A consistent theme in global oil markets since the US and Israel attacked Iran is that the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz will be short-lived, and therefore so will the disruption to the supply of crude and refined products.
That expectation has consistently been reflected in pricing for crude oil futures, which have risen sharply since the conflict began on February 28, but are still well short of the highs reached in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
In effect, the paper crude market has believed US President Donald Trump’s slew of social media posts since the bombing started that the conflict will be short, and result in Iran accepting US terms for a peace deal.
The problem is that the reality on the ground doesn’t match the social media claims, and the longer the Strait of Hormuz remains closed the more severe the energy crisis will become, especially in Asia.
Brent crude futures fell 9.1 percent on April 17 to end at $90.38 a barrel in the wake of Trump’s post that the Strait of Hormuz was fully open. But they jumped 6.9 percent in early Asian trade on Monday to $96.59 when it became clear the waterway was still closed.
The latest round of optimism that the Strait of Hormuz would re-open began after a Trump social media post on April 17 that the waterway that carried as much as 20 percent of the world’s crude oil and refined product supply prior to the war was “fully open and ready for full passage.”
Trump’s assertion was even backed by elements within the Iranian government, but the optimism proved short-lived as Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps moved to keep the strait closed, given Trump’s decision to maintain a US naval blockade of Iranian ports.
There are several questions that the market should be asking about the current situation.
Does this mean that the Strait of Hormuz is now effectively being closed by the United States?
Would it re-open if Trump ended the blockade of Iranian ports?
Is there sufficient trust between the warring parties to accept a principle that the strait should be open to all?
Who is really in control in Iran, and are they willing to negotiate with a US administration that has a track record of abandoning agreements?
While these are issues for debate, the only fact that really matters is that the strait isn’t open and the risk of attack is likely to keep it that way for the hundreds of vessels waiting either side of the crucial waterway.
SUPPLY STRESS
In the meantime crude oil and refined product supply chains are becoming more stressed, especially in Asia, which was the destination for about 80 percent of all the shipments via the Strait of Hormuz prior to the conflict.
While crude futures have largely traded on the daily news flow and an underlying optimism that the conflict will be of a limited duration, physical oil and refined products have reflected a more dire near-term supply situation.
Refined products in the Asian trading hub of Singapore have remained at extreme levels, with jet fuel ending at $204.13 a barrel on April 17, more than double the $93.45 close on February 27, the day before the war started.
Gasoil, the building block for diesel, ended at $145.27 a barrel on April 17, up 59 percent since the conflict started, although down from the record $199.89 hit on March 30.
The problem for Asia is that the worst of the supply crunch is probably still to come, as crude shipments into the region fall sharply.
Asia’s seaborne crude imports are estimated at 20.62 million barrels per day (bpd) in April, down from 22.36 million bpd in March, according to data compiled by commodity analysts Kpler. However, both March and April are well down on the 26.76 million bpd average for the three months prior to the attacks on Iran.
The situation is especially worrying for countries that are major refining centres and exporters of fuels to the region.
Singapore’s crude imports are forecast at 388,000 bpd in April, down from 715,000 bpd in March and 980,000 bpd in January.
South Korea’s crude imports are estimated at 1.68 million bpd in April, down from 2.24 million bpd in March and 2.74 million bpd in January.
Japan’s April imports are expected to be 921,000 bpd, a drop from 1.63 million bpd in March and 2.16 million bpd in January.
Only India is bucking the trend, with April imports estimated by Kpler at 4.67 million bpd, up from 4.45 million bpd in March, but below January’s 5.15 million bpd.
India has been able to secure Russian oil to help offset the loss of barrels from the Middle East, with 1.64 million bpd arriving in April, up from 1.06 million bpd in February.
Notwithstanding India’s success in sourcing crude from other producers, the problem is that Asia’s supplies are coming under strain and it’s likely that refinery processing rates will have to be cut in coming weeks.
It is when the supply of refined products becomes more constrained that the real economic impact of Trump’s war of choice will be felt.
The question for the paper crude oil market is how long can it maintain the hope that the conflict will be over soon, when the reality seems to be heading in the other direction?
Finance authorities are set to seek Prime Minister's guidance as to how far the government can go in complying with the International Monetary Fund conditions to secure hard-term budget-support funds.
Finance Minister Amir Khasru Mahmud Chowdhury will lead his team at the consultation today with Prime Minister Tarek Rahman, officials say, as the IMF lending terms have seemingly outwitted negotiators.
A senior government official who attended last week's Spring Meetings in Washington says the decision has become increasingly complex as the current economic situation leaves little room to fully comply with all the IMF conditions.Global economy analysis
"It is now a political decision rather than an economic one -- whether the government will accept the IMF conditions," the official told The Financial Express.
Key IMF strings binding the release of the next two tranches from a lending package in June 2026 include withdrawal of subsidies, raising the tax-to-GDP ratio to 9.2 per cent, and adopting a market-based exchange rate.
Given the ongoing Middle East conflict, sluggish investment, rising fuel prices, persistent inflation, and a downward trend in exports, the government is unlikely to take any drastic measures in the upcoming budget, the official adds.
"We have found the IMF quite rigid on its conditions this time. It wants the withdrawal of all tax exemptions and the introduction of a single VAT rate, which appears difficult to implement under current circumstances," the official notes.
However, IMF officials have urged the government to undertake reforms early in its tenure to minimize future challenges.
Officials at the National Board of Revenue (NBR) say achieving a tax-to-GDP ratio of 9.2 per cent by FY2026-27 would require an additional Tk 2.0 trillion in revenue collection within the next year.Politics
At a recent coordination council meeting, the government set an NBR revenue target of Tk 6.04 trillion -- an increase by nearly Tk 1.0 trillion from the current fiscal year.
However, the revenue officials fear a revenue shortfall of around Tk 1.0 trillion in the ongoing fiscal year.
Until February, the NBR had collected Tk 2.51 trillion, roughly 50 per cent of the revised target of Tk 5.03 trillion.
Government insiders say the situation has become more complicated as the IMF has taken a firm stance on three key issues that the Ministry of Finance cannot decide on its own.
External financing from multilateral development partners largely depends on IMF assessments and approval. Following the IMF meetings, the NBR chairman held an emergency meeting Sunday to assess the feasibility of complying with the dos.
A senior NBR official has told the FE that achieving the targeted increase in the tax-GDP ratio -- from the current 6.5 per cent to 9.2 per cent -- would require around 50 per cent growth in tax revenue.
"We find these conditions difficult to implement in the current economic environment," the official says.
He adds that scrapping time-bound tax exemptions may not be legally feasible either, while withdrawing subsidies is not practical at a time when the economy is under strain due to the impact of the Mideast conflict.Financial news subscription
"The economy does not have the capacity to absorb a complete withdrawal of tax exemptions at this stage."
However, the IMF has advised the government to implement difficult reforms early in its tenure for long-term economic stability.
"We cannot increase revenue overnight simply by curbing tax evasion or recovering arrears," the NBR official says in clear terms.
The revenue board is currently conducting intensive internal assessments to evaluate the potential impact of implementing the IMF conditions.
Dr Fahmida Khatun, executive director of the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD), suggests the government should prepare a roadmap to implement IMF conditions.
She, however, finds it difficult to implement all conditions by next year, such as withdrawal of all tax exemptions.
"We need IMF funds but the government needs to be cautious as economy is not prepared now to absorb the pressure," she adds.Banking sector news
There are many sectors that need tax benefits and fiscal support to grow, she notes.
Unilever Consumer Care reported that its revenue dropped by 8% in the first quarter of this year.
According to the financial statement for the January-March period of 2026, the health drinks like Horlicks producer posted a revenue of Tk87.44 crore, which was Tk95.40 crore during the same quarter a year ago.
Following the revenue decline, its net profit also dropped by 12% year-on-year to Tk12.11 crore in the first quarter.
At the end of March, its earnings per share stood at Tk6.29, which was Tk7.13 a year ago.
In alignment with the BNP government's election manifesto, the finance ministry will prioritise 12 sectors in the upcoming FY2026-27 budget, including ensuring advanced education and healthcare, job creation, and food and energy security.
The Finance Division has instructed various ministries to submit their budget estimates for the next fiscal year and projections for the following two fiscal years to the finance ministry by 30 April, keeping these priorities in mind.
A circular issued today (20 April) emphasised prioritising human resource development, social protection, women and child development, poverty alleviation, the expansion of creative economic activities, tackling climate change, and bringing dynamism to economic development.
The first budget of the BNP government is likely to be announced on 11 June.
The estimated budget size is Tk9.30 lakh crore, which includes Tk3 lakh crore for development expenditure and Tk6.30 lakh crore for operating expenditure.
Pioneer Insurance PLC posted a 25% year-on-year growth in net profit in the first quarter of 2026, driven largely by a sharp cut in management expenses, even as its premium income declined significantly.
According to the company's financial statements for the January–March period, net profit after tax rose to Tk16.59 crore, up from the same period last year. Earnings per share (EPS) also increased to Tk1.70, compared to Tk1.36 a year earlier.
However, the insurer's premium income dropped by 19% to Tk77.72 crore during the quarter, reflecting a broader slowdown in the general insurance sector.
The profit growth was mainly supported by a 45% reduction in management expenses, which fell to Tk16.37 crore. The decline followed a regulatory move by the Insurance Development and Regulatory Authority (IDRA) to cancel agent commissions for non-life insurers, easing operational costs.
Despite the improved bottom line, the company faced rising claims, which surged by 64% year-on-year to Tk12.11 crore during the quarter.
Commenting on the performance, Syed Shahriyar Ahsan, chief executive officer of Pioneer Insurance, said the industry is currently navigating a challenging environment.
"The cancellation of agent commissions has significantly reduced business volumes that were previously driven by agents," he told The Business Standard.
He added that a slowdown in private sector exports and imports, coupled with geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, has further impacted the sector.
According to Ahsan, the general insurance industry experienced a combined premium income decline of Tk221 crore in the first two months of 2026, reflecting sluggish economic activity and the absence of agent incentives.
He also raised concerns over pricing practices among smaller insurers, alleging that some companies are undercutting premiums to secure business. "This creates an uneven playing field for companies that maintain standard pricing and transparency," he said, urging regulators to address the issue.
To stabilise the sector, he suggested reintroducing mandatory motor insurance, citing rising road accidents and the need to expand coverage while improving industry transparency.
Despite the quarterly profit growth, investor sentiment remained cautious. Pioneer Insurance shares declined by 1.13% to close at Tk61.30 on the Dhaka Stock Exchange on Monday.
For the year ended 31 December 2025, the company reported an EPS of Tk4.57 and a net asset value per share of Tk46.97. Based on this performance, its board has recommended a 25% cash dividend alongside a 5% stock dividend, subject to regulatory approval.
The company's annual general meeting is scheduled to be held on 4 May through a digital platform.
Shahjibazar Power Co Ltd, a concern of Youth Group, has reported a staggering 138% growth in its consolidated net profit during the first nine months of the 2025-26 fiscal year, driven by higher operational efficiency and strong contributions from its associate companies.
According to the company's price-sensitive disclosure released on Monday following its board meeting, consolidated net profit reached Tk81.53 crore for the July-March period, while the consolidated earnings per share (EPS) surged to Tk4.37 from the previous year's levels.
This growth was supported by a 15% increase in total consolidated revenue, which climbed to Tk1,055 crore.
The company's performance was even more robust in the third quarter alone, spanning January to March, where consolidated net profit skyrocketed by 254% to settle at Tk24.71 crore.
During these three months, consolidated revenue grew by 13% to Tk331.31 crore, yielding an EPS of Tk1.32.
The company attributed this stellar numerical performance primarily to a substantial increase in its plant factor, which rose to 77% during this period compared to just 55% in the corresponding period of the previous year.
Beyond its core operations, Shahjibazar Power benefited significantly from its diversified investment portfolio.
A senior company official noted that the firm's bottom line was bolstered by substantial earnings from its two associate companies – Midland East Power and Midland Power Company.
Additionally, the company's subsidiary, Petromax Refinery Limited, showed a healthy recovery, with its revenue jumping by 6% to Tk721.32 crore during the nine-month period.
The parent company, Shahjibazar Power, also displayed remarkable standalone strength as its revenue grew by 41% to reach Tk333.71 crore.
On Monday, Shahjibazar Power shares ended 2.12% higher at Tk53.10 at the Dhaka Stock Exchange.
The capital market extended its losing streak for a second consecutive session today (20 April) as investor confidence remained under significant pressure.
A combination of domestic macroeconomic shifts and geopolitical uncertainty continues to weigh on the bourse, with the benchmark DSEX index of the Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) plunging by 15 points to settle at 5,232.
The blue-chip DS30 index followed a similar trajectory, dropping 10 points to close at 1,980, reflecting a cautious risk-off sentiment among both retail and institutional participants.
Market analysts at EBL Securities said in their daily review that the recent adjustment in domestic fuel prices has rekindled concerns over rising production costs and broader inflationary pressures in the economy. This domestic factor, coupled with persistent uncertainty surrounding ceasefire negotiations in the Middle East conflict, has significantly dampened the risk appetite of investors.
The broad-based selling pressure resulted in a substantial erosion of the market's total valuation, with the market capitalisation of the premier bourse dropping by approximately Tk3,000 crore in a single day.
The trading session was characterised by persistent volatility from the opening bell. While buyers made sporadic attempts to reverse the downward trend during the mid-session, the recovery efforts were ultimately overwhelmed by an intensifying wave of selling, according to the EBL Securities.
By the end of the day, the market breadth remained heavily skewed toward the bears, as 207 issues declined compared to 120 advancing, while 62 securities remained unchanged. Despite the fall in prices, market activity saw a slight uptick, with total turnover on the DSE inching up to Tk824 crore.
On the sectoral front, the engineering sector continued to lead the turnover chart, accounting for 17.5% of the day's total trading volume. This was followed by the textile sector at 14.8% and the pharmaceutical sector at 11.8%.
Performance across most sectors remained weak, led by a 1.2% drop in travel and leisure, while jute and cement each declined by 1.0%. In contrast, services and real estate stood out with a 1.5% gain, and tannery and textile posted modest gains.
Several high-cap and influential stocks exerted significant downward pressure on the index during the session, with Islami Bank, Square Pharmaceuticals, City Bank, IDLC Finance, and Uttara Bank emerging as the key contributors to the DSEX's decline.
In terms of liquidity and trading volume, Summit Alliance Port emerged as the most traded stock, followed by City Bank, Dominage Steel, Acme Pesticides, and Khan Brothers PP Woven Bag.
Among individual performers, Nahee Aluminum topped the gainers' list by hitting the 10% upper circuit limit, followed by Evince Textiles and Coppertech Industries. On the losing end, IDLC Finance was the top loser with a 7.75% decline, followed by Hamid Fabrics and several non-bank financial institutions including Fareast Finance, International Leasing, and Premier Leasing.
The bearish sentiment was mirrored at the Chittagong Stock Exchange (CSE), where both key indices ended in the red.
The CSCX declined by 11 points to reach 9,023, while the CASPI shed 27 points to close the day at 14,724. Turnover at the port city bourse also saw a decline, settling at Tk34 crore.
The Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission has approved a proposal by state-owned Titas Gas Transmission and Distribution Company Limited to issue irredeemable, non-cumulative preference shares worth approximately Tk282.75 crore.
According to a disclosure on the Dhaka Stock Exchange today (20 April), Titas Gas will issue 282,747,469 preference shares at a face value and issue price of Tk10 each, amounting to Tk2,827,474,690. The shares will be issued in favour of the Finance Division of the Ministry of Finance.
Today, the company's share price closed at Tk17 on the DSE.
Titas Gas said the proposal was unanimously approved by shareholders at its 5th Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) held on 24 December 2025. It was later submitted to the regulator, which granted approval on 15 April 2026.
The move aims to align the company's capital structure with equity support provided by the government. According to Titas, the government had injected a total of Tk282.75 crore into the company as equity up to 30 June 2023, which will now be formally converted into share capital through the issuance.
A committee comprising officials from the finance ministry, Titas Gas, and the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) had earlier, at a meeting on 16 April 2023, decided to issue irredeemable non-cumulative preference shares in favour of the government.
The structure is intended to offer flexibility to the financially strained company.
Under the proposed terms, the government will receive dividends on the preference shares when the company records profits, but no dividends will be paid in years when it incurs losses.
The irredeemable preference shares will remain on the company's books permanently without increasing its paid-up or common share capital, while their non-cumulative nature means Titas will not be required to pay any unpaid dividends from previous years to the government.
Unlike ordinary shares, preference shares do not confer ownership. Instead, they give holders priority over common shareholders in receiving dividends and claims in the event of liquidation. The committee has also set guidelines governing the issuance of such shares and dividend payments.
Financial performance
Titas Gas reported a narrowing of losses in the July-December period, supported by higher operational income and a lower tax deduction rate, which reduced its overall tax burden.
Total revenue rose to Tk19,072 crore during the period, up from Tk17,473 crore a year earlier. Despite the increase, the company posted a loss of Tk390.32 crore, significantly lower than the Tk711.44 crore loss recorded in the corresponding period.
Meanwhile, net operating cash flow per share (NOCFPS) stood at Tk6.07 at the end of December 2025, mainly due to higher payments for gas purchases compared with collections from gas sales.
The government currently holds 75% of Titas Gas's ordinary shares. Institutional investors own 14.95%, while foreign investors hold 0.03% and general investors 10.02%.
On 2 March 2020, the Financial Reporting Council directed that any capital received as share money deposit – included under equity but not refundable – must be converted into share capital within six months of receipt. Such amounts are also to be considered in the calculation of earnings per share.
Economist Rehman Sobhan today (19 April) said Bangladesh's loan defaulters have become embedded in the political system and are now creating barriers to financial and institutional reforms.
"Loan defaulters have become part of the political structure. They themselves are obstructing reforms. So the problem is no longer person-specific, it is structural," he said on the final day of the three-day 9th South Asian Network on Economic Modeling (Sanem) Annual Economists' Conference in Dhaka.
"Reform is not merely about passing laws, but a continuous process requiring implementation, enforcement and measurable outcomes," he added at the session titled "Romancing the Reform: The Bangladesh Story", held in Dhaka today.
Sobhan said many reform efforts fail because governments do not follow through after legislation. "The first step of reform is enacting laws, followed by building the necessary administrative framework, ensuring proper enforcement and finally evaluating results."
The session was moderated by Sanem Executive Director Selim Raihan. The keynote paper was presented by CPD Distinguished Fellow Debapriya Bhattacharya, while former Finance Secretary and former Comptroller and Auditor General Mohammad Muslim Chowdhury served as designated discussant.
Debapriya said Bangladesh has pursued multiple reforms since independence but progress has been slowed by what he termed a "kleptocratic legacy" of corruption, misuse of public resources, weakened institutions and collusion among political, bureaucratic and business elites.
He said reforms often fail due to weak political ownership, poor implementation capacity, vested interests, lack of consultation, corruption, financing constraints and weak accountability.
Referring to the interim government, he said despite strong rhetoric, it failed to establish a coherent reform framework, lacked an integrated economic vision and did not create a real-time system for citizens to monitor progress.
Banking sector at center of crisis
Debapriya said the banking sector has become one of the clearest examples of how reform plans are derailed during implementation. He said rising non-performing loans (NPLs) are weighing heavily on the economy, while repeated attempts to restructure weak banks have been blocked by political resistance.
"The government has finally disclosed the names of major defaulters. But the real question is what to do with banks that have effectively collapsed," he said.
He also criticised amendments to the Bank Resolution Act, saying the changes created an opportunity for former owners of failed banks to regain influence by injecting a relatively small amount of money.
"This is seen as the comeback of oligarchs in a new form, with political patronage," he said, warning that such policy reversals send the wrong signal when depositors and investors need confidence.
He also criticised overlapping administrative control in the sector, saying governance reforms have been delayed for too long. "Good intentions are not enough. If banking reforms are delayed again, the cost to the economy will be much higher," he warned.
However, he welcomed promises of greater central bank autonomy, stronger supervision, action against defaulters and depositor protection, but questioned whether those commitments would be implemented.
Reform needs political commitment
Rehman Sobhan said political parties make major reform promises during elections, but it remains unclear whether they have the leadership or commitment to deliver them.
He said past reforms succeeded only when they had strong public support, citing the Six-Point Movement as an example of a widely backed reform agenda.
He added that such mobilisation is now weak, with parties failing to effectively communicate manifestos to voters. "In many cases, even party members do not properly know their own manifesto," he said.
Questioning the policy debate culture, Sobhan asked how many commentators have direct government experience, arguing that reform cannot be fully understood without working inside the state. "Without that experience, it is hard to know who supports reform, who resists it, and why it fails," he said.
Recalling his time at the Planning Commission, he said passing reform laws was not the main challenge.
Using police reform as an example, he said success should be measured by outcomes in practice. If accountability mechanisms are introduced, their effectiveness must be tested over time by citizens and journalists, he said. "That would be the real test of reform," he added.
Sobhan said many reform proposals promoted by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) are not new, but have been discussed for decades under successive governments.
According to him, governments often show limited progress to unlock loan disbursements, while development partners also have an interest in showing money has been spent.
"What actually happens in the long run is rarely examined," he said.
Need for performance budgeting
Sobhan said he has repeatedly proposed performance-based budgeting to show citizens what outcomes are achieved through public spending. "At present, we only see expenditure figures, with little analysis of results," he said.
Referring to health and education, he said allocations are often underutilised even as complaints persist over inadequate budgets. "If allocated money is not spent properly, where is the real problem?" he asked.
Citing India, Sobhan said major reforms such as the right to food, education and work were driven by strong citizen movements. In Bangladesh, he said civil society remains fragmented and unable to build unified pressure for large-scale reform.
He described the democratic process as the ultimate test of reform, calling for free, fair and inclusive elections. "A government becomes truly accountable when it accepts the people's verdict."
Amid ongoing domestic and global challenges, businesses have urged the government to ensure that the upcoming national budget for the 2026-27 fiscal year is supportive and growth-oriented rather than “punitive”.
They also called for a reduction in effective tax rates, including turnover tax, and stressed the need for a balanced and pragmatic tax policy to encourage investment and economic expansion.
The demands were made at a pre-budget seminar on private-sector priorities in Dhaka, jointly organised by the Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Dhaka (MCCI), and the Economic Reporters’ Forum (ERF).
“In the current global and domestic economic context, we are going through a challenging time,” said Kamran T Rahman, president of MCCI.
High inflation, sluggish investment, elevated interest rates, and pressure on foreign exchange have made doing business difficult, he said, adding that small and medium enterprises are the worst affected.
He said the budget should focus on boosting investment and job creation, urging a further 2.5 percentage point cut in corporate tax for both listed and non-listed companies and the removal of the cash transaction condition.
Rahman also proposed introducing a “Unified Taxpayer Profile” to replace separate tax, VAT, and customs systems, which he said would reduce complexity and harassment.
Golam Mainuddin, chairperson of Apex Footwear Limited, said the tax burden remains disproportionately high on compliant taxpayers.
Habibullah N Karim, senior vice-president of MCCI, said, “This is an opportunity to rethink our taxation paradigm; high rates often discourage compliance.”
“Bangladesh once had such high-income tax rates that no one paid at the top bracket. When rates were reduced, collection increased and it could rise further if rates are lowered again,” he added.
Citing VAT, he noted, “If rates come down from 15 percent, more businesses will comply, and overall collection could increase.”
“There is a huge scope to expand the tax net, but a rent-seeking culture within the tax administration remains a major barrier.”
“Without making the system service-oriented and addressing this culture, even automation will not deliver effective results,” he said.
Malik Mohammed Sayeed, chief executive officer of Square Toiletries Limited, called for retaining tax exemptions on sanitary napkins and diapers.
He also urged a reduction in taxes on imported raw materials to around 10 percent, as key inputs are not locally produced and require large-scale investment.
Asif Ibrahim, former president of the Chittagong Stock Exchange, said, “Investment has stagnated. Without protecting domestic investors, foreign investment will not come.”
He noted that declining private-sector credit growth is a concern, and financial sector reforms are needed.
“We expect the budget to support both domestic and foreign investment through a collaborative approach to drive growth and jobs,” he said.
Former NBR chairman Muhammad Abdul Mazid stressed policy predictability, saying businesses need clarity on tax rates in advance.
ERF President Doulot Akter Mala warned of a potential revenue shortfall of nearly Tk 100,000 crore this fiscal year, cautioning against overly ambitious targets in the next budget.
Business leaders have called for the urgent appointment of a private-sector administrator and swift elections at the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FBCCI), warning that prolonged administrative uncertainty is weakening the country’s apex trade body and undermining the interests of the private sector.
They made the call at a meeting with Commerce Minister Khandker Abdul Muqtadir at the commerce ministry today.
The FBCCI has been run by an administrator for the past two years following the political changeover on August 5, 2024.
At today’s event, Mohammad Hatem, president of the BKMEA, stressed the need to appoint an experienced businessperson as administrator of the FBCCI, instead of a government official, so that the concerns of the business community can be addressed more effectively.
He emphasised greater engagement with businesses in policymaking, particularly in the trade and industrial sectors, and highlighted the need to ensure the federation remains active, inclusive, and responsive to all business groups.
Hatem also underscored the urgency of restoring effective leadership through timely elections, warning that prolonged uncertainty is undermining business confidence.
He said the apex trade body must function as a strong and credible representative of the private sector, especially at a time when businesses face multiple domestic and global challenges. Without an elected committee, he noted, the organisation cannot effectively carry out its role in policy advocacy and coordination.
He called for prompt steps to hold elections and restore normal operations, adding that representative leadership would better protect business interests and support economic growth.
Md Zakir Hossain, general secretary of the Bangladesh Supermarket Owners’ Association, also called for the immediate appointment of a new administrator for the FBCCI from within the business community, saying the association has become ineffective under the current setup.
He said the organisation has effectively been left “without guardianship” following consecutive government-appointed administrators. While a previous administrator, Hafizur Rahman, initiated reforms and announced an election schedule, the process was later stalled due to legal challenges from business leaders.
Hossain acknowledged shared responsibility within the business community but warned that prolonged uncertainty is hurting small and medium enterprises the most. “Large businesses can directly approach ministries, but SMEs depend on FBCCI,” he said.
He criticised current administrator Abdur Rahim for limited engagement, calling for a full-time, business-backed administrator. He added that elections should be held quickly, with any rule-related issues addressed either before or after polls by an elected committee.
Abdul Haque, president of the Bangladesh Reconditioned Vehicles Importers and Dealers Association (BARVIDA), also called for the immediate holding of elections at the FBCCI, saying prolonged delays are harming the private sector.
He said the federation has been without an elected committee for nearly two years, calling the situation detrimental to the business environment. “In an economy where around 80 percent is driven by the private sector, the absence of elected leadership in its apex body is unacceptable,” he said.
Haque warned that several policies have been adopted without adequate private-sector input and could have negative impacts. He particularly flagged the long-pending import policy, urging a thorough review.
While acknowledging shared responsibility, he urged the government to appoint a private-sector administrator and hold elections swiftly. Citing the 2006–07 caretaker period as precedent, he said timely action is both possible and necessary.
In response, Commerce Minister Khandker Abdul Muqtadir called for transforming the FBCCI into a truly representative, effective, and non-political body for the business community.
He said the association must play a more proactive role in protecting business interests and conveying concerns to the government, while applying constructive pressure when needed without being politicised.
“We want an FBCCI that genuinely serves as a unified platform for all businesses,” he said, adding that it should provide practical, ground-level input in policymaking.
Muqtadir stressed that competent and dynamic leadership from within the business community is essential to revitalise the organisation. He also reassured leaders of the government’s commitment to a business-friendly environment, noting that a new import policy is in its final stage and that committees will be formed to simplify services across key ministries.
At the meeting, FBCCI Administrator and Additional Secretary (export) Md Abdur Rahim Khan also spoke.
Among the business leaders present were former FBCCI president Mir Nasir Hossain, former BKMEA president SM Fazlul Haque, former FBCCI director Nasreen Fatema Awal, Bangladesh CNG Machineries Importers Association president Zakir Hossain Nayan, former FBCCI director Gias Uddin Chowdhury Khokon, former Rangamati Chamber president Belayet Hossain Bhuiyan, former FBCCI vice-president Nizam Uddin Rajesh, and former director Syed Bakhtiar.
Economist Debapriya Bhattacharya yesterday urged the government to explain the intention behind recent revisions to the Bank Resolution Act, which now allow former owners to regain control of five Islamic banks being merged amid a severe liquidity crisis due to past irregularities.
At a session of the annual economists’ conference at BRAC Centre Inn in Dhaka, he said political authorities must set out their position in parliament and issue a clear statement explaining their intent.
Earlier this month, the House passed the revised Bank Resolution Act 2026, paving the way for former owners of the merging banks to reclaim control under relatively easy terms. The move has been widely viewed as a reversal of the interim government’s banking reform drive.
Under the law, former directors or owners can reclaim control by paying 7.5 percent of the funds injected by the government or the Bangladesh Bank upfront. The remaining 92.5 percent is to be paid within two years at 10 percent simple interest.
“I have no problem with the policy itself, but I want clarity,” Debapriya said at the conference organised by the South Asian Network on Economic Modeling (Sanem).
He said, “Even the central bank governor has not given a statement on this. So, instead of relying on our own interpretations, the authorities must speak.”
Debapriya, convenor of the Citizen’s Platform for SDGs, Bangladesh, said, “I am worried. I have already said over the past couple of days that we need a political statement on this issue. We need a discussion in parliament.”
“What we are doing now, what you, I, and others are saying, is based on our goodwill, but it is still just interpretation,” he said.
“I believe in political interpretation backed by commitment. That commitment should ensure that past problems or actors do not return. And this issue is not limited to today; it will affect the media tomorrow, and then oil and LNG imports the day after. It extends beyond banking; it affects the entire economy,” he further said.
“We have seen such patterns before. That is why I am looking for a clear political explanation, and wondering why the political leadership is silent,” added Debapriya, also a distinguished fellow at the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD).
He said the situation highlights a broader failure to pursue meaningful reform. If reforms are delayed further and pushed into a Five-Year Plan, the approach would be misplaced.
“Unfortunately, although I am also a member of that planning committee, I must say that now is the time for consolidation and reform in order to move forward,” he said.
Without reforms, including stronger revenue generation, better public spending and balanced deficit financing, he asked where the economy would go.
He also referred to findings in a white paper on the economy published by the interim government, which highlighted how deals were struck between politicians and businesspeople, especially around the Prime Minister’s Office.
Businesspeople observed such arrangements and thought, “Why shouldn’t I have a share in this?” he said, adding that some then tried to cut transaction costs by becoming directly involved, including awarding contracts to family members. Eventually, some even entered parliament themselves.
On the capital market, he suggested including not only multinational companies but also state-owned enterprises.
This, the economist said, could achieve two goals at once: raising funds in the short term, even if it feels like selling family silver, and strengthening the quality of listed shares to make the market more vibrant.
Researchers, businesspeople, economists, trade analysts and students from home and abroad took part in the discussion, which was moderated by Selim Raihan, executive director of Sanem.
‘BANK DEFAULT NOW EMBEDDED IN FINANCIAL SYSTEM’
At the session, Professor Rehman Sobhan, chairman of CPD, said banking reforms have been discussed since the time of President Ziaur Rahman, yet major defaults began then and have continued through successive governments.
Although it was once suggested that defaulters should not contest elections, laws were later introduced allowing them to do so if they made a 5 percent down payment and rescheduled loans.
This has resulted in a large group of defaulters in parliament who, he said, help block meaningful reform.
The CPD chairman added that bank default has now become embedded in the structure of the financial system and cannot be addressed simply by targeting a few crony capitalists.
He said legislation alone is not enough. Reforms must be translated into operational measures implemented by the bureaucracy, with outcomes monitored on the ground.
Prof Rehman Sobhan added that an active opposition should work with civil society to act as a watchdog over reform implementation. Ultimately, he said, the government must show genuine intent and build accountability from the Prime Minister’s Office down to the field level.
He said the ultimate test of accountability lies in the government’s willingness to subject its performance to a free, fair and inclusive election.
Mohammad Muslim Chowdhury, former Comptroller and Auditor General of Bangladesh, said that although banks such as Sonali, Janata, Agrani and Rupali were converted into public limited companies two decades ago, they continue to function largely as extensions of the government.
He suggested that these banks should be brought under a genuine corporate structure, merged if necessary, and eventually listed on the stock exchange after a thorough review of their asset quality and balance sheets.
He also called for bringing the Financial Institutions Division (FID) under the regulatory oversight of the Bangladesh Bank to prevent misuse of authority and strengthen supervision.
He further said the total number of banks should be reduced, with particular attention to those with weak balance sheets and negative net worth, through liquidation or other corrective measures.
The latest fuel price increase is expected to send shockwaves through much of the economy, lifting costs for farmers, transporters and manufacturers while offering only slight relief to the government finances and the exchange rate, according to an analysis by Brac EPL Stock Brokerage Ltd.
The brokerage estimates that seven out of nine key economic indicators it reviewed will face negative pressure. Only two areas, fiscal space and the dollar-taka exchange rate, are likely to benefit.
The government on Saturday night raised the prices of four fuels with effect from midnight. Diesel now sells at Tk 115 per litre, octane at Tk 140, petrol at Tk 135 and kerosene at Tk 130.
Bangladesh introduced an automatic, market-driven fuel pricing mechanism on March 7, 2024. Under the guidelines, prices are adjusted in the first week of each month based on the Mean of Platts Arab Gulf benchmark published by S&P Global.
For months, however, prices moved within a narrow Tk 1 to Tk 2 range in line with global markets. This time, the adjustment crosses over 15 percent, reflecting global price volatility amid conflicts in the Middle East.
Brac EPL estimates that a 15 percent increase across hydrocarbons could cut the subsidy bill by about Tk 700 crore a month at current price levels. That would ease pressure on public finances at a time when weak revenue collection and high operating costs have left the government with limited room to manoeuvre.
Lower subsidy requirements could also trim government borrowing, offering some support to the external balance and the exchange rate. But the impact is not straightforward, rather layered and uneven.
The immediate burden of the fuel shock will fall on irrigation, transport and power generation. North Bengal is in the middle of the Boro season, the largest paddy cycle of the year.
Irrigation there depends heavily on diesel and electricity. Higher diesel prices will raise cultivation costs unless offset by policy support or price adjustments.
Transport and logistics are equally exposed. Freight operators usually pass on higher fuel costs quickly, especially in goods transport. That, in turn, feeds into the prices of agricultural produce, consumer goods and manufactured items.
Although diesel-based generation accounts for less than 2 percent of total power output, its share can rise during peak demand, especially as liquified natural gas (LNG) shortages drag on. Higher generation costs may be passed on to consumers or absorbed through fresh subsidies, according to the report.
It said there could be second-round effects too. Dearer transport, irrigation and energy will add to inflationary pressures already stoked by high imported food prices.
The brokerage said that rising inflation expectations could push up yields on government securities and lift borrowing costs for companies if not carefully managed.
Higher inflation and interest rates, according to the report, would weaken demand, lower output, and leave factories running below capacity, which may ultimately translate into slower GDP growth.
While the country usually depends on long-term supply contracts, diesel, which accounts for nearly 65 percent of hydrocarbon consumption, is increasingly sourced from the volatile spot market.
Because geopolitical tensions have disrupted trade routes, with some suppliers declaring force majeure amid infrastructure damage and shipping blockade through the Strait of Hormuz.
The country’s sole crude oil refinery, Eastern Refinery Limited, has an annual capacity of 1.5 million tonnes and meets about 20 percent of domestic demand across 16 fuel products.
The refinery is currently running well below capacity because of crude shortages and is unlikely to scale up production before May this year.
Besides, existing trade agreements with the US limit Bangladesh’s ability to diversify its fuel sourcing, creating added pressure on procurement.
Brac EPL said reliance on spot purchases, low refinery utilisation and limited sourcing options could prompt further price increases, though at a slower pace.
Bangladesh is seeking an additional $2 billion in external support to cushion exposure to volatile fuel markets, ease foreign exchange pressure, and gradually reduce subsidies.
In the meantime, the country has secured a 60-day waiver from the United States to import fuel from Russia and has sourced 100,000 tonnes from Kazakhstan at around $75 a barrel.
Bangladesh’s mobile operators have warned of an imminent nationwide telecom disruption as a deepening electricity and fuel crisis pushes networks to the brink, raising serious concerns over the vulnerability of data centres and the wider digital economy.
In an urgent letter to the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission, they said the situation has “reached a point where continued telecom operations can no longer be sustained without immediate government intervention.”
The warning, issued by the Association of Mobile Telecom Operators of Bangladesh (AMTOB), comes as prolonged outages -- often lasting 5-8 hours daily during storms -- force operators to run critical infrastructure on diesel generators.
According to the letter, seen by The Daily Star, base transceiver stations (BTS) alone are now consuming over 52,000 litres of diesel and nearly 20,000 litres of octane daily across operators.
A shutdown would “critically disrupt emergency services, disaster response, law enforcement coordination, financial transactions, digital governance, and economic activity.”
Providing a breakdown, it stated that the country’s largest telecom operator Grameenphone consumes 28,079 litres of diesel and 9,254 litres of octane, Robi Axiata uses 13,140 litres of diesel and 5,610 litres of octane, and Banglalink requires 11,206 litres of diesel and 4,995 litres of octane daily to keep towers operational.
The most acute vulnerability, however, lies in data centres and switching facilities – the core of the country’s digital infrastructure.
“Core telecom infrastructure including data centres, switching facilities, and transmission hubs are frequently operating without grid power, posing serious risk to network stability,” the AMTOB said.
Each data centre consumes an estimated 500-600 litres of diesel per hour, translating to around 4,000 litres per day per facility, according to the letter.
Combined daily consumption for data centres and switching hubs has already surged to 27,196 litres, with Grameenphone, Robi and Banglalink accounting for 11,184, 9,732 and 8,200 litres respectively.
Industry insiders say this level of dependence on backup power is unsustainable.
Unlike BTS towers, data centres host critical systems such as call routing and internet traffic management. Any disruption at this level can trigger cascading failures across networks.
“If fuel can’t be managed and data centres go offline, it would cause widespread call drops, internet outages, and service blackouts,” said an official of an operator on condition of anonymity.
Tanveer Mohammad, chief corporate affairs officer of Grameenphone, echoed the concern.
Noting that operators are experiencing challenges in electricity and fuel availability, he said, “The evolving situation calls for timely and targeted measures to sustain uninterrupted telecom services nationwide.”
He said in order to “proactively avoid disruptions to essential services for millions”, they need further support from the government for priority electricity access to critical infrastructure, streamlined fuel supply, and facilitation of fuel transportation for emergency operations.
The consequences could extend far beyond communication breakdowns. The AMTOB cautioned that a shutdown would “critically disrupt emergency services, disaster response, law enforcement coordination, financial transactions, digital governance, and economic activity.”
Bangladesh’s fast-growing digital economy -- heavily reliant on mobile connectivity -- would be particularly exposed. Mobile financial services, e-commerce platforms, ride-sharing apps, and cloud-based enterprise systems depend on uninterrupted network availability. A prolonged outage could halt transactions, delay salary disbursements, and paralyse logistics chains.
The crisis is being compounded by fuel supply constraints. Local stations cannot provide volumes at this scale, the letter noted, and law enforcement barriers during inter-district transport have further disrupted supply lines.
“Multiple strategically vital telecom facilities are currently running on dangerously low fuel reserves,” it warned.
The operators’ association called for immediate government intervention, including uninterrupted electricity supply to key telecom facilities, priority power status for mobile towers, and direct fuel allocation from depots.
They also urged authorities to ensure smooth fuel transportation.
“Issue immediate written directives to LEAs (law enforcement agency) to ensure uninterrupted fuel transportation for emergency telecom operations,” they said in the letter.
“The telecom network is the backbone of national communications, public safety, governance, and emergency response. Any prolonged disruption will have severe and potentially irreversible consequences for the country,” they added.
They proposed that authorities hold an urgent high-level coordination meeting involving the power and energy divisions, fuel authorities, regulators, and operators.
There are 46,567 telecom towers in Bangladesh, operated by tower infrastructure companies and mobile operators, providing network coverage to over 18.58 crore customers. Operators have around 27 data centres across the country.
Global finance leaders, whipsawed by Middle East war news, came to grips this past week with their inability to mitigate the economic damage from increasingly frequent geopolitical shocks, and a realization that counting on U.S. leadership to resolve crises is no longer the guarantee it had long been.Finance committee reports
At International Monetary Fund and World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington, participants swung from gloom over a worsening global economic outlook due to deepening energy price and supply shocks to tentative optimism as it appeared Iran may reopen the Strait of Hormuz and allow flows of oil, gas, fertilizer and other commodities to resume.
By Saturday that optimism was already fading amid new attacks on shipping.
The IMF and the World Bank pledged up to a combined $150 billion in new financing assistance for developing countries hit hardest by the massive energy price shock, and celebrated their re-engagement with Venezuela’s acting government after a seven-year pause.
They warned countries not to hoard oil and not to go overboard with expensive and untargeted fuel price subsidies. But in the end, there was not much they could do but watch statements from Tehran and the White House.
“Actually some of the most important decisions on the global economy are not happening here,” Josh Lipsky, international economics chair at the Atlantic Council, said of the IMF and World Bank campus.
“The single most important development in the global economy happened between the U.S. and Iran,” he said. “We hope it’s good news, and we’ll wait and see.”Economy news updates
Despite buoyant stock markets and a sharp drop in oil futures prices on Friday, Saudi Arabia’s Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan summed up the mood of many officials when he said he would not be comfortable predicting an improved outlook until tankers start moving freely through the strait again with reasonably priced insurance and physical energy prices dropping.
“If the clear waters are open,” Al-Jadaan told a news conference, “I think that’s what would trigger, for me, a change in the scenario.”
As soon as the IMF released a mild cut in its global growth forecast for 2026 to 3.1% under the most optimistic of three scenarios it devised for the task, it said that was already outdated and that the global economy was drifting towards a more adverse growth scenario of just 2.5%. The fund’s latest World Economic Outlook said a prolonged war could push the global economy into recession.
SHOCK AFTER SHOCK
Before the U.S. and Israel launched attacks on Iran at the end of February, the global economy had just been recovering from last year’s shock from President Donald Trump’s wave of steep tariffs on global trading partners.
Discussions of trade tensions were more muted at this year’s meetings, as was Russia’s war on Ukraine, though G7 finance ministers pledged to keep up pressure on Russia.
But a constant drumbeat of shocks that started with the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 was teaching countries the U.S. is no longer “the general” of the international order and would not necessarily provide solutions, Lipsky said.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Friday launched an initiative calling for G20 countries, the IMF and World Bank to take coordinated action to ensure adequate access to fertilizers amid supply disruptions from Gulf countries. But seven weeks after the war’s start, that will do little to ease shortages and high prices for farmers now planting spring crops across the Northern Hemisphere.
Kevin Chika Urama, chief economist at the African Development Bank, said the Middle East crisis provided a fresh imperative for African countries to deepen regional trade and economic ties, work on alternative energy sources, expand their domestic tax bases, and tap into enormous natural gas reserves.
“Geopolitical tensions are the new normal and uncertainty in policymaking has become certain,” he told a panel with other chief economists from the multilateral institutions.
NOT OUR WAR
Finance ministers, central bankers and other officials attending the meetings expressed frustration at being thrust into another economic calamity by Trump’s actions.Finance committee reports
Behind closed doors, officials, particularly from Europe, sent a clear message to the U.S. that Washington needed to take action to reopen the strait, a senior finance official who attended the meetings said. In public, the comments were more diplomatic with less finger-pointing.
“The knot of this conflict is the Strait of Hormuz. We need this to open, but not at any price,” French Finance Minister Roland Lescure told reporters. “I don’t want to pay a dollar to go through the Strait of Hormuz.”
Successive shocks, including this war, have scrambled planning for developing economies “and you hardly have time to breathe,” Retselisitsoe Adelaide Matlanyane, Lesotho’s Minister of Finance and Development Planning, said during a panel of African ministers.
“For small, open, and vulnerable economies like Lesotho, these shocks have presented extraordinary pressures on the fiscals, on prices and on everything.”
Matlanyane said managing debt has now become very complex and the tensions have “brought on a sense that we have to rethink policy and we have to think differently.”
“It’s frustrating dealing with this,” she told Reuters.
For Thailand, a net energy importer that will host IMF and World Bank annual meetings in October, the lingering effects of destroyed Gulf oil and gas infrastructure will keep prices elevated for a long time, said Ekniti Nitithanprapas, deputy prime minister of Thailand.
But he said the crisis was an opportunity for Thailand to reduce its reliance on fossil fuels and boost the role of renewable energy, including solar farms - the opposite of Trump’s energy agenda.
“We need to commit to transform...to help people transform to face the new fragmented world and high oil prices,” Nitithanprapas said.
Despite repeated notices and a High Court directive, People's Leasing and Financial Services has failed to recover any dues from four former directors who collectively owe Tk1,785 crore.
The non-bank financial institution is now moving towards legal action to recover the long-overdue loans.
"We sent multiple letters to the permanent addresses of the four directors requesting repayment but have not received any response," managing director Md Sagir Hossain Khan told The Business Standard. The court gave them six months to repay, but the January deadline passed without compliance.
"Action is being taken under prevailing laws. Legal notices have already been served, but no response has been received. It has been decided to file cases, which are also in process," he added. "The company has also filed a fresh petition seeking further directions from the court."
The four directors
Recovery efforts have been complicated by the status of the accused directors. Former chairman Motiur Rahman and former director Khabir Uddin have died. Another director, Bishawjit Kumar Roy, remains absconding and his whereabouts remain unknown. Arafin Samsul Alamin remains active in business as a director of Shamsul Alamin Real Estate and managing director of SA Spinning Mills.
A special forensic audit, ordered by the court in 2021, revealed that the four sponsor-directors alone accounted for Tk1,413 crore of the Tk2,800 crore outstanding to major defaulters as of 2022.
The audit, conducted by MABS & J Partners covering 2009-2022, was submitted in January last year. Based on its findings, the High Court's company bench in January 2022 directed the defaulters to clear their dues within six months. The order was later published on the company's website in September.
According to the audit, outstanding loans as of 2022 were Tk565.47 crore for Motiur, Tk404.38 crore for Khabir, Tk415.66 crore for Arafin, and Tk28.47 crore for Bishawjit. By March 2026, the total outstanding to these four had risen to Tk1,785 crore.
The report detailed the nature of borrowing: Arafin and Bishawjit took direct loans, Motiur availed both loans and margin loans for share trading, while Khabir Uddin borrowed solely for share trading.
Motiur was chairman of MK Group, a major importer of fertilisers and commodities, while Khabir was engaged in jewellery and real estate development, according to the company's 2014 annual report.
Attempts to reach Arafin were unsuccessful. A woman who answered his phone denied that the number belonged to him and disconnected the call after the reporter identified himself.
Managing Director Sagir said the audit exposed deep-rooted governance failures. "The company's directors colluded among themselves to take loans and diverted funds from People's Leasing," he said.
"Some loans had collateral, while others had none. Even where collateral exists, it is negligible compared to the loan amount. We also found that for 65% of the loans, the required collateral was not provided, which has severely damaged the institution," he added.
Struggles of People's Leasing
People's Leasing has been struggling for years under the weight of non-performing loans, negative interest margins, operating losses, and mounting obligations to depositors. Since 2015, it has not paid dividends due to continuous losses.
Following a petition by Bangladesh Bank under the Financial Institutions Act, the High Court in July 2019 placed the company under liquidation. That order was later recalled in July 2021, when the court formed a new board, which has since been restructured to manage the institution.
The company's 2024 annual report, citing the forensic audit, pointed to widespread financial irregularities, systemic governance failures, and gross mismanagement. These included irregular loan approvals and disbursements, inaccurate interest calculations, unapproved waivers, dubious loan adjustments, regulatory non-compliance, and unreliable financial statements.
It also highlighted the involvement of former directors, board-level oversight failures, and negligence by officials, noting that repeated warning signals from external auditors since 2014 had been ignored.
In response to a query from the Dhaka Stock Exchange, People's Leasing said the current board and management have been working to stabilise the institution.
Since July 2021, around Tk200 crore has been recovered from default borrowers, while Tk85-90 crore has been repaid to depositors in phases. The third phase of repayment has also begun.
The company said its financial distress stemmed largely from irregularities, weak governance, and non-performing loans disbursed before 2019, with the forensic audit identifying significant liabilities linked to former directors.
As part of revival efforts, the company has sought around Tk750 crore in government support following court directives involving Bangladesh Bank and the Ministry of Finance. It has also resumed limited lending on a fully secured basis, disbursing approximately Tk25 crore in new loans so far.
Economists have attributed the decline to overall political instability and uncertainty surrounding the elections.
Former World Bank Dhaka office lead economist Zahid Hossain said there was no conducive environment for investment at the time.
“There was uncertainty over the direction of political consensus, making it unrealistic to expect foreign funds to flow into the country. Although the interim government took some initiatives to attract investment, those efforts faced obstacles,” he said.
He added that foreign investors were hesitant as they knew the interim government would not be permanent and there was no clear roadmap regarding the elections.
Reinvested earnings also saw a sharp decline during the period. Bangladesh Bank data showed a 35.31 percent drop, with reinvested earnings standing at $217.4 million at the end of the October–December quarter, compared to $325.75 million a year earlier.
Reinvested earnings refer to profits generated by foreign companies from local operations that are reinvested in the country instead of being repatriated. While this indicates some level of investment activity, overall FDI growth depends largely on new equity investments, which remain weak.
Distinguished Fellow of the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) Mustafizur Rahman said foreign firms reduced reinvested earnings considering the overall economic and political environment.
“There was uncertainty over whether elections would take place, which discouraged reinvestment. Although elections were held in February, concerns persisted during that quarter,” he said.
Apart from political factors, economists pointed to several structural challenges hindering FDI inflows, including policy complexities, high business costs, and infrastructural limitations.
Bangladesh also lags behind other South Asian countries in port management, transport, and logistics facilities, as well as cargo and container handling capacity.
Mustafizur Rahman said issues such as the absence of an effective single-window system and high costs of doing business are discouraging foreign investors.
“Even if the political environment improves, investment will not increase unless these structural problems are addressed. The arrival of an elected government alone will not automatically boost FDI, as investors evaluate overall opportunities and conditions,” he added.
A senior Bangladesh Bank official said private sector investment has also declined, indicating that both local and foreign investors are reluctant to undertake new investments.
According to Bangladesh Bank, total foreign investment—including equity, reinvested earnings, and intra-company loans—stood at $363.82 million during the period, down from $494 million in the same quarter of 2024.
The country's capital market began the week on a sluggish note today (19 April), as investors remained cautious following the recent adjustment in domestic fuel prices and ongoing uncertainty regarding the Middle East conflict.
The benchmark DSEX index of the Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) edged down by approximately 9 points to settle at 5,247.
Market participants remained cautious, refraining from taking fresh positions and instead adopting a wait-and-see stance amid lingering geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainties that continued to weigh on market momentum.
Despite a relatively steady performance during the mid-session, the early optimism failed to hold as mounting selling pressure in major large-cap scrips eventually eroded the initial gains.
EBL Securities, in its daily market review, noted that the recent hike in domestic fuel prices further reinstated investor caution.
While the benchmark index fell, the blue-chip DS30 index saw a marginal uptick, closing at 1,990. However, the overall market breadth remained bearish, with 223 issues declining against 125 advancing, while 56 remained unchanged.
Trading activity on the premier bourse saw a slight upward trend compared to previous sessions, with total turnover rising to Tk819 crore.
On the sectoral front, the engineering sector dominated market participation, accounting for 18.9% of the total turnover, followed by the textile and general insurance sectors.
However, the majority of sectors recorded negative returns. The paper and printing sector faced the steepest correction, dropping by 1.7%, while the travel and leisure and jute sectors declined by 1.5% and 1.1%, respectively.
In contrast, the general insurance sector emerged as a rare bright spot, posting a 2.2% gain, while the textile and tannery sectors also managed to end the day with marginal positive returns.
Several high-cap stocks acted as significant index draggers during the session, including Islami Bank, Walton Hi-Tech Industries, National Bank, ACI, and Beacon Pharmaceuticals.
On the other hand, turnover leaders included City Bank, Paramount Textile, Khan Brothers PP Woven Bag, Runner Auto, and Acme Pesticides.
Among individual stocks, Runner Auto and Janata Insurance emerged as the top gainers, both surging by 9.94%, while Sonar Bangla Insurance and Prime Textile also posted significant gains.
Conversely, Popular Life First Mutual Fund and Meghna Cement were among the top losers of the session, facing notable price corrections.
The bearish sentiment was mirrored at the Chittagong Stock Exchange (CSE), where the key indices both closed in negative territory.
The CSCX ended 5 points lower at 9,035, while the CASPI shed 9 points to settle at 14,751. Turnover at the port city bourse, however, saw an increase, reaching Tk41 crore
Oil prices rebounded more than 6% today (20 April) after tumbling more than 9% on Friday on news the Strait of Hormuz is closed again after both the US and Iran said the other party had violated their ceasefire deal by attacking ships over the weekend.
Brent crude futures jumped $6.11, or 6.76%, to $96.49 a barrel by 2327 GMT and US West Texas Intermediate was at $90.38 a barrel, up $6.53, or 7.79%.
The US military had seized an Iranian cargo ship that tried to run its blockade, US President Donald Trump said yesterday, while Iran said it would not participate in a second round of peace talks despite Trump's threat of renewed airstrikes.
The United States has maintained a blockade of Iranian ports, while Iran has lifted and then reimposed its own blockade of the Strait, which handled roughly one-fifth of the world's oil supply before the war began almost two months ago.
"Oil markets continue to gyrate in response to oscillating social media posts by the US and Iran, rather than the realities on the ground which remain challenging for oil flows to resume in a rapid fashion," Saul Kavonic, MST Marquee's head of research, said.
Both contracts posted on Friday their largest daily declines since April 18 after Iran said passage for all commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz was open for the remaining ceasefire period and Trump said Iran had agreed to never close the strait again.
"The announcement of the Strait opening proved premature," Kavonic said.
"Ship owners will be twice shy about heading towards the Strait again without receiving much more confidence that any announced passage is real."
More than 20 ships passed the strait on Saturday carrying oil, liquefied petroleum gas, metals and fertilizers, Kpler data showed, the highest number of vessels crossing the waterway since 1 March.
Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury has said that the government will not accept all the conditions of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in order to take loans.
"Decisions will be taken after safeguarding the interests of the country's people and businesses," he said while speaking with journalists at his office in the Secretariat today (19 April), after returning from the IMF-World Bank Spring Meetings.
Khosru stressed that the relationship with the IMF is not charitable but commercial.
He further said, "There are many ongoing discussions between the government of Bangladesh and the IMF and World Bank, and the issue is not only about the amount of money involved, which many people fail to understand."
He added that loan discussions with the IMF are ongoing and may continue for another 15 to 20 days, or even up to a month.
"We have not fully agreed with the IMF in the discussions. We are reviewing what the IMF is asking for, and we also have our own expectations. We are an elected government, and we will not accept everything just because someone asks us to," Khosru said.
The current government will not take any decision that creates pressure on the people or businesses, he added.
Khosru said discussions with the World Bank, Asian Development Bank (ADB), and Infrastructure Bank have already been completed.
He said the current IMF loan programme is not tied to the months of June or July.
"Many people do not understand this. The current IMF programme was taken under the previous Awami League government and includes many conditions. Its tenure is only seven months. Some of those conditions may not be acceptable to the current government."
"We will decide whether we will proceed with the next programme," Khosru added.
Responding to a journalist's comment that the introduction of the Family Card may have caused the IMF to step back or impose new conditions, the finance minister said there is no connection between the Family Card and IMF loans.
"On the contrary, the Family Card has been widely appreciated. It will help deliver the benefits of the economy to poor people."
When asked whether the increase in fuel prices was made to meet IMF conditions, he said fuel prices have increased globally.
"We are not the only ones who have increased prices. Everyone has asked why we are not increasing fuel prices. In Sri Lanka, fuel prices were increased by up to 25%."
He added, "If we do not increase fuel prices, pressure on the treasury increases, and with the upcoming budget, it is not easy to manage. So, we have increased it only as much as necessary. This has no relation with the IMF."
Asked whether inflation will rise, he said it may or may not increase. "The recent increase in fuel prices is temporary and not significant. Fuel has a small share in the inflation basket."
He further said representatives from the IMF, World Bank, ADB, Infrastructure Bank, and IDB will visit Bangladesh. "All of them want to work with the current government."
He added that their policies align with the government's election manifesto, so they are interested and supportive of cooperation.
Khosru also said that the presidents of the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank will visit Bangladesh.