Top finance officials from around the world will convene in Washington this week under the shadow of the war in the Middle East, which has delivered a third major shock to the global economy after the COVID pandemic and Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Top International Monetary Fund and World Bank officials last week said they would downgrade their forecasts for global growth and raise their inflation predictions as a result of the war, warning that emerging markets and developing countries will be hit hardest by higher energy prices and supply disruptions.
Before the Iran war broke out on 28 February, both institutions had expected to lift their growth forecasts given the resilience of the global economy - even in the wake of major tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump beginning last year. But the war has delivered a series of shocks that will slow progress on recovering growth and beating back inflation.
The World Bank's baseline estimate now projects growth in emerging markets and developing economies of 3.65% in 2026, down from 4% in October, but sees that number dropping as low as 2.6% if the war lasts longer. Inflation in those countries was now forecast to hit 4.9% in 2026, up from the previous estimate of 3%, and could spike as high as 6.7% in the worst case.
The IMF warned last week that about 45 million additional people could also face acute food insecurity if the war persists and continues to disrupt fertilizer shipments needed now.
The IMF and World Bank are racing to respond to the latest crisis and support vulnerable countries at a time when public debt levels have reached record levels and budgets are tight.
The IMF said it expects demand for $20 billion to $50 billion in near-term emergency support to low-income and energy-importing countries. The World Bank has said it could mobilize some $25 billion through crisis response instruments in the near-term, and up to $70 billion in six months, as needed.
But economists are urging governments to use only targeted and temporary steps to ease the pain of higher prices for their citizens, since broader measures could fuel inflation.
"Leadership matters, and we've come through crises in the past," World Bank President Ajay Banga told Reuters, lauding work on fiscal and monetary controls that had helped economies weather previous storms. "But this is a shock to the system."
Countries now face a tough balancing act managing inflation while keeping an eye on growth and the longer-term challenge of creating enough jobs for the 1.2 billion people who will reach working age in developing countries by 2035.
IMF and World Bank also face a far different global landscape with tensions running high between the United States and China, the world's largest economies, and the Group of 20 major economies hobbled in its ability to coordinate a response.
The United States currently holds the rotating presidency of the G20, which also includes Russia and China, but it has excluded another member - South Africa - from participation, complicating the group's ability to coordinate on this crisis.
"You're trying to operate on consensus when there's no consensus in the world right now on anything," said Josh Lipsky, chair of international economics at the Atlantic Council.
Lipsky said statements by the IMF, World Bank and other multilateral lenders about their readiness to support countries hit hard by the war were clearly aimed at reassuring markets.
"It's a signal to private creditors. This is not a time to flee countries that are in problematic waters. They will have support from the multilateral development banks and the international financial institutions. This is not going to be COVID. This is something that we can handle."
TOUGHER CONDITIONS FOR MANY
Mary Svenstrup, a former senior US Treasury official now with the Center for Global Development, said many emerging market and developing economies entered the crisis worse off than just a few years ago, with lower buffers, higher debt vulnerabilities and lower reserves.
"We need to have this crisis be a catalyst for IMF stakeholders to really rethink how the Fund supports vulnerable countries with the recognition that we're going to be seeing more global shocks," she said. "We can't ask them to sacrifice growth and development for the sake of rebuilding buffers."
Svenstrup said countries should pursue more ambitious reforms if they received fresh funds. "There probably does need to be more financial support from the (international financial institutions) but it needs to be affordable, and it needs to be in the context of reform programs and potentially broader debt relief," she said.
Martin Muehleisen, a former IMF strategy chief who is now with the Atlantic Council, agreed, saying the IMF should work with donor countries to accelerate debt restructuring for borrowers and "get them off the debt cycle." New lending should be tied to a credible debt-reduction road map, he said.
Eric Pelofsky, vice president at the Rockefeller Foundation, said low-income and lower middle-income countries paid twice the amount to service their debts in 2025 than before COVID, limiting funds for education, health care and other critical social programs. Half were now in or near debt distress, up from a quarter, just a few years ago.
"This new conflict threatens any recovery that occurred since the pandemic or the Ukraine war, and it takes countries that have basically been treading water, trying to stay away from default, and keeps them in a long term debt-growth-investment trap," he said.
With a trillion?dollar economy in vision by 2034, the new government plans a big budget worth Tk 9.30 trillion for the next fiscal year for augmented funding of critically important sectors.Economic Forecast Report
In order to finance the substantially raised annual spending plan, the government has set a target to collect some Tk 7.95 trillion as revenue in the fiscal year 2026-27, officials say.
The decisions were made at a meeting of the committee for coordination on fiscal, monetary, and currency exchange on Friday night, as the budgeting exercise is getting in gear with little over two months left before the current fiscal year ends.
Official sources say the new government will have to make large allocations to fulfill a number of its electoral pledges in the next fiscal year, face the impacts of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, and enhance salary of employees partially, and so the budget size is going to be increased significantly.
"The Middle East conflict alone is eating up a big portion of government subsidies now, but its impacts on the economy will be much bitter in the next fiscal year," says one official.
As such, he adds, the government is giving big target to the National Board of Revenue (NBR) for collecting revenue to meet the growing expenditure.
Also, the high revenue target is set as Bangladesh's tax-to-GDP ratio remains one of the lowest in the world by many accounts. The International Monetary Fund has pushed Bangladesh to increase the ratio to 9.20 per cent in the next fiscal year from the current rate of around 6.6.
In the new budget, sources have said, the size of the Annual Development Programme (ADP) is going to be Tk 3.0 trillion, significantly higher then the current development budget amounting Tk 2.3 trillion.Local Business Directory
The GDP-growth target has been set at 6.5 per cent for the next fiscal year while the government targets to keep inflationary pressure below 7.5 per cent then.
According to officials concerned, of the total ADP worth Tk 3.0 trillion for the next fiscal year, Tk 1.9 trillion, equivalent to 63.33 per cent of the total outlay, is set to be financed from government exchequer, while the remaining Tk 1.1 trillion is expected to be managed from external sources, mainly in the form of project loans and grants.
For the current fiscal year, the government initially approved an ADP of Tk 2.3 trillion, which was later revised down to Tk 2.0 trillion, comprising Tk 1.28 trillion from domestic resources and Tk 0.72 trillion from external financing.
The proposed allocation for the next fiscal year represents an increase of 48.44 per cent in domestic financing and 52.78 per cent in external financing.
According to Implementation Monitoring and Evaluation Division (IMED) data, ministries and divisions together spent Tk 591.34 billion up to February, accounting for 30 per cent of the total revised allocation.Personal Finance Software
The proposed ADP breakdown shows, Local Government Division (LGD) is set to receive the highest chunk of Tk 366.20 billion in the next fiscal, followed by the Road Transport and Highways Division (RTHD) with Tk 329.03 billion.
Health Services Division is likely to see a significant jump in allocation to Tk 206.08 billion, more than six-fold compared to its revised allocation of Tk 31.28 billion in the current fiscal, elevating its position to third from the 15th.
Power Division is expected to receive the fourth-highest allocation at Tk 191.86 billion, followed by the Ministry of Science and Technology with Tk 173.66 billion.
Among other sectors, Primary and Mass Education is set to receive Tk 168.48 billion in development budget, while Secondary and Higher Education Division is likely to get Tk 138.36 billion.
Sources say Finance and Planning Minister Amir Khasru Mahmud Chowdhury, who chaired the meeting, discussed the challenges now the country's economy faces due to the Middle East turmoil, especially the high import costs of fuel oils and gas and the possible way of their funding.
Also, he asked the finance officials to keep in mind "long-lasting impacts of the war fallouts on the economy, the inflationary pressure, and government's electoral pledges alongside gradual deregulation of the economy" while preparing the budget.
Mongla Port operations have come to a near standstill as lighter vessels responsible for unloading and transporting cargo from commercial ships are unable to operate due to a severe fuel shortage, leading to mounting financial losses for importers.
Owners of lighter vessels say most of their fleet is now idle due to the fuel crunch, disrupting cargo handling from mother vessels and delaying vessel turnaround time. As a result, importers are being forced to pay penalties for the extended stay of commercial ships at the port's outer anchorage.
They further said that since the outbreak of conflict in the Middle East, they have been unable to secure adequate fuel supplies from depots in Chattogram.
Vessel owners also complain that despite repeated appeals by the Lighter Vessel Owners' Association to the Ministry of Power, Energy and Mineral Resources, no effective remedial measures have been taken.
Sources say hundreds of empty lighter vessels have been anchored in the Pashur River in Mongla for several days. A similar situation has been observed in Rupsha and at Jetty no 4 and 5 in Khulna, where hundreds more vessels remain idle due to the fuel shortage.
Cargo from large mother vessels at the outer anchorage is usually transferred to lighter vessels and then transported via river routes to terminals in Dhaka, Narayanganj and other parts of the country. However, the fuel shortage has severely disrupted these operations.
Owner of MV Mimtaz lighter vessel Md Khokon said his vessel has been waiting for fuel for several days. "We are unable to get fuel from SK Enterprise as depot supplies are insufficient. This is the situation for all vessels," he said.
Mohammad Mamun, production officer at Seven Circle Cement in Rupsha, said delays in cargo unloading from commercial ships are causing significant financial losses.
"We are paying penalties of around $17,000 per day for each commercial vessel. Delays are increasing costs, and our plant is facing raw material shortages," he said.
Azadul Haque, AGM of Sheikh Cement Factory, said production has been completely halted due to the crisis. "Supply of raw materials is being disrupted and workers are sitting idle," he said.
HM Dulal, owner of Messrs Nuru and Sons, marine dealer and agent of Meghna Petroleum Limited in Mongla, said fuel demand has increased due to various government development activities, including river dredging and canal excavation, putting additional pressure on supply.
Engineer Prabir Hira, manager (operations) at Meghna Petroleum Limited in Mongla, said supply disruptions caused by the Iran conflict have affected fuel availability, and distribution is being carried out in line with government directives.
Despite no major surge in revenue collection, the government is planning a 50% increase in development spending in the upcoming 2026–27 fiscal year compared to the revised target of the current fiscal year.
To this end, the Ministry of Finance is set to allocate Tk3 lakh crore for the Annual Development Programme (ADP) in the upcoming budget, of which 1.90 lakh crore will come from government funds and around Tk1.10 lakh crore from foreign loans and grants, according to relevant officials.
In the current fiscal year, the government initially allocated Tk2.30 lakh crore for the ADP in the original budget. However, implementation fell short of expectations, leading to a downward revision to Tk2 lakh crore. Of this, Tk1.28 lakh crore was planned from domestic sources, while Tk72,000 crore was expected from external financing.
Data from the Implementation Monitoring and Evaluation Division (IMED) shows that, as of February, ministries and divisions have spent Tk59,130 crore, which is 30% of the revised total allocation.
The Local Government Division (LGD) is set to receive the highest allocation of Tk36,620, which is about 12.21% in the proposed Tk3 lakh crore ADP in the next fiscal year.
Roads Transport to get 2nd highest share; then Health
The Roads Transport and Highways Division (RTHD) is expected to secure the second-largest allocation at Tk32,903 crore, approximately 11% of total ADP allocation, according to preliminary estimates.
In a major shift, the Health Services Division's allocation is projected to rise sharply to Tk20,608 crore—more than six times higher than its revised allocation for the current fiscal year—lifting the sector from 15th to third position in the ADP ranking.
The Power Division is likely to receive the fourth-highest allocation of Tk19,186 crore, followed by the Ministry of Science and Technology with Tk17,366 crore.
Meanwhile, Tk16,848 crore is expected to be allocated to primary and mass education, while the Secondary and Higher Education Division may receive Tk13,836 crore.
Officials from the Planning Commission said emphasis has been placed on improving ADP implementation by aligning projects with medium-term resource availability, ensuring feasibility studies before approving large projects, strengthening project monitoring, and maximising the use of project loans.
Recommendations also include enhancing the capacity of project directors, improving financial management, and strengthening budget implementation monitoring systems.
Meanwhile, ADP implementation rates have shown a declining trend in recent years. From FY2021–22 to FY2024–25, the implementation rate fell to 67%, and based on spending trends in the first eight months of FY2025–26, it may remain below 80%.
However, during the July–February period of the current fiscal year, implementation progress stood at just 29.6%.
The Bangladesh Poultry Industries Association (BPIA) has urged the government to halve taxes on the poultry sector in the proposed 2026-27 national budget.
According to a budget proposal sent to the National Board of Revenue recently, BPIA said production costs in the poultry industry have nearly doubled over the past five years, putting significant pressure on farmers.
As expenses continue to outpace earnings, many are forced to shut down operations.
Mosharaf Hossain Chowdhury, president of BPIA, said that in the current fiscal year, corporate tax in the sector has been raised from 15 percent to 27.5 percent, advance income tax from 1 percent to 5 percent, and turnover tax from 0.6 percent to 1 percent.
Such high tax rates are unprecedented for food production sectors globally, he said, adding that the increases have driven up the cost of poultry feed and other essential inputs.
Chowdhury called for an immediate reduction of existing taxes and duties by half to ensure the safeguarding of small and medium-scale farmers and sustain industry growth.
Without such measures, it will be increasingly difficult for marginal farmers to survive, he said
The BPIA president also stressed the need to eliminate middlemen and extortion practices across the supply chain, from farms to retail egg markets.
In addition, he called for electricity subsidies, easier access to credit, and prioritising poultry farmers under government agricultural support programmes.
Md Safir Rahman, secretary general of the BPIA, said that without special incentives in the upcoming budget, investor interest in the poultry sector may decline, potentially slowing the emergence of new entrepreneurs.
Garment exports from Bangladesh to the United States fell 2.54 percent to $5.59 billion in the July-March period of the current fiscal year.
The US accounts for about 20 percent of the country’s total annual apparel exports.
Exports to the United Kingdom, the third-largest destination with a 12 percent market share, also dropped 1.61 percent to $3.30 billion during the period, according to data from the Export Promotion Bureau compiled by the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association, published yesterday.
Amid a volatile global supply chain, shipments to Canada edged down 0.26 percent to $961.34 million in July-March.
Exports to non-traditional markets declined sharply, falling 8.05 percent during the period.
Overall, readymade garment (RMG) exports stood at $28.58 billion in July-March, marking a 5.51 percent year-on-year decline.
Shipments to the European Union, which accounts for 49 percent of Bangladesh’s total apparel exports, also fell 6.99 percent to $14.02 billion, as per the data.
India has further raised a windfall tax on exports of diesel and aviation turbine fuel it imposed last month to ensure adequate domestic supply.
In a government notification on Saturday, India’s finance ministry increased the tax on diesel exports to 55.5 rupees per litre from 21.5 rupees per litre, and on exports of aviation turbine fuel to 42 rupees per litre from 29.5 rupees per litre, effective immediately. India also last month cut excise duty on petrol and diesel by 10 rupees ($0.11).
Separately, to control a rise in airfares, it has also capped a monthly increase in aviation turbine fuel prices for domestic airlines at 25 percent in April. Jet fuel accounts for up to 40 percent of an airline’s expenses. Global oil prices have surged past $100 per barrel as the flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz, which serves as a conduit for 40 percent of India’s crude oil imports, remains heavily restricted due to the US-Iran war.
India, which ranks among the top five refining nations globally and is also the world’s third-biggest oil importer and consumer, relies heavily on overseas supplies.
Amid the prolonged fallout from the Russia-Ukraine conflict and emerging geopolitical risks from Iran-US tensions, Bangladesh's capital market is standing at a critical crossroads. For years, the narrative of our equity market centred on expansion and "new projects". However, in a high-interest-rate environment where the Taka's depreciation has inflated project costs, the priority must shift from growth to survival.
To revitalise our thinning IPO pipeline, the newly appointed adviser to the Prime Minister on Investment and Capital Markets, Tanvir Ghani, along with the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC), needs to rethink a fundamental constraint: the utilisation of IPO proceeds for debt repayment.
A market in retreat
The numbers tell a sobering story. Since the brief post-pandemic surge in 2021, appetite for Initial Public Offerings has sharply declined – from 13 IPOs in 2021 to zero in 2025. This stagnation is not merely a symptom of "poor quality" companies. Many robust, Tier-1 firms are currently over-leveraged, burdened by heavy debt taken for capital expenditure over the last four to five years. In the current climate, these firms cannot feasibly justify further expansion, yet they are bleeding from double-digit interest rates. The problem is structural, not reputational.
The BSEC deserves credit for its recent efforts in modernising the valuation process for IPOs with premiums. By refining these methods to reflect intrinsic value, the Commission has finally addressed long-standing valuation anomalies. However, the next logical step – to truly breathe life into the market – is providing these corporates the flexibility to repair their balance sheets.
The 30% ceiling: A barrier to consolidation
On 30 December 2025, BSEC finalised the Public Offer of Equity Securities Rules, 2025. While the commission amended valuation methods, one particular clause remains a bottleneck: a maximum of 30% of IPO or RPO proceeds may be used for repayment of outstanding loans or investments. While the rule ensures that loans being repaid were used for legitimate BMRE (Balancing, Modernisation, Replacement, and Expansion) purposes, the 30% cap is increasingly out of touch with corporate reality.
For a company with a high debt-to-equity ratio, an IPO that only clears 30% of its debt does not move the needle on its credit rating or profitability. If a firm is forced to deploy the remaining 70% of proceeds into new projects it does not need – or cannot afford to operate due to soaring energy costs – the IPO becomes a burden rather than a blessing. The rule, intended to protect the market, is instead keeping quality issuers away from it.
A concrete illustration
Consider a mid-sized Bangladeshi textile manufacturer – call it company ABC – that invested Tk400 crore in factory expansion between 2020 and 2022, financed primarily through term loans at rates that have since risen to 13-14%. Today, company ABC is profitable at the operating level: it generates positive EBITDA, its plant runs at 70% capacity, and its export receivables are regular. But its interest burden consumes nearly half of its operating profit, leaving little room for retained earnings or dividend distribution.
Company ABC wishes to raise Tk250 crore through an IPO. Its debt repayment need is Tk200 crore. Under the current rule, only Tk75 crore may go toward debt repayment. The remaining Tk175 crore must fund "new projects" – yet company ABC has no immediate CAPEX pipeline, no additional capacity need, and no appetite to add fixed costs in an uncertain energy environment. The result: either company ABC walks away from the exchange entirely, or it lists with an artificially constructed use-of-proceeds that satisfies the regulator but serves no genuine business purpose.
Had the cap been set at 80% or eliminated for qualifying firms, company ABC could reduce its interest burden by Tk200 crore, improve NPAT by an estimated Tk26-28 crore annually, and emerge as a fundamentally stronger listed entity – one that attracts institutional investor confidence rather than undermining it.
Why a higher threshold makes sense
Allowing a significantly higher proportion of IPO proceeds to be used for debt repayment offers several systemic benefits. First, firms replace high-cost bank debt with permanent equity capital, immediately boosting NPAT and improving return on equity. Second, by migrating corporate debt from the banking sector to the capital market, we reduce pressure on a banking system already struggling with non-performing loans. Third, in a volatile global economy, a lean and deleveraged company is more resilient than an over-extended one. Finally, a company with a repaired balance sheet – lower gearing, stronger interest coverage – is fundamentally more investable, and far more likely to sustain its listing price post-IPO.
What peer markets tell us
This is not an untested idea. India's SEBI imposes no numerical ceiling on the proportion of IPO proceeds directed toward debt repayment. Its 2025 amendment to the ICDR framework explicitly recognised capex-loan repayment as equivalent to capital expenditure – acknowledging that paying off a factory loan is economically indistinguishable from building one. Malaysia's securities commission similarly sets no regulatory cap, focusing instead on disclosure and time-bound deployment. Across the globe, the philosophy is consistent: disclose the intended use of proceeds, and let the market determine whether the proposed capital restructuring is acceptable.
Bangladesh's 30% statutory cap is an outlier in this landscape, substituting regulatory prescription for investor judgment.
A workable reform
The BSEC should consider a temporary three-to-five-year window during which the cap is lifted for companies meeting clear eligibility criteria: positive operating cash flow for at least two of the three preceding fiscal years; an auditor's certificate confirming that loans proposed for repayment were used for BMRE-eligible purposes; a pre-IPO debt-to-equity ratio exceeding 2.0x; no default classification with any scheduled bank or financial institution; and a 24-month undertaking against drawing new bank financing for overlapping CAPEX purposes. These criteria preserve the spirit of the original rule while creating a transparent, operationally credible pathway for genuinely over-leveraged but fundamentally sound firms.
The path forward
To bring the market back to life, we must stop viewing debt repayment as a "waste" of IPO funds. If a company used bank loans to build a factory three years ago, that factory is already a national asset. Paying off that loan with public equity is simply a change in capital structure – not a loss of value. Our peer regulators in India and Malaysia understand this. Without this flexibility, IPO activity will remain subdued, and our best corporate houses will continue to stay away from the exchanges – preferring to suffer under the weight of bank interest rather than enter a market that does not give them room to breathe.
It is time to prioritise financial stability over forced expansion.
State-owned National Tubes Ltd, the country's only government-run steel pipe manufacturer listed on the stock exchanges, has reported a sharp decline in performance, with sales nearly halving in the first nine months of FY2025–26 amid weakening demand.
According to company disclosures approved by the board on Thursday, the firm's net sales dropped 50% year-on-year to Tk18.15 crore during the July–March period, down from Tk36.24 crore in the same period of the previous fiscal year.
The steep fall in revenue pushed the company into losses, reversing its profit trend from a year earlier.
National Tubes posted a net loss of Tk5.57 crore for the nine-month period, compared to a profit of Tk2.66 crore in July–March of FY25. Its loss per share stood at Tk1.60.
Operating cash flow also deteriorated significantly, with net operating cash flow per share falling to Tk0.17 as of March 2026, compared to Tk1.09 in the same period a year earlier.
The company's net asset value was recorded at Tk473 crore, according to its financial statements.
In the third quarter alone (January–March), National Tubes incurred a loss of Tk1.31 crore, a sharp reversal from a profit of Tk1.42 crore in the same quarter of the previous fiscal year. Quarterly revenue also declined by 40% to Tk8.12 crore from Tk13.51 crore a year earlier.
The company attributed the downturn to a broader fall in demand for steel pipes across key industrial and utility sectors.
National Tubes supplies pipes to major gas distribution and utility operators, including Titas Gas, Bakhrabad Gas Distribution Company, Jalalabad Gas Transmission and Distribution System, BAPEX, WASA, Fire Hydrant Company, and various manufacturing and real estate firms, according to its website.
Established in 1964 as a private-sector enterprise, National Tubes was nationalised in 1972 and placed under the Bangladesh Steel and Engineering Corporation (BSEC). It was later converted into a public limited company in 1989, with 49% of its shares offloaded to the general public.
City Bank PLC has reported a record-breaking financial performance for 2025, posting a consolidated net profit of Tk1,324 crore, which represents a robust 31% growth from the Tk1,014 crore recorded in the previous year.
The record profit was driven largely by a sharp rise in investment income from government securities.
Reflecting the strong earnings, the bank's board of directors has recommended a 30% dividend for 2025, comprising 15% cash and 15% stock, up from the previous year's 25% total dividend, which included 12.5% cash and 12.5% stock. The annual general meeting is scheduled for 7 June, while 3 May has been set as the record date, according to a disclosure filed on the bank's website.
The bank's latest financial disclosures reflect a remarkable turnaround over the past five years, with profits steadily climbing from Tk549 crore in 2021 to over Tk1,300 crore in 2025, underscoring its strengthening earnings base despite a challenging economic environment.
Its earnings per share rose in tandem with profitability, increasing by 31% to Tk8.71, while net asset value per share surged by 33% to Tk40.67. Its net operating cash flow per share stood at Tk47, indicating strong liquidity support for the bank's operations.
Despite the headline profit growth, the bank's core banking income faced pressure during the year. Its interest income from loans increased by around 22% to Tk5,471 crore, up from Tk4,501 crore a year earlier.
However, this growth was overshadowed by a much steeper rise in interest expenses on deposits, which surged by 71% to Tk5,186 crore. As a result, the bank's net interest income remained relatively modest at Tk285 crore, reflecting narrowing spreads amid rising funding costs.
The bank's record profit was instead powered by its non-core income streams, particularly investments in government Treasury bills and bonds. Income from treasury instruments more than doubled during the year, jumping 114% to Tk3,562 crore. Overall income from investments, fees, commissions, exchange, and brokerage activities reached Tk4,506 crore, significantly higher than the previous year's Tk1,661 crore.
This surge in investment income played a pivotal role in offsetting the pressure on traditional lending operations and helped push operating profit up by 16% to Tk2,727 crore from Tk2,351 crore in 2024.
City Bank's performance aligns with a broader trend in the banking sector, where several listed banks have reported record profits for the year despite subdued private sector credit growth.
Earlier, Prime Bank PLC and Shahjalal Islami Bank PLC also announced strong earnings, posting profits of Tk910 crore and Tk368 crore, respectively.
Market insiders said the banking sector faced weak demand for private sector loans in 2025 amid a sluggish business environment. As a result, many banks shifted their focus toward fixed-income instruments such as Treasury bills and government bonds, where yields rose to double-digit levels during the year.
This strategic reallocation of funds enabled banks like City Bank to capitalise on higher returns from relatively risk-free investments, compensating for the decline in traditional interest-based income. Analysts, however, caution that sustained reliance on such income sources may not be viable in the long run if interest rate conditions change.
Runner Automobiles Limited, a listed motorcycle manufacturer, is witnessing a continued divestment by its foreign investment partner, Brummer Frontier PE II (Mauritius) Limited.
In its latest move, the investment firm, a concern of Sweden-based Brummer & Partners, has declared its intention to sell 50 lakh shares of the company within a specified timeframe at prevailing market prices.
According to disclosures published on the Dhaka Stock Exchange, Brummer Frontier will dispose of the shares from its existing holdings through the market. Based on the current market price, the total value of these shares stands at around Tk20 crore.
However, this is not a new development. The share sale is part of the investor's long-term, phased exit strategy.
A transaction of this size has naturally had an impact on the market. In the short term, selling pressure weighed on the stock, leading to a 6.30% decline in its price. Yesterday, the share closed at Tk38.70 on the DSE.
Previously, on 27 April 2022, the investment firm had announced the sale of 1 crore shares from its holdings. At one point, Brummer Frontier held 24.93% of Runner Automobiles' total shares.
Currently, the investor holds 1,83,04,347 shares, representing around 16% of the company's total shareholding. The planned sale of 50 lakh shares will come from this remaining stake.
Speaking to The Business Standard, a top official of Runner Automobiles said that the decision to sell shares lies entirely with the board of the investment firm.
He explained that after the post-IPO lock-in period expired, Brummer Frontier obtained regulatory approval to sell its shares. Based on that approval, the firm has been gradually offloading its stake.
The official further noted that decisions regarding the timing and volume of share sales are determined solely by the investor's board, taking into account market conditions, share price, and internal investment strategies.
He also clarified that Runner Automobiles' management or board has no role in this matter, adding, "This is part of the investor's exit strategy and is not directly related to the company's operations or performance."
Brummer Frontier first invested in Runner Automobiles in 2013, injecting around Tk105 crore to acquire a significant stake. The objective was to accelerate the company's growth, strengthen corporate governance, and eventually secure a profitable exit.
Later, in 2019, Runner Automobiles was listed on the stock exchange through an initial public offering (IPO). While this opened up ownership to general investors, Brummer Frontier's shares were subject to a lock-in period. Following the expiry of that period, the investor began gradually reducing its stake.
There are several logical reasons behind Brummer Frontier's ongoing share sales, most of which are aligned with the typical lifecycle of private equity investments.
Firstly, private equity funds do not invest permanently. They aim to exit after a certain period by realising returns. Brummer Frontier's fund has now crossed a decade, making it necessary to return capital to its investors.
Secondly, during its tenure, Brummer Frontier contributed to significant improvements in Runner Automobiles, including enhancements in corporate governance, management structure, and environmental and safety standards. Having achieved these milestones, the firm is now in the phase of monetising its investment.
Thirdly, portfolio rebalancing is another key factor. Global investment funds frequently adjust their portfolios to explore new opportunities across sectors and geographies.
Meanwhile, Runner Automobiles has recently signed an agreement with Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer BYD Auto Industry Company.
However, the company has stated that the final investment size and potential financial impact under the Master Supply and Manufacturing Agreement (MSMA) have not yet been determined.
According to Runner, the MSMA serves as a framework for vehicle production under the Completely Knocked Down model, where components will be imported and assembled locally.
The company noted that a comprehensive feasibility assessment is currently underway. This includes determining the investment size, evaluating production capacity, analysing supply chain requirements, assessing market potential, and projecting revenues and costs.
However, no final commercial or financial terms have been established under the MSMA so far.
Bangladesh's tax authority is once again pledging to introduce a fully automated compliance monitoring system, this time with a deadline. The National Board of Revenue (NBR) says it aims to roll out a nationwide automated system by 2027 to curb widespread tax evasion and improve the country's declining tax-to-GDP ratio.
The move comes as revenue collection faces increasing pressure, with Bangladesh recording one of the lowest tax-to-GDP ratios in Asia. Despite more than a decade of efforts and significant spending on digitalisation, only limited portions of income tax, VAT, and customs services have been automated so far.
Senior NBR officials said the plan will begin by making existing online return filing and e-audit systems fully functional. This will be followed by the introduction of risk-based audits for both individual and corporate taxpayers within the year. The authority also plans to integrate real-time data with key institutions – including banks, land offices, and vehicle registration authorities – before launching the full monitoring system.
NBR Chairman Abdur Rahman Khan said, "While several tax services are already online, the next step is to link tax data with other government and financial databases. Once integrated, the system will be able to track transactions more efficiently and identify non-compliant taxpayers quickly."
However, the timeline has raised doubts among experts and former officials, who note that similar promises over the past 15 years have seen limited success. Large-scale projects funded by both domestic and foreign sources have failed to deliver the expected level of automation.
Former NBR chairman Muhammad Abdul Mazid believes full automation within a year is unrealistic. "Automation has been discussed since the 1990s, yet meaningful results remain limited," he said.
He also questioned whether there is sufficient internal support within the NBR for such a system, noting that both some officials and non-compliant businesses may lack incentives to embrace full transparency. He added that past projects often consumed time and funds on consultancy, logistics, and administration without producing tangible outcomes.
Mazid emphasised that while the 2027 deadline may be ambitious, the NBR must remain committed to implementation. He also stressed the need to bring all relevant institutions under digital systems to enable effective data sharing.
Bangladesh's tax-to-GDP ratio has declined from around 10% a decade ago to just 6.6% in the 2024-25 fiscal year – one of the lowest in Asia. Experts attribute this to tax evasion, widespread exemptions, and institutional inefficiencies.
There is no official estimate of revenue losses due to tax evasion, but a study by the Centre for Policy Dialogue suggests that losses exceeded Tk1.26 lakh crore in 2023.
Over the past decade and a half, the government has launched more than ten initiatives to automate tax administration, including online TIN registration, income tax returns, VAT systems, refund mechanisms, customs bond automation, and the National Single Window. However, many of these systems remain only partially functional. For instance, the online income tax system still relies partly on manual processes, while VAT automation and customs bond systems continue to face operational challenges.
Weak data integration
Stakeholders say resistance from some officials, frequent leadership changes at the NBR, and political transitions have slowed progress. Data integration with other institutions has also lagged, limiting the effectiveness of enforcement.
Currently, tax authorities must manually collect data from banks, land offices, city corporations, and utility providers, making it difficult to detect tax evasion at scale. Although there have been efforts to access banking data, lack of cooperation from financial institutions has hindered progress.
Stocks at the Dhaka bourse ended flat last week amid the US-Iran ceasefire, rebounding from the previous week's losing streak.
During the week of 5-9 April, the benchmark index of the Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE), DSEX, ended in the green, gaining 37 points and recovering from a 96-point loss in the previous week, according to data.
Turnover stood at Tk3,348 crore, while the daily average turnover increased by 0.20% to Tk669.6 crore. However, the prices of the majority of stocks declined amid sell-offs.
According to DSE weekly data, three of the five trading sessions ended positively, including a strong rebound in one session, with DSEX surging by 205 points in these sessions. Meanwhile, two sessions closed in the negative, weighing on the index by 168 points.
On 8 April, breaking a prolonged bearish spell since the onset of the war, Dhaka stocks rallied strongly, with turnover and indices surging after the US and Iran agreed to a conditional two-week ceasefire. DSEX rose by 3.12%, or 161 points, marking its highest single-day gain since 15 February.
As per the data, at the end of last week, DSEX closed at 5,257 points, while DS30, the blue-chip index, surged by 22 points to 2,002, and DSES, the shariah index, and increased by 3.6 points to 1,059.
Of the traded stocks, 138 advanced, 220 declined, 29 remained unchanged, and 24 were not traded.
EBL Securities, in its weekly market commentary, said the capital market exhibited mixed performance over the week as escalating tensions in the Middle East prompted investors to adopt a risk-averse stance and closely monitor unfolding developments.
"The week opened with broad-based sell-offs, fueled by panic reactions to newly announced government austerity measures aimed at addressing the country's potential energy crisis. As the week progressed, sentiment gradually improved.
"Bargain hunters moved in to accumulate oversold large-cap stocks following the government's decision to keep fuel prices unchanged and amid growing optimism over a potential US-Iran ceasefire. This shift in mood supported three consecutive sessions of market recovery," it said.
However, the optimism proved short-lived. Renewed uncertainties surrounding a lasting resolution to the conflict, along with concerns over a possible blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, weighed on investor confidence once again.
It said investors were mostly active in pharma sector stocks, which contributed 15.8% to total turnover, followed by engineering with 14.2% and bank sector stocks with 9.3%.
Sectors exhibited mixed returns, with tannery at 2.4%, bank at 1.7%, and paper at 1.7% being the top gainers, while mutual fund, life insurance, and travel sector stocks emerged as the top losers
Inflation in the United States rose sharply in March, government data showed Friday, as higher energy prices due to the war in the Middle East hit Americans hard.
The nationwide sticker shock put pressure on President Donald Trump, who has ordered peace talks with Iran and faces mid-term elections in November.
The rate of inflation rose to 3.3 percent year-on-year in March, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). By comparison, this same consumer price index (CPI) was 2.4 percent year-on-year a month earlier.
Gasoline prices surged by 21.2 percent between February and March -- the largest monthly increase since the government began publishing a related index in 1967, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) said.
Markets had anticipated the surge, according to the consensus published by MarketWatch.
The United States and Israel began bombing Iran on February 28 and Tehran retaliated by blocking traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway used to carry a fifth of the world’s oil and gas deliveries.
Despite being the world’s top producer of crude oil, the United States also felt the pain, as prices at the gas pump shot up.
A gallon (3.78 liters) of regular gasoline currently costs an average of $4.15 in the United States, compared to approximately $3 just before the war.
The Trump administration -- elected in part on a promise to quash inflation -- maintains that the war’s economic disruptions will be temporary.
‘MORE PRICE PAIN AHEAD’
Reacting to the data, White House spokesperson Kush Desai said the US economy “remains on a solid trajectory.”
Economic advisor Kevin Hassett claimed some wins for the White House, citing drops in the price of eggs, beef and concert tickets on Fox News.
US Vice President JD Vance said he hoped for a “positive” outcome as he departed Washington for US-Iran peace talks in Pakistan this weekend.
But experts predicted more economic pain ahead due to the war in Iran, especially for middle and lower-income households already squeezed by rising energy and airfare prices.
Heather Long, chief economist at Navy Federal Credit Union, said that inflation soared in March to the highest level in almost two years.
“This is only the beginning. Food prices, travel and shipping costs are all going up in April and will exacerbate the pain,” she said.
“March CPI was as expected, so no surprises. But there is a huge increase in fuel prices, boosting inflation,” Christopher Low of FHN Financial told AFP.
“And we got the news last night that the ceasefire is not being honored by either side, apparently,” he said. “There’s still very little traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.”
Some economists calculate the oil price surge will cost each US household at least $350 per household.
Consumer sentiment also dipped sharply -- 11 percent -- this month, according to a University of Michigan survey.
During the Federal Reserve’s most recent meeting in mid-March, Chairman Jerome Powell said that the war risked delaying efforts to bring inflation under control in the United States.
The US central bank’s target for inflation is two percent -- an objective it has not met in five years due to the Covid pandemic, the war in Ukraine and tariffs.
AB Bank has made a decisive strategic shift toward micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), moving away from its earlier concentration in large corporate lending, said Reazul Islam, acting managing director and CEO.
The move by the oldest private commercial bank of the country is a recalibration amid a weak economic environment marked by subdued private sector demand and geopolitical uncertainties, he told The Daily Star in a recent interview.
“Excessive concentration in large corporate exposures historically created vulnerabilities,” Islam said.
By distributing loans across a broader base of smaller borrowers, the bank aims to reduce systemic risk -- ensuring that isolated defaults do not significantly undermine overall stability.
“While corporate lending will continue, it will be more selective, with greater emphasis on supporting strong existing clients rather than pursuing aggressive expansion.”
Digital transformation sits at the heart of the bank’s new direction, according to Islam, a veteran banker with 29 years of experience in regulatory management, banking and professional services, who joined the bank in August 2024 as additional managing director.
He informed that AB Bank is developing fully branchless, digital loan processing systems and plans to introduce nano loans pending regulatory approval.
It is also deploying AI-based credit assessment tools and automated decision-making to minimise human intervention and move toward instant, paperless loan approvals via mobile platforms.
By leveraging alternative data sources, such as transaction behaviour and digital footprints, the bank aims to enhance credit scoring accuracy, reduce operational costs, and mitigate risk.
Over time, this digital lending framework is expected to expand beyond personal loans into SME financing, Islam said.
He acknowledged that the bank has lagged behind peers in agent banking and sub-branch reach, with 264 and 60 outlets respectively. “This was largely due to earlier strategic decisions and delayed entry into these segments.”
Both channels are now prioritised for deposit mobilisation and customer outreach, with new expansion targets set, though regulatory approvals remain a constraint.
Approaching 44 years since its founding in April 1982, it has faced repeated cycles of stress from the 1980s through the 2000s but demonstrated resilience by recovering from setbacks.
“This resilience has largely been driven by strong customer confidence, brand loyalty, institutional trust, and the commitment of its workforce,” says Islam.
The bank is currently navigating another difficult phase of high non-performing loans and mounting losses. Yet customers have continued to access their funds without disruption -- a factor Islam credits as critical to preserving confidence.
He says, “Liquidity management at the branch level remains relatively stable, and conditions have gradually improved.”
Islam notes that the deposit situation was particularly strained in 2024, when panic withdrawals amid broader sectoral uncertainty pushed liquidity under pressure. Total deposits fell roughly 9 percent that year to Tk 32,292 crore. The bank responded by ensuring uninterrupted cash availability and reinforcing employee confidence.
The effort paid off. Deposits recovered to Tk 34,465 crore by September 2025, with liquidity pressures easing and customer confidence gradually returning. Support from the central bank was instrumental during the peak of the crisis.
Islam, however, notes that structural challenges persist. Many loans have been rescheduled or placed under moratoriums, with repayment delays stretching up to two years -- meaning meaningful cash inflow improvements are unlikely before 2027-2028.
The bank has set targets to reduce NPLs by 20-25 percent in the near term and 30-40 percent over time, and has engaged international asset recovery firms to trace and reclaim overseas assets linked to defaulted loans.
“While this is a time-intensive process, early indications suggest some progress,” says the bank’s CEO.
On costs, the bank is targeting a 25 percent year-on-year reduction and has already achieved around 15 percent savings in recent quarters.
The private bank’s overall recovery plan spans three to five years -- from 2025 through 2027 and beyond -- and a longer-term vision extending up to a decade.
The timeline remains contingent on external economic conditions and policy support, but the direction is clearly focused on rebuilding stability and strengthening fundamentals.
Islam says the strategy is built around digital transformation, SME-focused lending, cost efficiency, deposit growth, and improved governance.
In terms of shareholder returns, he notes that the bank is not in a position to pay dividends in the near term due to its current financial condition.
Management remains focused on restoring profitability and operational stability before resuming dividend payments, he adds.
The managing director described the current board of the bank as professional and supportive, with decision-making processes aligned with management priorities.
While acknowledging that governance issues may have contributed to past challenges, he emphasised that ongoing reforms are focused on strengthening transparency, accountability, and professionalism.
The Bangladesh Bank has verbally cautioned several commercial banks against purchasing US dollars at elevated rates in a move to maintain stability in the foreign exchange market.
The matter was discussed during a meeting between the central bank governor, Md Mostaqur Rahman, and the Association of Bankers Bangladesh (ABB) held in the capital today (9 April).
A senior Bangladesh Bank official told TBS that the regulator had observed that some banks were purchasing dollars at excessive rates. "As a result, banks have been instructed to refrain from buying or selling dollars at inflated prices."
He added that the exchange rate would be determined by supply and demand, with no direct intervention by the central bank.
According to the official, the current supply of dollars remains strong, while banks are also maintaining a healthy net open position. In such a situation, purchasing dollars at higher rates could destabilise the market, prompting the central bank to advise strict compliance.
A senior official of a private bank said the Bangladesh Bank instructed banks to purchase remittance dollars from money exchange houses within Tk123.10. It also directed that interbank transactions should not exceed Tk122.75.
However, officials at several banks told this newspaper yesterday that they had purchased remittance dollars at Tk123 from exchange houses.
Bankers noted that interbank dollar transactions have declined over the past two days following the central bank's instruction to cap the rate at Tk122.75.
They explained that banks are reluctant to sell dollars at Tk122.75 in the interbank market after purchasing remittance at higher rates, which has contributed to reduced trading activity.
ABB seeks relaxation on bonus rules
During the meeting with the governor, the ABB called for a revision of a December 2025 circular that prohibits banks with capital or provision deficits from granting incentive bonuses to their employees. Bank representatives argued for a move away from this rule to ensure staff remained motivated.
According to a senior official, the governor expressed a willingness to consider a new circular. This could potentially allow banks with capital shortfalls to provide bonuses, provided they at least maintain their required provision levels.
Furthermore, the ABB demanded the removal of the current Tk15 lakh ceiling on annual bonuses for bank managing directors. Existing regulations mandate that an MD's bonus cannot exceed this limit and that no other bank official can receive a higher bonus than the MD.
ABB Chairman Mashrur Arefin said the association also proposed raising the personal loan limit from Tk20 lakh to Tk40 lakh.
In addition, a proposal was made to allow banks to provide up to 90% financing for the purchase of hybrid vehicles.
K&Q Bangladesh Limited has entered into a direct operator billing agreement with Robi Axiata Limited to facilitate voucher sales for digital services such as Netflix, Google Pay and other platforms, a move expected to strengthen its revenue base and accelerate growth in the digital services segment.
According to disclosures from the Dhaka Stock Exchange, the partnership will allow the company to tap into Robi's extensive subscriber network, significantly enhancing its reach in the rapidly expanding digital payments and content ecosystem.
In addition to the latest agreement, the company has been actively expanding its footprint in the digital and technology space.
Earlier this year, K&Q Bangladesh signed an agreement with Bangladesh Satellite Company Limited to act as an authorised partner and sales agent for Starlink satellite-based internet services in Bangladesh. Under this arrangement, the company will handle nationwide marketing, sales, implementation, and operational activities for the service.
Separately, the company has also entered into an Application-to-Person (A2P) aggregator agreement with Robi Axiata, enabling it to provide SMS and notification delivery services for various applications and digital platforms. These services will be offered under a license issued by the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission.
In the first half of the 2025-26 fiscal year, the company reported earnings per share (EPS) of Tk5.83, marking a sharp increase from Tk1.67 in the same period a year earlier. Its net asset value per share (NAVPS) stood at Tk107.55 as of 31 December 2025.
For the FY2024-25, the company posted EPS of Tk9.49, a significant jump from Tk0.67 in the previous year, reflecting a notable turnaround in profitability. The board declared a 4% cash dividend for shareholders, while NAV per share rose to Tk101.72 at the end of June 2025.
The Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE), the primary regulator of listed companies, has approved the transfer of 8.10 lakh shares of Shahjalal Islami Bank PLC sponsor-director Anwer Hossain Khan to Bangladesh Finance.
The DSE approved the share transfer outside of a gift transaction under Listing Regulation 47(1) (d) and other applicable laws, according to a disclosure published today (9 April).
Under this regulation, share transfers are allowed in cases of confiscation or loan default.
Based on the latest closing share price of Tk17.90 per share, the market value of the transferred shares amounts to Tk1.45crore.
The shares are to be transferred within the next 30 working days.
Anwer Hossain Khan is one of the sponsors and a former chairman of Shahjalal Islami Bank PLC.
According to the bank's 2024 annual report, he is also the chairman and managing director of Anwer Khan Modern Medical College & Hospital Limited, Modern Diagnostic Centre Limited, Anwer Khan Modern Nursing College, and Hazi Sakawat Anwara Modern Eye Hospital Limited, among others.
According to the shareholding report as of December 2025, Anwer Hossain Khan owns 3.02 crore shares, or a 2.71% stake, in the company.
In October last year, the DSE approved the transfer of 30.62 lakh shares of Shahjalal Islami Bank held by Anwer Hossain Khan to LankaBangla Finance.
In 2025, Shahjalal Islami Bank reported a sharp rise in profitability, driven by strong growth in investment income and improved operational performance, while announcing a higher cash dividend for shareholders.
According to the bank's latest financials, its consolidated net profit surged 118% year-on-year to Tk368 crore in 2025, up from Tk169 crore in the previous year.
On the back of this improved performance, the board of directors recommended a 13% cash dividend for the year, up from 10% in 2024.
The bank attributed the strong profit growth mainly to higher net investment income, increased earnings from shares and securities, and a rise in other operating income.
Improved cash flow was supported by higher investment income and increased placements with banks and financial institutions.
Renewed geopolitical tensions in the Middle East unsettled Bangladesh's stock market today, as the sudden collapse of the Iran–US ceasefire erased investor optimism and triggered broad-based selling across sectors.
The Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) witnessed a broad-based decline, with the DSEX shedding 60 points to close at 5,257. Of the 390 traded securities, 306 issues declined, 70 advanced, and 14 remained unchanged, reflecting heightened investor caution.
According to EBL Securities, the market opened sharply lower as panic selling gripped investors early in the session.
Although a brief wave of bargain hunting provided temporary support, selling pressure intensified as the session progressed, driven by fading confidence and persistent uncertainty surrounding the evolving Iran–US conflict.
Turnover also took a hit, dropping 22% to Tk776 crore from Tk991 crore in the previous session, indicating reduced participation as cautious investors refrained from taking fresh exposure.
Sector-wise, engineering stocks dominated turnover, accounting for 15.9% of the total, followed by pharmaceuticals at 12.7% and textiles at 9.3%. Despite relatively high activity in these sectors, most ended in negative territory.
Mutual funds, travel, and life insurance stocks recorded the steepest corrections, reflecting the broader risk-off sentiment. A handful of sectors, including services and tannery, managed to post marginal gains, but these advances were insufficient to offset the overall market decline.
Among individual stocks, Khan Brothers PP Woven Bag topped the turnover chart, followed by Acme Pesticides, Lovello Ice-Cream, and Dominage Steel.
On the gainers' side, Bengal Windsor Thermoplastic led the rally, while Prime Finance, Familytex, Bangladesh Industrial Finance Company (BIFC), and Generation Next emerged as the worst performers of the day.
The bearish sentiment extended to the Chittagong Stock Exchange (CSE), where both key indices closed lower. The CSCX declined by 20 points, while the CASPI fell by 44.2 points, mirroring the cautious stance of investors across the country's equity markets.
As part of efforts to stabilise the market, the government is considering retaining existing taxes and duties on fuel imports even if retail fuel prices are raised.
For instance, the government currently earns around Tk38 per litre of petrol priced at Tk120. Under the proposed approach, the tax component would not be changed even if the retail price is adjusted to Tk140, instead of rising proportionately to about Tk45.
This would effectively prevent a Tk7 increase in consumer prices. Although the move would reduce government revenue, the authorities are pursuing a strategy of keeping fuel prices slightly lower in May and June to help contain inflation.
Officials said any upward adjustment in fuel prices would add to inflationary pressure, given its wide impact on overall costs. However, keeping taxes unchanged would help limit the extent of that pressure.
Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury has asked the National Board of Revenue (NBR) to submit an urgent report analysing the potential impact of such a move on state revenue collection.
The directive was issued yesterday at the second meeting of the Fiscal, Monetary and Exchange Rate Coordination Council for the 2025-26 fiscal year. Several senior officials told TBS that the council also discussed broader measures aimed at easing inflationary pressure in the economy.
These include instructions to reduce additional costs faced by importers at ports, measures to lower cost build-up in pricing calculations across various commodities through directives to the commerce ministry.
The council further decided to explore the creation of a large fund to revive sick and closed industrial units. The proposed fund would be formed through a combination of loans from development partners and resources from the central bank's own financing mechanisms.
The virtual meeting, chaired by the finance minister, was attended by the governor, finance secretary, secretary of the Financial Institutions Division, NBR chairman, Economic Relations Division secretary, commerce secretary, and senior finance division officials, along with other ministry representatives.
Speaking to TBS after the meeting, Commerce Secretary Mahbubur Rahman said the coordination council had decided to reduce value-added tax and import duties on essential commodities.
"No country in the world imposes such high levels of duties and taxes on essential goods. These duties and VAT rates will be gradually reduced." he said. He added that discussions also focused on preventing traders from engaging in unjustified price hikes.
No need for fuel price hike if duties unchanged
Finance officials said that more than 32% in various duties, taxes and VAT are currently imposed on imported fuel oil. The NBR collects around Tk15,000 crore annually from this sector.
Due to the conflict in the Middle East, the government is now importing fuel at nearly double the previous prices, which has also doubled the volume of revenue collection.
"The BPC and Petrobangla sell fuel and gas at prices lower than their import cost. The Energy Division has long argued that the duties, taxes and VAT imposed by the NBR on fuel imports are unjustified. However, the NBR has not moved due to concerns over revenue loss," said one finance division official.
He also mentioned that the IMF has been pressing Bangladesh to reduce subsidies. In that scenario, fuel prices would need to be raised, which would significantly increase inflation. Against this backdrop, he said keeping existing duties, taxes and VAT on fuel imports could help the public.
"Fuel prices are adjusted by the government at the end of each month. Therefore, the finance ministry has asked the NBR to submit an analysis report before the end of May, ahead of the next price adjustment, on the likely impact of such keeping taxes unchanged," said another finance official.
Fund to revive sick industries
Finance ministry officials said a large fund will be created in the next fiscal year's budget to revive closed and sick industries, a commitment reflected in the BNP's election manifesto.
To this end, the council has instructed the Economic Relations Division to seek loan assistance from the Asian Development Bank, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, and the World Bank.
"The fund will be formed by combining resources from development partners with financing from Bangladesh Bank," said a ministry official.
However, amid the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, the government has not taken any decision to increase incentives to boost remittance inflows. Instead, the focus will be on simplifying remittance transfer processes and ensuring that banks can disburse funds to recipients' families as quickly as possible.
The Bangladesh Bank has been tasked with taking necessary measures in this regard.
Tk9.2 lakh crore FY27 budget
Finance officials said the ministry at the Coordination Council meeting proposed a large budget of over Tk9.20 lakh crore for FY27, as the government moves to contain inflation and create jobs.
They said higher spending will be driven mainly by global economic risks, rising subsidies and increased allocations for social protection. Additional interest payments and a planned partial salary adjustment for government employees are also contributing to the expansion of the budget.
Officials noted that total revenue mobilisation for the next fiscal year may be set at around Tk6.90 lakh crore. Of this, more than Tk6 lakh crore is expected to come from the NBR.
In the current fiscal year's original budget, the NBR was tasked with collecting nearly Tk5 lakh crore. The Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) has warned that the shortfall could reach Tk1 lakh crore by year-end. Despite this, the revised budget has already raised the revenue target by an additional Tk20,000 crore.
Rising subsidy burden, economic outlook
Higher global fuel prices are expected to raise subsidy requirements by Tk36,000 crore, the finance minister said on Thursday. The original allocation for gas and electricity subsidies stood at Tk42,000 crore.
Officials said the additional pressure has pushed the government to increase revenue targets.
Inflation for the next fiscal year is being targeted at 7.5%. Finance officials said easing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and stabilising fuel prices could help bring inflation closer to the target.
The GDP growth estimate has not yet been finalised, with officials considering a range of 6.2% to 6.5%. International agencies, however, have projected Bangladesh's growth at around 3.9% for the current fiscal.
The finance minister, finance secretary and ERD secretary travelled to Washington on Friday night to attend IMF meetings. An official present at the Coordination Council meeting said discussions were concluded early due to the visit. Budget deliberations are expected to resume after their return.
In a statement to parliament on 10 April, the finance minister said budget preparations are underway amid multiple economic pressures. He said the objective is not only growth, but also a sustainable, transparent and inclusive economy, while acknowledging public expectations and inherited constraints.
Fiscal framework and financing mix
The FY26 budget was set at Tk7.90 lakh crore, later revised to Tk7.88 lakh crore following cuts in development spending and higher allocations for subsidies and operating costs.
Officials said the FY27 budget deficit is projected at around Tk2.70 lakh crore, within 5% of GDP. Of this, around Tk1.50 lakh crore is expected from domestic borrowing, while Tk1.20 lakh crore will come from external sources, largely as budget support.
The finance minister has directed the NBR to prepare a plan to raise the tax-to-GDP ratio to 10% by FY28. Measures to reduce the cost of doing business and revive closed industries were also discussed at the coordination meeting.
Spending priorities, welfare programmes
Around 67% of expenditure in the next budget is expected to go towards operating costs, while 33% will be allocated to development spending. Officials said large-scale new development projects are unlikely in the near term.
The government also plans to introduce a "Family Card" programme covering 50 lakh families, along with separate cards for farmers, fishermen and livestock producers. A youth sports initiative will provide scholarships for talented athletes aged 12 to 14.
Salary increases for public sector employees and expanded job creation commitments are expected to cost nearly Tk1 lakh crore in the next fiscal year.