate change.

After providing $115.9 billion in 2022, wealthy countries sharply raised their contribution to $132.8 billion in 2023, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, which tracks the figures.

It increased slightly in 2024 to $136.7 billion.

Climate finance can come from governments in the form of bilateral aid, multinational development lenders like the World Bank, or the private sector.

Public climate finance slipped 2.6 percent to $101.6 billion in 2024 but private sector contributions surged 33 percent to $30.5 billion.

The OECD said the data needed to produce figures for 2025, the last year of the $100 billion pledge, would not be available before 2027 "at the earliest".

Raphael Jachnik, who led the report at the OECD, told AFP the dip in bilateral public finance partly reflected a return to more normal trends after a sharp rise in 2023.

- Trump guts aid programmes -

Climate finance has been a thorny issue at annual UN climate talks, as developing nations grew frustrated with the developed world for dragging its heels to fulfil its pledges.

Richer nations committed to a new goal at the UN COP29 summit in Azerbaijan in 2024, pledging to provide $300 billion a year by 2035 -- an amount still considered insufficient by developing nations.

They also set a less specific target of helping raise $1.3 trillion annually from public and private sources.

Jachnik said the international context "raises more fundamental questions" about the new $300 billion target.

US President Donald Trump, a climate sceptic who returned to office last year, pulled the world's richest country out of climate diplomacy and gutted its foreign aid programmes.

The European Union, the biggest contributor to climate finance, is under budget strains and seeking to ramp up military spending amid the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East.

Turkish Climate Minister Murat Kurum, who will chair the COP31 climate summit hosted by his country in November, said Wednesday that he would "hold donors accountable for the commitments they made under the $300 billion Baku finance goal".

"It is easy to say we support global climate action. But promises must be kept," Kurum said in a speech at a climate ministerial meeting in Copenhagen.

Western nations have pushed to broaden the contributor base to include countries that are still listed as developing but have now become wealthy, such as China and Saudi Arabia.

Developed countries, which are facing their own budget constraints and debt problems, have also insisted that the private sector play a bigger role.

- 'Total scandal' -

Asia was the main target of climate finance contributions in 2024, with 36 percent, followed by Africa at 31 percent.

As in previous years, most public climate finance took the form of loans in 2023 and 2024, accounting for 73 percent and 67 percent of the total respectively, according to the OECD.

Developing countries have argued that climate finance should come in the form of grants, as loans compound their debt problems.

"The rich world profits from the loans they provide to poor countries who are desperately trying to deal with climate change caused by the rich world. It's a total scandal," said Mohamed Adow, director of the Nairobi-based climate think tank Power Shift Africa.

"The countries least responsible for the climate crisis are being asked to take on debt to survive it," he said.

Next budget must focus on food security, climate resilience: BIDS DG
23 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard


As the national budget for fiscal year 2026–27 is set to be placed amid rising global uncertainty, Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies (BIDS) Director General (DG) Dr AK Enamul Haque has stressed that the country's top economic priority should be the systematic implementation of the government's election commitments while simultaneously preparing for emerging global risks.

In an exclusive interview with BSS ahead of the upcoming national budget to be placed in the Jatiya Sangsad next month, he said, "One major issue is implementing the government's election manifesto. The commitments made to the people for the next five years should begin to be implemented systematically."

Dr Enamul warned that the ongoing conflict in the Middle East could trigger a fresh global food crisis and place additional pressure on Bangladesh's economy through rising commodity prices and supply disruptions.

"As a result of the war, global food shortages are likely to increase. Bangladesh must prepare in advance," he said.

Dr Enamul emphasised that the budget should allocate sufficient resources for government-led food procurement and imports to maintain adequate domestic supply and stabilise prices.

"The government should maintain strategic food stocks under its own supervision. If supply does not increase, inflationary pressure will worsen," he said.

He argued that relying only on cash assistance would not be enough in the current situation, as shortages in food supply could continue pushing prices upward.

"If there is not enough food in the market, simply providing money will not solve the problem," he added.

The noted economist also urged the government to prepare contingency plans for Bangladeshi migrant workers who may return from Gulf countries, especially from the United Arab Emirates (UAE), if regional instability deepens.

"There should be budgetary preparation for their rehabilitation through easier access to loans so they can start small businesses or income-generating activities after returning home," he said.

Highlighting climate-related vulnerabilities, Dr Enamul said Bangladesh must increase support for rural populations affected by heatwaves, flash floods, and crop losses, especially in haor regions.

He proposed expanding support for duck farming, cattle rearing, and livestock-based activities in flood-prone areas to create alternative sources of income for farmers.

"Haor farmers depend on a single crop. If that crop is destroyed, they lose income for the entire year. Alternative income sources are essential," he said.

While supporting temporary cash assistance for disaster-hit populations, he cautioned that excessive dependence on cash transfers without increasing food supply could intensify inflation.

The BIDS DG also stressed the importance of expanding the government's Open Market Sales (OMS) programme and improving food assistance for vulnerable groups.

"If rice and lentils are supplied through OMS, eggs should also be included to ensure balanced nutrition and support domestic producers," he said.

Referring to growing food insecurity risks, he cited international warnings that several countries could face famine-like conditions if the global situation deteriorates further.

"Bangladesh must prepare now because food insecurity is becoming a concern," he added.

Dr Enamul further suggested that the government expand the use of farmer cards and family cards to streamline social protection programmes and agricultural support.

"If agricultural inputs such as fertiliser and pesticides can be supplied at lower prices through farmer cards, it will help increase production," he said.

He also recommended integrating multiple welfare programmes under a unified family card system to improve accountability and reduce misuse.

"About 20% of the population already receives some form of government support. If these programmes are integrated strategically, fiscal pressure will not increase significantly," he noted.

On external trade strategy, Dr Enamul stressed that Bangladesh should strengthen economic integration with Asian economies as geopolitical tensions continue affecting European and Middle Eastern trade routes.

"Asia is still relatively neutral in the current conflict situation. Bangladesh should focus more on increasing exports to Asian markets, including India," he said.

He added that the FY27 budget should focus more on building long-term economic foundations rather than launching excessively ambitious projects.

"The main objective should be to maintain economic growth momentum and prepare the foundation for the next five years," he said.

Power Grid gets BSEC nod to issue Tk1,529cr preference shares to govt
23 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

In a move to convert its share money deposits into equity, Power Grid Company Bangladesh (PGCB), a state-owned power transmission company, is now set to issue preference shares to the government worth Tk1,529 crore.

In several tranches, Power Grid had already issued preference shares to the government worth Tk10,146 crore against funds received from the government for development projects.

Its balance sheet as of March 2026 shows that its preference share capital is 11 times higher than its ordinary share capital, with existing ordinary paid-up capital standing at Tk913.80 crore.

The Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC) gave its consent on 20 May to issue 152.92 crore irredeemable and non-cumulative preference shares at a face value of Tk10 each.

The preference shares will be issued in favour of the Secretary, Power Division, Ministry of Power, Energy and Mineral Resources, against share money deposits for the year ended June 2025.

According to company sources, Power Grid received a substantial amount of funds from the government in the FY2024–25, against which it will now issue preference shares worth Tk1,529 crore.

Under the government financing structure, 60% of disbursed funds is treated as equity and the remainder as loans, with the equity portion recorded as share money deposits.

At the end of March 2026, PGCB's outstanding share money deposits stood at Tk3,376 crore.

The shares issuance follows to comply with a notification issued by the Financial Reporting Council (FRC). The accounting regulator FRC directive, issued in 2020, said share money deposits must be converted into the company's capital within six months.

It also directed companies to include share money deposits when calculating earnings per share and dividends as soon as the funds are deposited, even before securitisation.

In line with the directive to comply, Power Grid gradually issued preference shares in favor of the government rather than issuing ordinary shares.

Preference shares are a class of shares where dividends are paid to holders before any distribution to ordinary shareholders. The government will accordingly receive dividends on the preference shares at a fixed rate before any dividend is declared for general shareholders.

The dividend rate for the government on the preference shares will be determined as a percentage of total capital, calculated as 25% of the assumed share of net profit after tax attributable to the preference shareholders.

Power Grid Company secretary Md Jahangir Azad said "The preference share issuance is a continuous process as we are instructed to issue shares against share money deposits after the end of the fiscal year."

"We are issuing shares for the government that was taken for the 2024-25 fiscal year. Every year, we will issue shares to the government that will be taken each year," he added.

Earlier explaining the dividend mechanism to The Business Standard, Power Grid Company secretary Md Jahangir Azad said, "Suppose preference shares account for 25% of the company's paid-up capital. If the company makes a profit of Tk100 in a financial year, the entitlement of the preference shares would be Tk25 from that profit. The government would then receive a 25% dividend on this Tk25 allocated to the preference shares."

In the first nine months of the current fiscal year, Power Grid reported that its revenue slightly grew to Tk2,386 crore, and made a profit of Tk570 crore.

At the same time of the previous fiscal year, its revenue was Tk2,218 crore and incurred a loss of Tk31 crore due to foreign currency fluctuation as it has to pay its foreign loans in foreign currency. The company's shares closed at Tk33.20 yesterday, up 3.11% from the previous session.

BSEC clears stock dividends for MTB, Southeast Bank, Trust Bank
23 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

Three private commercial banks — Mutual Trust Bank, Southeast Bank, and Trust Bank — have received formal approval from the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC) to disburse their declared stock dividends for the financial year ended 31 December 2025.

According to regulatory disclosures filed with the Dhaka Stock Exchange yesterday, the banks are utilising these stock issuances to strengthen their capital bases in alignment with Basel III requirements and to provide the necessary fiscal cushion for future business expansion.

These regulatory clearances allow the banks to convert retained earnings into equity paid-up capital, a strategic move often preferred by lenders to maintain high capital adequacy ratios while supporting larger credit portfolios.

Mutual Trust Bank received consent to issue a 12% stock dividend. The bank's financial performance for 2025 showed steady growth, with its consolidated earnings per share (EPS) rising to Tk3.14 from Tk2.93 in the previous year, while its net asset value (NAV) per share improved to Tk28.11.

The bank informed its stakeholders that it would soon re-fix and notify a new record date for dividend entitlement.

Southeast Bank secured the regulator's nod for a 7% stock dividend, which complements its 3% cash dividend recommendation. The bank recorded a sharp recovery in its bottom line, with consolidated EPS jumping to Tk2.51 in 2025 from just Tk0.32 in the preceding year. Its NAV per share also rose to Tk25.74.

The bank has scheduled 4 June as the record date for the stock dividend.

Trust Bank also obtained approval for a 5% stock dividend, having already recommended an 8% cash dividend for the same period. The lender reported a consolidated EPS of Tk3.38 and a NAV per share of Tk28.52 for the year. The record date for Trust Bank's dividend remains 11 June.

Trust Bank also obtained approval for a 5% stock dividend, having already recommended an 8% cash dividend for the same period. The lender reported a consolidated EPS of Tk3.38 and a NAV per share of

Tk28.52 for the year. The bank has scheduled 11 June as the record date for the stock dividend.

Govt to float offshore exploration tender next Monday, solar policy by June: Energy minister
23 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Power, Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Iqbal Hassan Mahmood Tuku on Friday (22 May) said the government will float an international tender next Monday for offshore oil and gas exploration, while an investment-friendly solar energy policy is expected to be unveiled by June.

Speaking at a policy symposium in Dhaka, he said the government is prioritising energy security through expanded exploration, structural reforms in the power sector and diversification into renewable energy sources.

Tuku said Bangladesh has not carried out meaningful offshore exploration for the past 17 years despite securing maritime boundary settlements.

"The last major offshore exploration initiative was undertaken in 1991 under the BNP government led by former prime minister Khaleda Zia, which later enabled ongoing gas production by Chevron," he said.

"We achieved victory in maritime boundary disputes, but we have yet to extract resources from the sea. To address this, we are floating an international tender for offshore exploration next Monday," he added.

The minister said the government is strengthening state-owned Bangladesh Petroleum Exploration and Production Company (Bapex) through the procurement of new rigs.

Acknowledging Bapex's lack of deep-sea drilling expertise, he said the company has been advised to participate in the upcoming tender through joint ventures with international oil companies to ensure Bangladesh retains a strategic stake in offshore resources.

Highlighting the government's clean energy agenda, Tuku said work is underway on solar, wind and waste-to-energy projects, with a new solar policy aimed at attracting investment expected by June.

He said high import taxes on battery storage systems remain a major obstacle for private investors in the renewable energy sector.

"The current tax structure on solar batteries is too high, discouraging investors. We are working with the finance ministry to resolve these tax and tariff issues," he said.

The government is targeting at least 5,000 megawatts (MW) of renewable energy generation by the end of its term, however, Tuku expressed hope that the figure could reach 10,000MW if implementation proceeds smoothly.

The world built more coal power in 2025, but used less
23 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

The world built and commissioned more coal power in 2025, but used the polluting fuel less, with the United States the only major economy to substantially increase generation, analysis showed Thursday.

Coal is a key contributor to planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions, and phasing it out is crucial to taming climate change.

The growing affordability and abundance of renewable energy means solar and wind power can now cover growing electricity demand in much of the world.

That helped push coal generation down globally by 0.6 percent in 2025 from a year earlier, according to a new report from Global Energy Monitor, which has tracked coal power for more than a decade.

But despite the generation drop, coal power capacity -- plants that came online or were commissioned -- jumped 3.5 percent last year.

The overwhelming majority of that -- 95 percent -- was in China and India, GEM said.

China’s coal capacity grew six percent last year, but coal-powered electricity generation fell 1.2 percent, in part because of soaring renewable capacity.

The same was true in India, where capacity grew almost four percent, even as generation fell nearly three percent.

In both countries, “many of the provinces and states leading coal development are major coal-producing regions”, said Christine Shearer, project manager of GEM’s Global Coal Plant Tracker and author of the report.

They have “strong industrial incentives to keep building coal”, she told AFP.

US ACTIVELY INCREASES COAL

China is the world’s top emitter, while India ranks third behind the United States.

Beijing sees coal as a reliable failsafe for intermittent renewable supply, particularly for after power shortages several years ago.

India, the world’s most populous country, is leaning heavily on coal to meet soaring electricity demand. But coal’s persistence is also the result of infrastructure issues.

Non-fossil fuels already account for 50 percent of India’s installed capacity, but infrastructure and other issues mean the country still generates around three-quarters of its electricity from coal.

Globally, the retirement of coal power also slowed last year, with nearly 70 percent of units that were due to end operations instead staying online, GEM said.

In Europe, those missed targets were linked primarily to decisions taken during the 2022-23 energy crisis caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

In the United States however, retirement delays were due to a government push for coal, said Shearer. “US coal-fired generation rose by more than 80 TWh (terawatt hours) year-on-year, a figure so large that no other country came close,” she said.

The surge “was not simply a function of (demand) growth, it reflected a policy environment that actively encouraged it,” she added.

COAL ‘FAVOURITISM’

The energy crisis sparked by the US-Israeli war with Iran has seen some countries turn back to coal, reactivating idle coal units or delaying retirements.

In China, coal-fired power generation also jumped in the first part of the year, in part due to “underperformance” by wind and nuclear.

“But the oversupply and favouritism of coal power is an important factor,” added Lauri Myllyvirta, co-founder of the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, and contributor to the report.

While figures from May suggest China’s coal generation may have dropped again, “the problem of excess coal capacity and entrenched favouritism of coal in the grid remain”, he told AFP.

Globally, coal-fired generation has risen 0.3 percent so far this year, Shearer said, while wind and solar generation has jumped 10 percent.

“Clean energy is absorbing most of the world’s new electricity demand, with coal barely growing at all,” she said.