The government has reiterated that Bangladesh faces no actual fuel shortage, even as the ongoing conflict in the Middle East disrupts global energy markets, maintaining that supply remains stable and manageable with plans underway to build longer-term reserves, including a 90-day fuel stock.
Officials stressed that recent supply pressures are largely the result of hoarding by a section of traders, creating artificial scarcity rather than reflecting real deficits.
Energy Minister Iqbal Hasan Mahmud said that supply constraints at times were due to logistical delays rather than a lack of fuel. "There is enough fuel… people will get it, but they should not buy more than necessary," he said, urging consumers to avoid panic purchases.
State Minister for Power, Energy, and Mineral Resources Anindha Islam Amit said that long queues at filling stations were caused by a sudden spike in demand.
He urged consumers to avoid stockpiling, reassuring them that both fuel and electricity remain stable.
The state minister said around Tk167 crore is being spent daily to stabilise fuel prices and ease public suffering, as any price hike would immediately increase electricity tariffs, transport fares and food prices.
Recent fuel arrivals
Early today (31 March), a Panama-flagged vessel, PVT Solana, carrying 30,000 tonnes of diesel from Malaysia, berthed at Chattogram Port, marking the eighth fuel shipment to arrive this month.
The Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation (BPC) confirmed that the diesel may be unloaded either via lightering or directly at the dolphin jetty, with final arrangements pending.
Another vessel carrying a similar quantity is expected on 3 April, while a ship transporting around 70,000 tonnes of LNG is due on 4 April. Over the past month, 33 vessels have docked, including 15 carrying fuel oil, eight with LNG, and nine transporting LPG.
Officials said that Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation plans to boost diesel imports from India's Numaligarh Refinery, while Petrobangla has secured nine LNG cargoes for April.
Govt plans strategy to battle crisis
State Minister for Foreign Affairs Shama Obead Islam outlined the government's multi-pronged strategy to secure an uninterrupted fuel supply and strengthen reserves.
Bangladesh is actively engaging with multiple countries – including Saudi Arabia, India, Malaysia, Indonesia, the United States, and Russia – to ensure continued imports.
Several consignments are expected in April under existing agreements and memorandums of understanding.
On fuel imports from Russia, the state minister said the issue of sanctions requires procedural considerations, including engagement with the United States, adding that the relevant ministries are in discussions to resolve such matters.
"There is no fuel crisis at the moment. We have sufficient reserves, and efforts are underway to strengthen our stock further," she said, emphasising that traders creating artificial pressure must be addressed strictly.
India's real GDP growth for the next fiscal (2026-27) could erode by around one percentage point, while retail inflation could rise by about 1.5 percentage points from their baseline estimates if the West Asia conflict persists through the next fiscal, consultancy firm Ernst & Young report said.
The EY Economy Watch report said several sectors, including employment-intensive sectors like textiles, paints, chemicals, fertilisers and cement could be directly impacted.
Any reduction in employment or incomes in these sectors may further dampen aggregate demand. As a result, both supply and demand conditions may be adversely affected by global oil market disturbances, the report added.
It said the Indian economy, which imports nearly 90% of its crude oil requirements, is also highly dependent on imports of natural gas and fertilisers and is particularly vulnerable to such external shocks, with the adverse effects likely to cascade across multiple sectors through strong forward and backward linkages with crude oil and energy.
EY, in its February report, projected India's GDP could be between 6.8% and 7.2% in the 2026-27 fiscal.
The Indian government has already set up a Rs1 lakh crore economic stabilisation fund to act as a financial cushion against global headwinds.
Green Delta Insurance PLC has declared a 27% cash dividend for shareholders for the year ended 31 December, 2025.
The announcement was made at the company's 40th annual general meeting, held on 31 March, 2026 through an online conferencing and broadcasting platform.
The meeting was attended by sponsors, directors and shareholders. Company Secretary Md Oliullah Khan, FCS, conducted the AGM with the permission of Chairperson Shamsun Nahar Begum Chowdhury.
The chairperson thanked the shareholders for their continued support and cooperation in the company's growth. She also congratulated members of the Green Delta family for their sincere efforts to ensure uninterrupted customer service and smooth business operations during the economic challenges faced by businesses.
Farzanah Chowdhury, managing director and CEO of Green Delta Insurance, thanked shareholders for their support in helping the company maintain its leading position in the industry. She also expressed gratitude to the team for pursuing excellence amid the difficult economic conditions of 2025.
She expressed optimism about the company's future, citing its diverse service portfolio, digital solutions, automated customer service, agriculture insurance and microinsurance. She also pledged to continue innovation and deliver best-in-class service to ensure financial stability and sustainable growth.
Founding Managing Director Nasir A Choudhury also addressed the shareholders and thanked them for their continued support.
A large number of shareholders joined the online AGM and appreciated the board of directors and management of Green Delta Insurance PLC for the company's performance, corporate governance, dividend declaration and informative annual report for 2025.
Dove soap maker Unilever has implemented a global hiring freeze "at all levels" that will last at least three months, citing the effects of the widening conflict in the Middle East, according to a memo seen by Reuters.
In the memo, sent to staff late last week and previously unreported, Unilever said the freeze would take effect immediately and was made with an eye on the "significant challenges" from the month-old Iran war.
Firms globally from airlines to retail are scrambling to buttress themselves from the effects of the Iran war, which has snarled global trade flows and resulted in the worst-ever disruption of oil-and-gas supplies in history. The rapid surge in energy costs is already surfacing in other markets, slowing production in industries like chemicals and plastics.
"Macro economic and geopolitical realities, especially the Middle East conflict... bring some significant challenges for the coming few months," Fabian Garcia, head of Unilever's personal care business, wrote in the memo sent to staff.
"With this in mind, the Unilever Leadership Executive team has agreed a global recruitment freeze at all levels. This will be effective immediately and last for a minimum of three months."
The London-based consumer products giant owns some of the world's most prominent brands. While it produces most of its goods where it sells them, it buys chemicals, food, packaging and other raw materials that are energy-intensive to create.
Unilever, in a statement, said that due to the "uncertain external environment, we have decided to put in place a temporary pause on our recruitment," adding that it will "always adjust our plans as necessary."
Unilever was already cost-cutting
The freeze comes on top of an existing cost-cutting programme Unilever has had in place since 2024, meant to save around 800 million euros ($916.72 million) in costs over the next three years. The changes Unilever proposed then were expected to affect around 7,500 jobs globally, mostly office-based.
The firm's current headcount of 96,000 is down from the roughly 149,000 people it employed in 2020.
The company has struggled to grow sales volumes across its businesses in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. It is now in talks to sell its foods business to smaller rival McCormick & Company, it said on 20 March.
Under the proposed combination, which would mark a major shake-up under CEO Fernando Fernandez, the British group's shareholders would likely keep a majority stake in the new entity, Reuters reported late last week.
Shares of Unilever rose 1.1% in London trading Monday.
China's factory activity grew at the fastest pace in a year in March, underpinned by improved demand, an official survey showed on Tuesday, a welcome relief for an economy grappling with global supply chain strains and energy market volatility.
The stronger reading eases pressure on policymakers, though its durability is in doubt as surging energy prices driven by the Middle East war, and heightened growth risks, pose fresh headwinds for manufacturers reliant on exports and operating on thin margins.
"The outlook for Q2 is unclear at this stage, given the negative impact from high energy prices," said Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.
"The market is increasingly worried about the risk of global growth slowdown and supply chain disruption."
The official manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) rose to 50.4 from 49.0 in February, above the 50-threshold and hitting the highest point in 12 months, data released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed. It beat analysts' forecast for a 50.1 reading in a Reuters poll.
The manufacturing PMI was in contraction for most of 2025 and the first two months of 2026.
China's goods exports continued to power growth in January and February after last year's record $1.2 trillion trade surplus, buoyed by firm global demand for electronics, particularly semiconductors. The commerce ministry said last week the momentum looked set to hold, even as geopolitical strains linger.
Yet the war in the Middle East is raising concerns for policymakers.
Pressure was already evident in the latest survey. The sub-index for purchase prices of main raw materials jumped to 63.9 in March from 54.8 in February, driven by rising bulk commodity prices and faster procurement by companies, the NBS said.
Output prices also rose, albeit at a more modest pace, suggesting limited pricing power.
War fans business uncertainty amid weak domestic demand
The March PMI data may have been skewed by the Lunar New Year holiday, despite seasonal adjustments to the NBS survey that economists say remain imperfect. The festival fell in February, when factories often shut for longer than the official break, which stretched to a record nine days this year.
Businesses accelerated their resumption of work and production after the holiday and market activity improved, NBS statistician Huo Lihui said in a statement, adding that PMI readings improved across companies of different sizes.
The sub-indexes for output and new orders both rose above 51 from below 50 the previous month, while that for new export orders improved to 49.1 from 45 in February.
China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, an industry association, said earlier this month that the war could affect car exports. The Middle East accounted for around a fifth of China's vehicle exports last year.
Hikes in input costs could pressure wages and job security, which would in turn weigh on already chronically weak domestic demand.
China's economic activity outperformed expectations in the first two months in part due to government support.
The non-manufacturing PMI, which includes services and construction, also increased to 50.1 from 49.5 in February, the NBS survey showed.
Tuesday's PMI survey suggests China's first-quarter GDP growth would likely exceed 4.5%, the floor for Beijing's 4.5%-5.0% target for this year, ANZ analysts said.
ANZ no longer expects rate cuts in 2026 or 2027 given growth stayed within the official goal, saying instead policymakers would likely prioritise structural measures to cushion the impact of the oil shock.
China's leaders have repeatedly vowed to shift the growth engine toward domestic consumption to reduce reliance on external demand. But rebalancing reforms will take time, and as the fallout from the war deepens, businesses are likely to feel the pain more sharply in the near term.
"When the global situation is uncertain, reliance on China's industrial chain increases, similar to the situation at the beginning of the pandemic," said Dan Wang, director for China at Eurasia Group.
"However, exports and PMI may face risks in the second half of the year, as the Iranian issue could lead to a recession in major economies, especially the EU, which is China's most important trading destination."
Overseas credit card spending by Bangladeshis declined by 5.74%, falling to Tk463 crore in January from Tk491.2 crore the previous month, according to the latest report of the Bangladesh Bank.
However, Bangladeshis spent the highest amount using credit cards in Thailand in January 2026, totalling Tk69.4 crore, reveals it.
The central bank's report titled "An Overview of Card Usage Patterns Within and Outside Bangladesh" showed that spending in Thailand increased from Tk64.9 crore in December.
After Thailand, the United States was the second most popular destination, where spending stood at Tk67.5 crore in January, slightly down from Tk68.2 crore in December.
The United Kingdom ranked third with Tk38.4 crore in spending, also decreasing from Tk44.4 crore a month earlier.
Spending in Singapore rose slightly to Tk38.3 crore while expenses in India dropped significantly to Tk28.5 crore from Tk35.1 crore in December.
According to the report, India had been the top destination for Bangladeshi credit card spending until August 2024. However, stricter visa policies have reduced travel to India, shifting spending to other countries.
The report also showed debit card usage abroad, with the UK, US, China and India topping the list.
Bangladesh secured higher foreign loan commitments in the first eight months of the current fiscal year, yet actual disbursement fell by 26 percent compared with the same period last year, raising concerns about the country’s ability to use external funds effectively.
Between the July-February period, foreign loan disbursement dropped to $3.05 billion, down from $4.13 billion a year earlier, according to data released by the Economic Relations Division (ERD) yesterday.
The decline was driven largely by slower project aid, the primary channel for financing infrastructure and development projects.
Disbursement under project assistance fell to just above $3 billion in the first eight months of this fiscal year, compared with over $4.1 billion during the same period last year.
This slowdown comes despite nearly $40 billion in financing commitments from foreign lenders.
Analysts say the widening gap between pledged funds and actual disbursement reflects Bangladesh’s limited capacity to use external resources on time.
Foreign aid is crucial for roads, power plants, and social sector projects, but delays can reduce project benefits and increase costs.
The trend is particularly concerning as Bangladesh’s external debt servicing rises. During the July-February period, the country paid $2.9 billion in principal and interest, up from $2.63 billion a year earlier.
Deen Islam, professor of economics at Dhaka University, said the figures indicate a gradual shift from development financing to debt rollover.
“When a large portion of new external borrowing is used to service existing debt rather than finance productive investment, the net inflow of resources into the economy declines,” he said.
“Infrastructure and development spending may slow, while rising debt servicing puts additional pressure on foreign exchange reserves and the exchange rate,” Islam said.
He added that the situation could also fuel imported inflation. While not yet a crisis, he described it as a “warning sign”.
“If this trend persists, policymakers will face difficult trade-offs between taking on more debt and reallocating domestic resources away from development spending,” he said.
Meanwhile, Monzur Hossain, member (secretary) of the General Economics Division (GED) under the Planning Commission, said, “Loan disbursement is directly tied to project progress. When implementation slows, disbursement inevitably falls.”
He pointed to structural bottlenecks, particularly in investment projects.
“Many projects involve complex conditions, and meeting those requirements takes time. Land acquisition remains a major challenge in many cases,” Hossain said.
He also noted weaknesses in the execution of the Annual Development Programme (ADP) as a key factor. “Since most of these loans are linked to ADP projects, delays in overall project execution translate into slower disbursement,” he added.
During the period of the interim government, many projects were almost stagnant. However, Hossain expressed optimism about improvement in the coming months.
“Now, with a political government in place, monitoring has increased, projects are being prioritised, and delays are being scrutinised more closely,” he said.
“I expect the situation to improve soon, particularly in the final months of the fiscal year as measures taken by the Planning Commission begin to take effect,” he added.
Dhaka Stock Exchange witnessed a second consecutive session of losses today (30 March) as persistent sell-offs, fueled by rising US-Israeli tensions over Iran, dragged the benchmark index down. The DSEX fell 41 points to close at 5,230.
Despite declining prices for 59% of listed stocks, turnover slightly increased by 2.69% to Tk663.87 crore, according to DSE data. The other key indices also ended lower, with the DSES down 5 points to 1,061 and the blue-chip DS30 falling 19 points to 1,979.
Among traded stocks, 111 advanced, 231 declined, and 51 remained unchanged.
Trading opened on a positive note at 10 am but lasted only seven minutes before selling pressure gripped the market, pushing indices into the red. Selling intensified in the latter part of the session, keeping stocks under pressure throughout the day.
EBL Securities said in its daily report that investor sentiment remained cautious amid ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and a nationwide fuel shortage.
"The market continued its losing streak for the second consecutive session, as investors shifted focus from large-cap stocks to momentum-driven speculative scrips," the report said. "Despite a firm start, broad-based selling emerged midway through the session, intensifying toward the close and dragging the index lower."
On the sectoral front, Pharma stocks accounted for the highest share of turnover at 18.2%, followed by Engineering at 11.7% and Banks at 9.7%.
Among gainers, Hakkani Pulp and Paper led with a 9.92% rise to Tk88.6, followed by Intech Ltd with a 9.41% gain to Tk43 and IFIC First Mutual Fund up 7.69% to Tk4.2.
Prime Finance was the top loser, slipping 9.25% to Tk4.9, followed by FAS Finance down 8.57% to Tk3.2 and Fareast Finance falling 8.33% to Tk3.3.
The port city bourse, Chittagong Stock Exchange, also ended in negative territory. Its CSCX and CASPI fell by 7.1 points and 17.7 points, respectively
Oil prices extended gains on Monday, with Brent headed for a record monthly rise, after Yemeni Houthis launched their first attacks on Israel over the weekend, widening the US-Israel war with Iran in the Middle East.
Brent crude futures jumped $3.94, or 3.5 percent, to $116.51 a barrel at 0703 GMT after settling 4.2 percent higher on Friday.
US West Texas Intermediate was at $102.14 a barrel, up $1.86, or 1.87 percent, following a 5.5 percent gain in the previous session.
“The market has all but discounted the prospect of a negotiated end to the war, Trump’s claims of ongoing ‘direct and indirect’ talks with Iran notwithstanding, and is bracing for a sharp escalation in military hostilities, which is a bullish signal for crude, with huge uncertainties on the timing and nature of the outcome,” said Vandana Hari, founder of oil market analysis provider Vanda Insights.
US President Donald Trump said the US and Iran have been meeting “directly and indirectly” and that Iran’s new leaders have been “very reasonable”, as more U.S troops arrived in the region, while the Israeli military said on Monday it is attacking the Iranian government’s infrastructure throughout Tehran.
Brent has soared 59 percent this month, the steepest monthly jump, exceeding gains seen during the 1990 Gulf War, after the Iran conflict effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, a conduit for a fifth of the world’s oil and gas supplies.
The war, launched on February 28 with US and Israeli strikes on Iran, has spread across the Middle East, raising concern about shipping lanes around the Arabian Peninsula and the Red Sea.
The Israeli military on Monday said Iran launched multiple waves of missiles at Israel and an attack had also been launched from Yemen for only the second time since the war began.
“The conflict is no longer concentrated in the Persian Gulf and around the Strait of Hormuz, but now extends into the Red Sea and the Bab el-Mandeb — one of the world’s most crucial chokepoints for crude and refined product flows,” JP Morgan analysts led by Natasha Kaneva said in a note.
Saudi crude exports re-directed from the Strait of Hormuz to the Yanbu port in the Red Sea reached 4.658 million barrels per day last week, data from analytics firm Kpler showed.
If exports from Yanbu were disrupted, Saudi oil would need to pivot toward Egypt’s Suez-Mediterranean (SUMED) pipeline to the Mediterranean, JP Morgan analysts said.
Attacks in the region escalated over the weekend and damaged Oman’s Salalah terminal despite efforts to start ceasefire talks.
Iran said it was ready to respond to a US ground attack, accusing Washington on Sunday of preparing a land assault even as it sought negotiations.
Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said they had covered possible ways to bring an early and permanent end to the war in the region as well as potential US-Iran talks in Islamabad.
Separately, Vietnam’s Binh Son Refining and Petrochemical on Monday said it is in talks with Russian partners to buy crude oil. The company said it would also buy more crude oil from Africa, the US and Southeast Asia.
Foreign loan disbursement declined by 26.2% in the first eight months (July–February) of the current fiscal year.
According to an updated report published today (30 March) by the Economic Relations Division (ERD), development partners disbursed $3.053 billion during this period, compared to $4.134 billion in the same period of the previous fiscal year.
ERD officials said the slowdown in project implementation due to elections led to the drop in disbursement. The administration remained focused on the election during the current fiscal year, which slowed the pace of development project implementation and affected foreign loan disbursement.
Officials also noted that, similar to the previous fiscal year, there was administrative instability at the beginning of the current fiscal year and during the interim government period. At the same time, there was a lack of confidence among development partners, which further slowed project implementation from the outset.
In addition, after the Awami League government lost power in 2024, many project directors and related officials left their positions. Appointing new project directors took time, and this situation persisted into the first half of the current fiscal year, disrupting both project implementation and fund disbursement.
Meanwhile, ERD data show that in the first eight months of the fiscal year, Bangladesh repaid nearly the same amount to development partners as it received in disbursements.
According to ERD, Bangladesh repaid $2.899 billion in principal and interest on past loans during July–February, while disbursement during the same period stood at $3.05 billion.
In the same period of the previous fiscal year, Bangladesh repaid $2.636 billion to development partners.
Officials said repayments have increased as grace periods for many previously taken loans have ended. However, on a full-year basis, repayments are still expected to remain lower than disbursements. For example, Bangladesh repaid $4.086 billion in the previous fiscal year, while disbursements were $8.56 billion. Similarly, although repayments may rise by the end of the current fiscal year, they are unlikely to exceed disbursements.
ERD data show that Bangladesh repaid $1.943 billion in principal during the first eight months, up from $1.692 billion in the same period last year.
Interest payments during this period amounted to $955.8 million, compared to $944.1 million in the same period of the previous fiscal year.
Meanwhile, Bangladesh secured $2.431 billion in foreign loan commitments during July–February, slightly higher than $2.353 billion in the same period last year.
ERD sources said that last fiscal year's student-led uprising, change of government, administrative instability, and lack of confidence among development partners contributed to lower loan commitments. Although the situation has improved in the current fiscal year, the interim government remains cautious about foreign borrowing, which has limited the pace of new commitments. However, commitments are expected to increase under a newly elected government.
Mustafa K Mujeri, executive director at the Institute for Inclusive Finance and Development, said development partners generally feel more comfortable working with a stable and democratically elected government. As a result, during the interim government period, both major loan commitments and disbursements remained low except for urgent needs. This contributed to the decline in disbursement compared to the previous fiscal year. Although commitments have increased somewhat in the first eight months, the rise is not significant.
He added that repayment of foreign loans taken in previous years has now become a major pressure. As repayment periods for loans taken under the previous government begin, the amount of repayment is increasing. Currently, disbursement and repayment are nearly at the same level, which could increase pressure on foreign exchange reserves.
According to him, if new loan inflows do not increase, this pressure may intensify in the future. At the same time, global uncertainties, including the Middle East conflict, have increased costs of energy, transport, and insurance. Importing oil and LNG from alternative sources at higher prices is putting additional strain on reserves. The current reserve stands at around $30 billion, and increasing it to $40-45 billion could bring some relief. In this situation, the government is seeking budget support from the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and Asian Development Bank to ease pressure on reserves.
Mujeri said coordinated efforts are essential to tackle the crisis. Strengthening foreign assistance, expanding exports, boosting reserves, and controlling expenditure will help Bangladesh address these challenges.
According to ERD data, Russia disbursed the highest amount – $755.15 million – during July-February, mainly for the Rooppur power project. The World Bank disbursed $636 million, the Asian Development Bank $566.19 million, China $257.72 million, Japan $189.36 million, and India $152.89 million.
In terms of commitments, the Asian Development Bank provided the highest at $1.269 billion during the first eight months. The World Bank committed $416.25 million, while European Union countries pledged $392.07 million.
A dedicated division under Bangladesh Bank spearheads anew stolen-asset-recovery initiative with over 200 high-value non-performing loan (NPL) cases under scrutiny, each involving an estimated Tk 2.0 billion.Bangladesh market analysis
A newly established unit--Stolen Asset Recovery Division--is currently validating the amounts using data from the Credit Information Bureau (CIB), says Farhanul Gani Choudhury, adviser to the governor on stolen asset recovery.
Talking to The Financial Express, he said the 200 cases were shortlisted from NPL data submitted by commercial banks to the central bank. According to compiled information, these cases collectively account for approximately $12 billion or Tk 1.47 trillion in NPLs.
Bangladesh's total NPL volume stood at Tk 5.57 trillion as of December 2025, according to BB data.
Mr Gani clarifies that while the total NPL amount in these 200 cases is under intelligence scrutiny, it does not necessarily mean that the entire sum has been siphoned off.
"The SAR has now started working under a single platform to proceed in a structured way," he says.
The division will prioritise cases based on the number of banks affected by each NPL, he adds.
Under the second phase, SAR has engaged with 40 banks.Personal finance tools
Through civil proceedings, the division aims to determine how much of the NPL amounts in these 200 cases has actually been siphoned off the banking system.
Meanwhile, the first phase of the SAR initiative is also progressing in full swing.
"These 200 cases involve around 200 companies and individuals - a mixed group. While individuals are involved, they often operate through companies," Mr Gani says, without naming names of the suspects.
He notes that many of these borrowers are multi-bank clients, meaning a single individual has taken loans from multiple banks.
Sharif Zahir, chairman of UCB, which was the first bank to sign an NDA in the case involving former land minister Saifuzzaman Chowdhury, has said the response from litigation funders on asset recovery has so far been disappointing.
"One firm, FT, initially responded but later backtracked. Perhaps they found the amount not large enough or not sufficiently attractive," he says.Premium content access
He adds that UCB moved quickly to claim the alleged stolen assets in order to appoint an administrator. Grant Thornton has since taken over the administratorship.
"If we proceed through civil litigation, it is not that difficult to recover stolen assets. However, criminal proceedings require government-to-government agreements, which make the process more complex."
Mr Zahir expresses optimism about recovering at least part of the assets linked to Saifuzzaman Chowdhury, some of which have already been put up for sale in the UK.
On the 200 cases, Mr Gani explains that in cases where a single defaulter is linked to 10 or 15 banks, coordination becomes essential.
For cases involving only one bank, such coordination is not required, and the choice of international firm becomes less critical. However, in multi-bank exposures, a consortium or lead-bank approach is necessary.
"I have established an entirely new department. This work would not be sustainable without a strong institutional structure," he told the FE.
The SAR division consists of around 12 officials led by a director, in line with the organogram approved earlier by former BB governor Dr Ahsan H Mansur and endorsed by the current governor.
At a meeting with senior journalists on Sunday, the new BB governor reaffirmed his position to proceed on SAR without political and other interventions.
A director has already been appointed and is actively working on SAR. Previously, these responsibilities were partially handled by the Bangladesh Financial Intelligence Unit (BFIU), but now all asset- recovery functions have been consolidated under one umbrella.Bangladesh market analysis
All members of this division are officials of Bangladesh Bank. The structure includes one director from BFIU, two additional directors, four joint directors, and several assistant and deputy directors. Given the technical nature of the work, an IT specialist will also be appointed.
BFIU Director Syed Mahbub, who has been closely involved in SAR efforts from the outset, is also part of the division.
The division of crusaders for stolen asset recovery includes two to three joint directors who have completed two-year master's degrees in asset recovery from the UK, bringing valuable international expertise and knowledge of global best practices.
Under Phase 1, SAR has completed 36 non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) with 10 banks. NDAs have also been signed with nine international firms, and data sharing is now underway.
United Commercial Bank, Janata Bank, National Bank, Al-ArafahIslami Bank, Agrani Bank, AB Bank, and Islami Bank Bangladesh, among others, have signed the agreements with the law firms.
The global law and litigation firms engaged are Kroll, R1 Consortium, Interpath, Dentons/EY, DLA Piper/Unitas Global, PwC/Baker McKenzie, Omni Bridgeway, and Grant Thornton.Personal finance tools
"Data is the most critical element. Everything I have done so far has been through coordination. Now we will be able to assess how viable this data is for building cases internationally," Mr Gani further says.
He explains that prior to signing NDAs, international firms did not have access to case-level data and were relying only on broad macroeconomic estimates of capital flight.
"Now it will become clear how much of this can actually stand up in international jurisdictions. Based on this, they will need to convince their litigation funders. Once they receive positive feedback from those funders, they will proceed with commercial contracts."
The SAR division has already begun seeking feedback from international firms, with mixed responses so far.
Some banks have performed well by properly organising and indexing their data and clearly presenting their proceedings in the Money Loan Court. Others, however, have submitted unstructured data, reflecting gaps in capacity and understanding.
"I plan to organise a best-practice session where better-performing banks will demonstrate to others how to prepare and present data to the required standard," he says.
SAR has also asked international firms to formally outline their minimum data requirements to ensure clarity in expectations.
Officials have observed that not all international firms operate the same way - some are more supportive and flexible, while others are less so.
German companies are so deeply tied to both the United States and China that they cannot decouple from either without severe economic costs, according to a study by the University of Sussex and King's College London seen by Reuters on Monday.
The researchers mapped sales, production and supply-chain exposures of firms listed on Germany's DAX and MDAX indices, finding that dependence on the world's two biggest economies runs across sectors and individual companies.
Automakers and machinery groups are most reliant on China as a market, while chemical and pharmaceutical firms depend more heavily on the US for research, development and production, the study said. Digital, telecoms and semiconductor companies, meanwhile, are highly exposed to suppliers in both countries.
"Leading industrial players like Siemens and BMW were built in a fundamentally globalised system and can't decouple from either China or the US without devastating losses," University of Sussex political economist Steven Rolf, a co-author, said.
The study said BMW generates more revenue from China than from the United States, while also depending on Chinese battery supplier CATL for more than 1.4 billion euros ($1.5 billion) in inputs.
Siemens gets 24% of revenue from the United States and 12% from China, with supplier networks heavily exposed to both.
The findings underscore the difficulty for Berlin in crafting a clear strategy as US-China tensions intensify, Rolf said.
The interim government's reliance on the banking sector surged significantly to meet development project costs and other expenditures, with borrowing from internal banks reaching over Tk73,000 crore in the first seven months of the current fiscal year, FY2025-26.
According to a report from Bangladesh Bank, 81% of the government's total domestic and foreign loans between July and January were sourced from the internal banking system. The total net borrowing from both local and international sources stood at approximately Tk90,000 crore during this period.
Economists warn that excessive government borrowing from banks can crowd out the private sector, discouraging investment and creating pressure for interest rate hikes. This comes at a time when private sector credit flow has already hit a record low due to political instability ahead of the 13th national elections.
Central bank officials identified several factors behind the rapid increase in bank loans. A primary reason is the government's capital support for the "Combined Islamic Bank," formed by merging five banks. In the first week of last December, the government injected approximately Tk 20,000 crore into the bank, a large portion of which was financed through bank borrowing.
Additionally, while revenue collection fell short of targets in the first half of the fiscal year, operating expenses rose significantly, forcing the interim government to lean more heavily on the banking sector.
The government proposed a budget of Tk7.90 lakh crore for the FY2025-26, with an overall deficit (including grants) of Tk2.21 lakh crore, or 3.5% of GDP. To bridge this gap, the government planned to borrow Tk1.25 lakh crore from domestic sources, including Tk1.04 lakh crore from the banking system and Tk21,000 crore from non-banking sources.
However, data shows a sharp shift in borrowing patterns.
Net borrowing reached Tk73,035 crore from July to January, nearly an eight-fold increase compared to Tk9,442 crore during the same period of the previous fiscal year.
Borrowing from non-banking sources plummeted to Tk7,216 crore, down from Tk25,864 crore in the previous year.
The total stock of domestic debt stood at Tk10.37 lakh crore as of January 2025, an increase of over Tk1.51 lakh crore within a single year.
The report also highlighted a dwindling contribution from external sources. In the first seven months of FY2025-26, net foreign borrowing amounted to only Tk9,832 crore, accounting for less than 11% of total loans.
In contrast, the government had secured approximately Tk27,964 crore from foreign sources during the same period in the previous fiscal year.
Experts emphasised the need for a balanced debt management strategy to attract private investment and ensure long-term economic stability.
City Sugar Industries Limited, a concern of City Group, has received regulatory approval to raise Tk1,300 crore through a three-year zero-coupon bond.
The approval was granted by the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC) at a meeting today (30 March), according to a press release.
The proposed bond will be secured and mortgage-backed, non-convertible, and fully redeemable, with an estimated discount rate of around 13.50%. Under the structure, the company will provide land as collateral, offering enhanced security to investors.
The bond will be issued through private placement to corporate entities, high-net-worth individuals, banks, financial institutions, and insurance companies. Each unit of the bond will carry a face value of Tk13 lakh.
Officials said the proceeds from the bond issuance will be used to repay existing liabilities with various banks and financial institutions, helping the company restructure its debt and improve financial stability.
BRAC EPL Investments Limited has been appointed as the trustee of the bond, while BRAC Bank will act as the arranger. The bond is also expected to be listed on the Alternative Trading Board, providing a platform for secondary market trading.
Syed Rashed Hussain, chief executive officer of BRAC EPL Investments, said the mortgage-backed nature of the bond ensures a higher level of security for investors.
He explained that the company's land will be transferred under the trustee as collateral, and in case of default, the trustee will have the authority to liquidate the assets to repay investors.
He added that this is the first instance of a mortgage-backed bond issuance in Bangladesh, setting a precedent in the local capital market and potentially opening the door for similar structured financing instruments in the future.
Earlier, City Auto Rice and Dal Mills Limited, another concern of City Group, issued a Tk350 crore bond for repaying the debt.
Market analysts believe the move reflects a growing trend among corporates to explore alternative financing options beyond traditional bank loans, while also offering investors more secure investment avenues.
The securities regulator has approved a proposal from non-listed Akij Food & Beverage Ltd to raise Tk 5 billion by issuing zero-coupon bonds, a move that reflects the growing reliance of large corporations on alternative financing instruments.Financial literacy course
According to the regulatory approval, the bond will be unsecured, non-convertible, and fully redeemable. Unlike conventional bonds, this instrument does not offer periodic interest payments. Instead, the bond is issued at a discounted price and redeemed at full face value upon maturity, allowing investors to earn a fixed return.
The approval came at a meeting of the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC) last week, presided over by its Chairman Khondoker Rashed Maqsood.
The tenure of the bond will range from six months to 60 months, providing flexibility for investors with varying investment horizons.
The bond units will be issued through private placement to banks, non-bank financial institutions, insurance companies, institutional investors, and high net-worth individuals. Each unit will carry a face value of Tk 1 million, effectively limiting participation to large-scale investors.
Sena Insurance has been appointed trustee, responsible for safeguarding investors' interests and ensuring regulatory compliance, while North Star Investments (BD) will act as the fund manager.Bangladesh market analysis
Market insiders said amid tighter banking liquidity and relatively high borrowing costs, corporations are actively diversifying funding sources. Structured instruments such as zero-coupon bonds allow issuers to better align repayment obligations with long-term revenue generation.
The proceeds from the issuance are expected to support the company's expansion and operational financing needs, although detailed utilisation plans were not disclosed. This would be a cost-efficient way to fund expansion without immediate interest servicing burdens.
Founded in 2006, Akij Food & Beverage has grown into one of the country's leading beverage manufacturers. Its portfolio includes several well-known brands such as Mojo, Frutika, and Speed, which enjoy a strong market presence across segments.
Asian stock markets fell while oil prices surged today (31 March) as the ongoing war involving Iran continued to rattle global markets and drive up energy costs.
South Korea's benchmark Kospi index dropped sharply by 3.82%, losing more than 200 points to stand at 5,075.92 around 01:00 GMT.
Japan's Nikkei 225 also declined 2.24% in early trading before recovering slightly, though it remained down 0.73%, or 377 points, at 51,507.99.
China's FTSE China A50 Index edged lower as well, slipping between five and 10 points, or less than 0.07%, to hover around 14,570.
Meanwhile, oil prices climbed amid supply concerns linked to the conflict.
The US benchmark West Texas Intermediate rose 1.08% to $103.99 per barrel, crossing the $100 mark for the first time since the war began. International benchmark Brent Crude jumped 2.23% to reach $109.78 per barrel.
Rising crude prices have translated into higher fuel costs in the United States.
The average retail gasoline price has exceeded $4 per gallon for the first time in more than three years, according to data cited by Reuters from fuel tracking service GasBuddy.
Since the US-Israel war involving Iran began on February 28, gasoline prices across the US have surged by about $1.06 per gallon, marking a 36% increase.
The last time prices reached the $4 threshold was in August 2022, following the outbreak of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
During his 2022 campaign to return to the White House, Donald Trump had pledged to cut energy costs and boost domestic oil and gas production, a promise now facing renewed scrutiny amid the latest price spike.
Oil companies will have to look further afield for new fossil fuel resources now that the Iran war has dented the investment allure of the energy-rich Middle East. Higher oil prices will give them that chance.
Major international oil companies, including Exxon Mobil, Chevron, TotalEnergies, Shell and BP, have long been drawn to the Middle East by its vast resources, stable fiscal terms and, until recently, relative political stability. The region accounts for roughly a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) production.
That reputation, built painstakingly over decades even as wars raged in Iraq and Yemen, has now been shattered by the US-Israeli war with Iran.
Now in its fifth week, the conflict has put energy infrastructure squarely in the crosshairs. Dozens of facilities across the Gulf have been damaged, including Qatar’s giant LNG hub and several major oil refineries.
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz - through which roughly 20 percent of the world’s oil and gas normally flows - has forced producers to shut oilfields, costing the region an estimated $1 billion a day in lost export revenues, according to Reuters calculations based on pre‑war prices.
The longer‑term costs will be far higher. Restarting operations and repairing damaged facilities will likely run into the tens of billions of dollars - if not far more. QatarEnergy said an Iranian missile strike on February 18 could cost it about $20 billion a year in lost revenue and take up to five years to repair.
But no amount of money may be able to repair the region’s reputational damage – at least not in the short term – and that is likely to rapidly reshape Western energy majors’ upstream strategies.
The Middle East will clearly remain a major source of oil and gas for decades. It holds about half of the world’s proven oil reserves and 40 percent of gas reserves. Western companies are thus unlikely to abandon it altogether.
It currently makes up a substantial portion of many majors’ portfolios, including 41 percent of Exxon’s reserves, 42 percent of TotalEnergies’ and a quarter of Shell’s, according to consultancy Welligence. The region attracted around $130 billion in oil and gas investment in 2025, roughly 15 percent of the global total, according to the International Energy Agency.
But unless the Iran war ends with a new, non-belligerent government sitting in Tehran - an outcome that currently appears remote - the conflict will leave deep scars. Uncertainty over the safety of transit through Hormuz and the higher risk of conflagration is apt to sharply boost the cost of deploying staff, equipment, insurance and capital in the Middle East, making the region a lot less attractive for exploration.
This rising risk premium in the world’s largest energy-producing region is already being reflected in long-term oil prices.
Since the eve of the conflict, the average Brent crude price expected in 2030 has jumped about 10 percent to roughly $72 a barrel. Once the full extent of the damage from the war is known, that could rise even further.
A structurally higher oil price would change the upstream calculus for the world’s energy giants.
This shift comes as the industry’s appetite for new oil and gas investment has been strengthening. Over the past year, oil companies have significantly increased spending on exploration worldwide - from West Africa and the eastern Mediterranean to Brazil and Southeast Asia.
That was a sharp break from the prior decade, when shareholder pressure and fears of a rapid demand decline driven by the energy transition reduced upstream investment. Today, companies – spurred by new outlooks suggesting fossil fuel demand won’t peak until next decade – are increasingly confident that more supply will be needed through the end of the decade.
Of course, exploration remains a high‑risk, high‑reward business requiring heavy upfront investment. Projects can also often take more than a decade to progress from the first drilling campaign to production.
Still, higher long-term prices would expand the pool of economically viable reserves worldwide. And, importantly, the spiking risk premium in the Middle East is likely to push more capital toward regions previously deemed more risky or marginal.
Venezuela offers a case in point. Its oil industry reopened to Western companies after the US deposed President Nicolas Maduro in January, yet investment in the country has remained tepid given political uncertainty and concerns over the sector’s dilapidated infrastructure.
In a more bullish price environment, however, Venezuela’s vast resources could suddenly appear more appealing – particularly if the relative geopolitical risk gap between Venezuela and the Gulf shrinks.
The energy industry has been through such a geographic reshuffle before. After 2022, the Middle East gained importance when Western companies were forced to exit Russia following Moscow’s full‑scale invasion of Ukraine.
The Iran war now threatens to trigger another realignment - pushing companies to cast their investment nets wider than they have in years. But if the response this time around is to move into riskier or costlier areas, the floor on energy prices is likely going up.
Unpredictable tax practices, weak enforcement, and conflicting regulatory directives continue to raise costs and delay operations for businesses, Japanese investors said yesterday.
Speaking at an event at The Westin Dhaka, marking the Japan Business Day, they argued that without policy continuity, transparent administration, and reliable dispute resolution, long-term investment decisions remain at risk. The programme was jointly organised by the Embassy of Japan, Bangladesh and Japan External Trade Organisation (Jetro).
“Clear, consistent and fairly applied rules are vital to improve Bangladesh’s investment climate. Uncertainty often outweighs product competitiveness,” said Manabu Sugawara, president of Japanese Commerce and Industry Association in Dhaka (JCIAD), commonly known as Shoo-Koo-Kai.
He identified tax reform as a priority, calling for simpler procedures, clearer interpretations and reduced discretionary practices, alongside faster services and reliable dispute resolution.
Sugawara highlighted poor coordination among government agencies, saying conflicting directives create delays and raise costs for investors.
He also urged a functional one-stop service with fully digital, streamlined and time-bound approvals, licensing and renewals.
Pointing to persistent visa and permit delays, he said such bottlenecks must be resolved quickly.
Hiroshi Uegaki, country representative of Mitsubishi Corporation, one of Japan’s corporate giants, called for foundational reforms to strengthen Bangladesh’s investment climate for Japanese firms.
He stressed improving data management, business efficiency and digitalisation aligned with international standards to reduce delays.
Uegaki highlighted the importance of economic partnership agreements (EPAs) to ease import-export processes and support smoother operations.
Policy consistency, he added, remains critical to ensure long-term investor confidence and signal a stable, business-friendly environment.
Tareq Rafi Bhuiyan, president of the Japan-Bangladesh Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said the EPA would ensure continued market access to Japan and strengthen investor confidence through a rules-based framework.
The Bangladesh–Japan EPA is being seen as critical to sustaining trade and investment as Bangladesh prepares for LDC graduation, he said. “Investors value predictability and long-term trust,” he noted, adding that reforms must align with EPA commitments to attract sustained Japanese investment.
Also speaking at the event, Rashed Al Mahmud Titumir, the prime minister’s adviser on finance and planning, pointed out priorities to deepen Bangladesh–Japan economic ties and shift focus from aid to investment-led growth.
He said Bangladesh wants higher Japanese investment to match global averages, with a stronger emphasis on manufacturing to create sustainable jobs.
He also stressed the need for greater technology transfer through joint ventures, enabling long-term industrial capacity and competitiveness. Titumir added that the government is committed to policy reforms, including deregulation, stronger market-based oversight, and improved contract enforcement to build investor confidence.
Ashik Chowdhury, executive chairman of the Bangladesh Investment Development Authority (Bida), outlined a set of reforms aimed at attracting sustained foreign investment, particularly from Japanese firms.
He said improving the business climate would require making tax administration more transparent and efficient, reducing the burden of unpredictable enforcement. He also stressed the need for stronger coordination among government agencies to avoid conflicting directives that often delay operations.
Chowdhury called for a fully functional “one-stop service” to streamline licensing through digitalisation and ensure visa processing within a predictable timeframe. Policy consistency, he added, remains crucial for long-term corporate planning and boosting investor confidence.
Japanese Ambassador to Bangladesh Shinichi Saida described the recently signed bilateral EPA as a landmark step, urging Bangladesh to view it through a long-term lens rather than immediate gains.
He said the deal offers legal certainty for investors and reinforces a rules-based trade environment at a time of global uncertainty.
Meanwhile, presenting the findings of a survey on business conditions of Japanese firms, Kazuiki Kataoka, country representative of Jetro, said Bangladesh is emerging as a promising frontier for Japanese businesses, with stronger profit expectations and growing interest in expansion.
He noted that 56.9 percent of Japanese firms in Bangladesh plan to expand operations, driven largely by the country’s rising domestic market.
He also pointed to administrative inefficiencies and policy uncertainty as major risks, stressing that improving these areas could unlock greater foreign investment.
Syed Nasim Manzur, managing director of Apex Footwear Limited, said Bangladesh should position itself as a manufacturing hub, exporting to Japan and integrating into global value chains.
Leveraging the EPA, he added, could deepen long-term partnerships and boost trade and services.
M Masrur Reaz, chairman and CEO of Policy Exchange of Bangladesh (PEB), said Bangladesh’s prospects under the proposed economic partnership with Japan remain promising, but some weaknesses could blunt its gains.
He said weak inter-agency collaboration, fragmented public-private dialogue, and limited private-sector linkages undermine policy execution and investment climate reforms.
The war in Iran has sparked chaos across financial markets, leaving some investors and market makers reluctant to take on risk, making trading harder and costlier - a scenario regulators watch closely.
None of the world's biggest markets, from US Treasuries, to gold, to currencies have been spared, investors and traders said. In Europe, hedge funds, which now dominate bond trading, added to those dynamics as they rapidly unwound a number of bets this month.
Investors say they have at times struggled to get prices, or execute trades over the past four weeks, as market makers fear being stuck with large positions that could quickly become unprofitable.
"When we try to trade, it takes longer to trade. (The market makers) want us to be more patient, cut the trades into smaller sizes," Rajeev De Mello, chief investment officer at GAMA Asset Management, said, adding gaps had widened between the price at which market makers would buy an asset and at which they would sell it. "What that has as a consequence is that everybody's reduced the sizes of their positions."
Various measures of volatility have soared to levels seen in previous market crises, including those for stocks, bonds, oil and gold.
Cracks have emerged even in the usually deep and liquid government bond markets, a cornerstone of global finance that has been hit hard as inflation risks spook investors.
The difference between bid and ask prices on newly issued two-year US Treasuries, a key measure of market depth and transaction cost for the most widely traded securities, has meanwhile widened roughly 27% in March, compared with February levels, according to Morgan Stanley, suggesting dealers are charging a higher premium to take on risk.
Pain in futures market
To be sure, the latest symptoms of market stress are not uncommon during bouts of market turmoil, such as during US President Donald Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs last April and the 2020 COVID pandemic.
But this round of volatility has arrived at a time when markets had been in an expansive mood, as investors rode a runaway rally across asset classes, suggesting a deeper correction may materialise if the war drags on and liquidity evaporates.
In Europe, the pain has been particularly stark in the futures market for short-term interest rates, where traders rapidly priced steep central bank rate hikes.
Liquidity became "severely diminished" at one point, operating at 10% of usual levels, Morgan Stanley's co-head of EMEA rates Daniel Aksan said.
"The (illiquidity, price moves) reminded me of the COVID days," he said.
Three European financial regulators on Friday said ongoing geopolitical tensions, namely the war in the Middle East, pose significant risks to the global financial landscape through higher energy prices, potential inflationary pressures and weaker economic growth. They reiterated their warning about the impact of volatility on liquidity and the risk of sudden price swings.
Protecting bottom lines
Trading has thus far remained orderly, but buyers are becoming increasingly scarce as investors rush to de-risk and move into cash, leaving dealers hesitant in turn.
"Firms have lost so much money - whether it's sell-side or buy-side - that liquidity is suffering because you don't have the players," said Tom di Galoma, managing director of global rates trading at broker-dealer Mischler Financial, referring to the US Treasury market.
While trading volumes in Treasuries have surged, analysts say some of these trades have been done out of necessity, not by choice.
"With a wider bid-ask spread, it is more expensive to put on a trade and would be less attractive for people to enter into trades, but the fact that you still see really high volumes suggest that some of these trades were unwinds, or stop-outs," said Morgan Stanley US rates strategist Eli Carter.
Hedge funds in europe
The particularly sharp selloff in European bonds has also served as an example of the impact hedge funds may have on that market at times of stress, a risk the Bank of England in particular has flagged as their footprint has grown rapidly in recent years.
Hedge funds now make up over 50% of trading volumes in Britain's and euro zone government bond markets, according to the latest Tradeweb data from 2025.
While their presence in the bond markets provides liquidity in good times, many had piled into the same trades, some of which quickly proved loss-making.
Hedge funds took steep losses on betting the BoE would cut rates, three hedge fund investment sources said. They also took hits on trades that bet on steeper European yield curves and on trades that assumed the gap between Italian and German bond yields would stay narrow, Credit Agricole's head of European government bond trading Bruno Benchimol said.
As they all unwound similar positions at the same time, that pushed bond dealers to widen bid-ask spreads, Benchimol added.
When hedge funds all de-risk at the same time "it exacerbates volatility," said Morgan Stanley's Aksan. At other times, they took positions that helped dampen volatility, he said.
Staying in the market
But market makers still have pressure to win business even as clients reduce the frequency and size of trades.
Sagar Sambrani, a senior FX options trader at Nomura, said pricing for larger ticket orders had widened versus normal market conditions to account for market risk. But, "counter-intuitively, the pricing on smaller tickets is tighter than in regular conditions as market makers strive harder to capture the reducing client flows," Sambrani said.
But sometimes this is not possible.
In the gold market, which is highly sensitive to interest rates, Mukesh Dave, chief investment officer at Aravali Asset Management, a global arbitrage fund, said there were days when market makers were absent altogether, indicating an unwillingness to transact.
The price of normally safe-haven gold plunged this month after a record rally in 2025.
"They don't want to make money at the moment, they don't want to lose money by being in the market. If given a choice, they don't want to be in the market," Dave said.
Minister for Power, Energy and Mineral Resources Iqbal Hasan Mahmud Tuku stated in a parliamentary session today (30 March) under Rule 300 that the government has taken the initiative to import 50,000 tonnes of octane in April.
Additionally, the government announced that another 30,000 tonnes of octane will be supplied from domestic sources.
As a result, even though the monthly demand is 35,000 tonnes, the current management will ensure an additional reserve for at least two months.
The minister said that although global instability – particularly tensions in the Middle East – has created pressure on the global fuel supply, Bangladesh has kept the situation under control through advanced preparation, consistent imports and effective management.
The minister noted that despite the increase in prices on the international market, fuel prices have not been raised domestically.
Keeping fuel prices stable a major success of govt: Salahuddin
Currently, while the selling price of diesel is Tk100 per litre, the actual cost is approximately Tk198. The government is also providing subsidies for octane.
The minister stated that for the March-June quarter, a total subsidy of Tk15,409 crore will be required for diesel, and Tk636 crore for octane, totalling Tk16,045 crore.
"Furthermore, for LNG imports through Petrobangla, a subsidy of Tk15,077 crore will be required for the April-June quarter. This government believes the state's primary responsibility is to stand by the people during crises and ensure their protection," he added.
What’s driving our hoarding instinct in the ongoing fuel crisis?
The minister said, "I want to reassure the nation through this parliament that fuel prices have not been increased in the country despite the foreign crisis. Many countries around the world have had to adjust fuel prices repeatedly. Even in many neighbouring countries, prices have increased by more than 25%."
He emphasised that the Bangladesh government has prioritised the public interest and kept prices stable, because if fuel prices rise, the cost of agricultural production, transport and the general public's cost of living increases manifold.
The discussion on hiking fuel prices comes in the face of a global crisis stemming from the Middle East war. In order to cope with energy shortages, prices have increased in many neighbouring countries, and some countries have even shut down educational institutions due to energy shortages.
Earlier, Home Minister Salahuddin Ahmed said keeping fuel prices unchanged in the country, despite their rise in international markets following the Middle East war, was a major success of the government.