The Asian Development Bank (ADB) today approved a US$250 million loan to support Bangladesh in operationalising and institutionalising critical reforms to improve the efficiency, coverage, and effectiveness of the country’s social protection system.
The Subprogram 2 of the Second Strengthening Social Resilience Program aims to strengthen protective and preventive social protection measures to reduce vulnerability, exclusion, and poverty risks, said an ADB press release.
The program focuses on improving social protection system management, expanding its coverage and scope, and enhancing protection for vulnerable populations.
ADB Country Director for Bangladesh Hoe Yun Jeong said this program represents an important milestone in Bangladesh’s transition toward a more modern, inclusive, and resilient social protection system.
By expanding coverage for vulnerable groups -- particularly women -- and introducing contributory protection mechanisms, the reforms, introduced by this program, will help reduce poverty risks while supporting long-term economic stability, said ADB country director
“ADB is proud to partner with Bangladesh in building a system that is more efficient, adaptive, and better equipped to promote inclusive growth and shared prosperity” Jeong added.
Reforms under the program include the development of contributory social protection schemes, which are expected to help ease longer-term fiscal pressure.
The widow allowance program will also extend support to at least 250,000 additional vulnerable women, while adaptive social protection will be strengthened through initiative climate adaptive measures under a core workfare program. In addition, access to financial services for women entrepreneurs will increase by at least 15% through the Bangladesh Bank’s targeted refinancing scheme.
The initiatives under the program are expected to generate significant micro-level outcomes, including enhanced productivity and efficiency, increased female labour force participation, and greater poverty reduction -- leading to positive macroeconomic effects and contributing to inclusive economic growth, added the release.
Oil prices extended their gains on Thursday, rising more than $1 in the wake of stalled peace talks between Iran and the United States and as both nations maintained restrictions on the flow of trade through the Strait of Hormuz.
Brent crude futures rose $1.26, or 1.2 percent, to $103.17 a barrel at 0630 GMT, after settling above $100 for the first time in more than two weeks on Wednesday. West Texas Intermediate futures were also up $1.20, or 1.3 percent, at $94.16.
Both benchmarks closed more than $3 higher on Wednesday after larger-than-expected gasoline and distillate stock draws in the US, and over the lack of progress on Iran peace talks.
“The oil market is repricing expectations with little sign of progress in finding a resolution in the Persian Gulf,” said ING analysts in a note, adding that hopes for a resolution are fading as peace talks stall.
“In addition, Iran’s seizure of two vessels attempting to transit the Strait of Hormuz suggests disruptions to shipments are set to continue.”
While US President Donald Trump extended a ceasefire between the countries following a request by Pakistani mediators, Iran and the US are still restricting the transit of ships through the strait, which carried about 20 percent of daily global oil supplies until the war began on February 28.
Iran seized two ships in the waterway on Wednesday, tightening its grip on the strategic chokepoint.
Trump has also maintained a US Navy blockade of Iran’s trade by sea, and Iranian parliament speaker and top negotiator Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf said a full ceasefire only made sense if the blockade was lifted.
The US military has intercepted at least three Iranian-flagged tankers in Asian waters and is redirecting them away from positions near India, Malaysia and Sri Lanka, shipping and security sources said on Wednesday.
With his extension of the ceasefire on Tuesday, Trump again pulled back at the last moment from warnings to bomb Iran’s power plants and bridges. Trump has not set an end date for the extended ceasefire, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters.
US EXPORTS SET A RECORD HIGH
On energy trade, total exports of crude oil and petroleum products from the United States climbed by 137,000 barrels per day to a record 12.88 million bpd as Asian and European countries bought up supplies after disruptions tied to the Iran war.
US crude stocks rose while gasoline and distillate inventories fell, the Energy Information Administration said on Wednesday.
Crude inventories rose by 1.9 million barrels, compared with expectations in a Reuters poll for a 1.2 million-barrel draw.
US gasoline stocks fell by 4.6 million barrels, while analysts had expected a 1.5 million-barrel draw. Distillate stockpiles dropped by 3.4 million barrels versus expectations for a 2.5 million-barrel drop.
Three years after launch and with 99 percent of its budget unspent, a nearly Tk 1,700 crore customs modernisation project is set to be presented to the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (Ecnec) today with a proposal to extend its deadline and raise costs by nearly 40 percent.
The Customs Modernisation and Infrastructure Development project was launched in April 2023 with World Bank (WB) financing to modernise key customs offices, including Chattogram, Benapole and Dhaka.
It was scheduled for completion by March 2026. As of June 2025, only Tk 5.14 crore had been spent of the original Tk 1,686 crore budget, of which Tk 1,475 crore was a WB loan.
Although Tk 113 crore has been allocated in the current fiscal year, the government is now seeking to extend the project’s duration and increase its cost.
A senior planning ministry official said a revised proposal has been listed for presentation at today’s scheduled Ecnec meeting.
The proposal, seen by The Daily Star, recommends increasing the project cost by 39 percent to Tk 2,344 crore, with the WB loan increasing by 34 percent, or Tk 507 crore. It also proposes extending the deadline to June 30, 2028.
The proposal attributes the cost increase to revisions made at the detailed design stage, after the initial estimate was based on conceptual design.
The earlier exchange rate assumption of Tk 102 per US dollar has been revised to Tk 122. Rising construction rates and higher VAT and tax rates have also contributed to the escalation.
At present, Dhaka Customs handles large volumes of air freight and courier consignments, Chattogram Customs manages 90 percent of the country’s import-export activity, and Benapole Customs oversees the bulk of land trade.
The project will introduce modern infrastructure and technology at these offices to speed up import-export operations, reduce tax evasion, and strengthen the detection of money laundering.
Planned works include construction of office buildings, laboratories, warehouses and residential facilities at Chattogram Customs House, as well as a new building for the Customs, Excise and VAT Training Academy. Baseline, midline and endline time-release studies will be conducted at major customs stations.
A tariff policy implementation plan will also be prepared, the existing tariff structure reviewed, and the feasibility of tariff reforms assessed using ASYCUDA World, National Single Window and Automated Risk Management System software.
Prime Bank PLC has signed a $30 million term-loan agreement with the Opec Fund for International Development (Opec Fund), an international development finance institution.
The strategic collaboration is expected to significantly enhance Prime Bank’s capacity to support critical trade finance requirements across the country’s small and medium enterprise (SME), agriculture, and corporate sectors.
Faisal Rahman, chief executive officer (current charge) of the bank, and Abdulhamid Alkhalifa, president of the Opec Fund, signed the agreement in Dhaka recently, according to a press release.
Commenting on the partnership, Alkhalifa said, “MSMEs and agribusinesses play a vital role in jobs, food security, and economic resilience in Bangladesh, yet many still struggle to access trade finance.”
“Our partnership with Prime Bank will help unlock new opportunities, diversify exports, and strengthen the country’s private sector. This loan builds on our long-standing collaboration and reflects our commitment to inclusive, sustainable growth,” he added.
Rahman said, “We are delighted to enter into this strategic partnership with the Opec Fund. The three-year expandable term-loan facility will meaningfully enhance our capacity to support the trade financing needs of our valued clients.”
“This collaboration comes at a critical time when businesses are navigating uncertainties in the global economic landscape,” he added.
The Opec Fund’s support reinforces our relationship and reflects its strong confidence in Prime Bank’s governance, operational resilience, and future ambitions in supporting the national economy, the release added.
The facility, structured as a term-loan, will be provided to Prime Bank’s offshore banking unit by the Opec Fund.
It carries an initial tenor of one year, with a provision for extension up to three years.
This financing is expected to strengthen Prime Bank’s trade finance portfolio, providing much-needed stability and support to Bangladeshi businesses navigating complex global economic headwinds.
US consumer sentiment fell to a record low in April as households shrugged off a ceasefire in the war with Iran, remaining focused on the inflation fallout from the conflict.
The University of Michigan's Surveys of Consumers said its Consumer Sentiment Index dropped to a final reading of 49.8 this month, an all-time low. The reading was a slight improvement, however, from the 47.6 reported earlier in the month.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index at 48.0. It was at 53.3 in March. The deterioration in sentiment was across political party affiliation, and among consumers with investments in the stock market.
The Iran war has disrupted shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, boosting the price of oil, and ultimately the cost of gasoline and diesel. Prices for other commodities, including fertilizers, petrochemicals and aluminum, which will soon impact consumers, have also surged.
Tehran effectively closed the strait after the start of the war on February 28. President Donald Trump this week indefinitely extended the ceasefire with Iran, though a US Navy blockade of Iranian ports remained in effect.
"The Iran conflict appears to influence consumer views primarily through shocks to gasoline and potentially other prices," said Joanne Hsu, the director of the Surveys of Consumers. "In contrast, military and diplomatic developments that do not lift supply constraints or lower energy prices are unlikely to buoy consumers."
GASOLINE AND DIESEL PRICES INCREASE
The national average retail gasoline price has hovered above $4 a gallon this month, with diesel well above $5 a gallon, data from the US Energy Information Administration showed.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll on Friday showed a clear majority of Americans blamed Trump for surging gasoline prices, which are weighing on his Republican Party ahead of November's congressional midterm elections.
Expensive diesel is likely to raise prices of goods transported by road. Economists said while the correlation between consumer sentiment and spending was weak, they expected households, especially lower-income groups, to scale back on consumption.
"We expect the hit to real disposable income growth from higher gas prices will slow consumption growth," said Grace Zwemmer, a US economist at Oxford Economics. "The impact will be mostly felt by low- and middle-income households, since a larger share of their overall spending goes toward gasoline."
The survey's measure of consumer expectations for inflation over the next year jumped to 4.7 percent this month from 3.8 percent in March. April's reading exceeded levels that prevailed in 2024 and remained well above the 2.3 percent-3.0 percent range seen in the two years before the COVID-19 pandemic.
Consumers' expectations for inflation over the next five years climbed to 3.5 percent from 3.2 percent last month.
Higher inflation expectations added to a survey from S&P Global on Thursday showing a measure of prices charged by businesses for their goods and services jumped in April to the highest level in nearly four years in strengthening financial market expectations that the Federal Reserve would probably not cut interest rates this year.
"More pain will come as higher transportation costs are passed along for food, appliances, toys and every other item that travels on a ship, car or plane," said Heather Long, chief economist at Navy Federal Credit Union. "Sentiment won't improve until the Strait of Hormuz is open and there is a permanent end to the conflict."
A US naval blockade of Iranian ports is likely to squeeze Iran’s oil output in the coming weeks but claims it will throw the Islamic republic into economic free fall remain premature, analysts say.
After weeks of bombing and counter-strikes, focus has shifted to the standoff in the Strait of Hormuz, which ordinarily carries around a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas.
In response to Iran’s blockade of the strait since the start of the Middle East war, the US imposed a counter-blockade of the Islamic republic’s ports, a push to force its leaders into a compromise in peace talks.
That bid, however, looks set to fail, at least in the short term.
“If the blockade lasts for more than two or three months, it can cause more damage” to Iran, economic analyst and professor at Shahid Beheshti University in Tehran Saeed Laylaz told AFP.
“If Iran suffers any damage, the damage to the countries in the southern Persian Gulf will definitely be greater,” he added.
There’s a limit on how long Iran can bide its time, however.
Arne Lohmann Rasmussen, chief analyst at Global Risk Management said Iran “was expected to run out of storage capacity within approximately one month, but it may already be forced to shut in part of its oil production within a couple of weeks”.
‘COLLAPSING FINANCIALLY?’
Trump said Tuesday that Iran was “collapsing financially” under the blockade imposed by the US Navy on April 12, claiming that the country was “starving for cash”.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the blockade meant storage at Iran’s Kharg Island, the main export terminal through which most of the country’s crude is shipped, “will be full and the fragile Iranian oil wells will be shut in”.
Jamie Ingram, managing editor of Middle East Economic Survey (MEES), told AFP it was likely the timeline for Iran to hit its oil storage limits would be measured in “weeks rather than days”.
He added it was likely that “Iran will slightly reduce production before getting to the stage where storage constraints start to bite”.
According to analysis by oil expert Homayoun Falakshahi shared by energy intelligence firm Kpler, Iran’s crude production has already slowed since the start of the war.
Output fell by around 200,000 barrels per day in March to 3.68 million bpd and is expected to drop a further 420,000 bpd in April to about 3.43 million bpd, reflecting “the broader impact of export disruptions and refining constraints linked to the ongoing conflict,” Falakshahi said.
But Laylaz in Tehran said beyond the psychological effect of the blockade, the “real material effect has been small so far”.
Ingram said Kharg Island “shouldn’t be a particular bottleneck,” for Iran.
“This is the final storage facility used before oil is exported and Iran can divert crude oil to other facilities rather than straight to Kharg,” he said.
‘MUTUALLY ASSURED DISRUPTION’
The MEES expert also said Iran’s dependency on oil exports via Hormuz had “deepened due to the damage caused by US and Israeli strikes to other sections of the Iranian economy”.
“But Iran has also proven its ability to withstand huge oil-revenue declines during previous rounds of sanctions. I would not underestimate the regime’s resilience in this regard,” he added.
As the initial two-week truce between Iran and the US was set to expire Trump had said Tuesday he would maintain the ceasefire to allow more time for peace talks.
Iran said it welcomed the efforts by mediator Pakistan but made no other comment on Trump’s announcement, while vowing not to reopen Hormuz so long as the US blockade remains in place.
“It will take a long time before such economic pain forces Iran to compromise,” Ingram said, explaining it is “more likely economic disruption... pushes China into exerting more pressure on Iran to negotiate”.
Ali Vaez, Iran project director at the International Crisis Group, said “Iran’s economy was battered before the war, is contending with added strains caused during it, and now faces the combination of sanctions, seizures and potential strikes”.
“Iran’s leadership has previously shown a high threshold for pain even if the pressure on ordinary Iranians increases. It also likely calculates that its own efforts to subdue traffic through Hormuz act as a sort of mutually assured disruption,” he added.
Demand for rooftop solar systems across Europe has surged since the start of the Iran war, as households rush to shield themselves from soaring power prices triggered by the worst global energy disruption in history.
The conflict has pushed oil, gas and electricity prices sharply higher, hitting companies and households alike and accelerating efforts to find cheaper alternatives and reduce exposure to volatile energy markets.
Solar is among those options, with demand from homeowners more than doubling for some industry players since the war began in late February, according to interviews with more than half a dozen energy equipment wholesalers and renewable utilities in Germany, Britain and the Netherlands.
It’s a timely boost for a technology that accounts for about a third of Europe’s total power capacity, but saw the pace of new installations dip last year for the first time in nearly a decade. Industry advocates argue Europe still needs to do far more to cut its reliance on imported oil and gas.
“The war has merely exposed the problem that has existed all along: energy dependency,” said Janik Nolden, co-founder of German privately owned solar equipment wholesaler Solarhandel24, adding European governments had been “walking into a trap”.
Solarhandel24 said net sales more than tripled in March to nearly 70 million euros ($82 million) from a year earlier, and are expected to triple again this month to as much as 60 million euros. The company plans to expand its workforce by about 85 people, roughly a third, to cope with demand.
To secure supply, Solarhandel24 has stocked up around half a million solar panels in recent weeks - a costly decision, Nolden said, but one he sees as worthwhile given the potential for net sales to rise to around 400 million euros in 2026 from about 250 million euros last year.
Germany’s Enpal is seeing a similar trend. The energy firm said orders rose 30 percent year-on-year in March to 130 million euros, while April was on track for a 33 percent increase to about 120 million euros, driven by rooftop solar installations.
“This is about European resilience,” said Enpal CEO and founder Mario Kohle. “We are seeing this trend in the defence sector too. Just as Europe must be able to defend itself, we must be able to supply our own energy.”
The financial figures from Solarhandel24 and Enpal have not been previously reported.
While aggregated installation data for Europe are not yet available, industry associations in Germany and the Netherlands have confirmed a pickup in demand since the war began.
Executives say homeowners are increasingly opting for full systems combining solar panels - nearly 90 percent of which are supplied by China - with batteries and electric-vehicle wallboxes, allowing surplus power to be stored and used later.
That trend is also lifting demand for energy storage technologies, which Holland Solar’s Wijnand van Hooff says is seeing demand increases of 40 percent-50 percent.
“This cannot be explained by purely seasonal factors,” said Filip Thon of E.ON (EONGn.DE), , Europe’s largest energy network operator, which also sells rooftop solar systems. Customer requests, he said, have nearly doubled year-on-year.
A STRUCTURAL SHIFT?
Some executives also point to upcoming changes to Germany’s renewable energy law as an additional driver of demand for rooftop installations, which typically cost between 10,000 and 20,000 euros for an average family home.
The war-driven surge comes after the pace of new European solar installations slowed, in 2025, according to industry lobby SolarPower Europe, with weak residential demand a key factor following the phase-out of support schemes.
Shares in SMA Solar (S92G.DE), , the world’s third-largest solar inverter maker and one of the few remaining European equipment producers, have risen about 50 percent since the war began. The company has also reported an uptick in demand.
“We view the spike in demand as a structural shift that current geopolitical events are accelerating, not creating,” said Ed Janvrin, who heads the solar and heating business at Britain’s OVO Energy, adding April sales in the division were roughly 10 times higher than a year earlier.
Chinese solar manufacturers, however, say any war-related boost in global demand is unlikely to significantly ease the sector’s overcapacity, with China alone having enough manufacturing capacity to meet this year’s expected global demand nearly twice over.
Even so, the surge highlights how geopolitical shocks can rapidly reprice the value of renewables, said Jannik Schall, co-founder of German renewables firm 1Komma5Grad, noting that solar demand during the 2022 energy crisis had been even stronger.
“The recurring energy crises prove the renewables sector right.”
When the International Monetary Fund (IMF) released its latest World Economic Outlook (WEO) database on April 14, one data point quickly made its way through financial markets and newsrooms.
Bangladesh is projected to record a higher gross domestic product per capita than India in 2026, measured in current US dollars. The forecast puts Bangladesh at $2,911 per person against India at $2,812. The difference is small in absolute terms, but its symbolism is significant.
India’s economy, valued at $3,916 billion in 2025, is roughly eight times the size of Bangladesh’s $458 billion. It is also one of the most closely watched growth stories in the world. Yet on this narrow measure, the smaller neighbour appears set to edge ahead.
The reaction in India was swift. Kaushik Basu, former chief economist of the World Bank, described the development as "shocking". Indian commentators debated whether the figure reflected a deeper structural divergence or merely a statistical quirk.
The answer, as is so often the case with economic data, is: both.
Measured in current dollars, Bangladesh led India in per capita income for seven years from 2018.
India moved ahead in 2025 after the Bangladeshi taka weakened sharply. This is not without precedent.
Bangladesh was also ahead of India in per capita GDP between 1989 and 2002.
India then pulled in front for around 15 years before slipping below Bangladesh in 2018.
The rupee's own depreciation against the dollar in the subsequent period then swung the comparison back.
According to the latest projections, Bangladesh is set to move ahead in 2026 by roughly $100 per person.
The IMF expects India to regain the lead in 2027 and to remain ahead at least until 2031.
To understand why this measure is so volatile, consider the arithmetic.
GDP per capita in current dollars is calculated by converting each country's output into US dollars at the prevailing exchange rate.
When a currency depreciates — as both the taka and the rupee have done in recent years, though at different speeds — it compresses the dollar value of output regardless of how productive the underlying economy has become.
The crossing of the two lines in 2026, seen on any given screen, tells us something real: that exchange-rate dynamics now place the two economies' dollar incomes within touching distance of each other. It does not, on its own, tell us which population is better off.
The second measure complicates the picture considerably. The IMF also publishes GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power parity (PPP), which strips out exchange-rate movements and instead converts output into a common "international dollar" based on what each currency can actually buy domestically.
On this basis, India leads Bangladesh by a wide margin — and always has in the modern era.
In 2025, India's PPP-adjusted GDP per capita stands at $11,789 — some 15 percent above Bangladesh's $10,271.
By 2031, the IMF projects the gap will widen to nearly 24 percent, with India reaching $18,485 against Bangladesh's $14,857.
Nearly 1.6 crore people in Bangladesh faced high levels of acute food insecurity in 2025, placing the country among the top ten nations with the largest number of people struggling to secure enough food, according to the latest Global Report on Food Crises.
The 2026 report, published by an alliance of UN agencies, the European Union and other partners, said that food conditions in those ten worst-affected countries are unlikely to improve this year.
Together, including Afghanistan, Myanmar and Pakistan, they accounted for two-thirds of the 26.6 crore people worldwide who experienced acute food insecurity last year.
The other countries on the list are the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nigeria, South Sudan, Sudan, the Syrian Arab Republic and Yemen.
The report said chronic economic weakness continues to erode resilience at both household and national levels.
"Half of the world's poorest people live in five countries, three of which -- Bangladesh, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Nigeria -- are in protracted food crises," it said.
Acute food insecurity occurs when one or more dimensions of food security, including availability, access, utilisation and stability, are disrupted to a degree that threatens lives or livelihoods.
Despite the scale of the challenge, Bangladesh recorded progress. The number of people facing acute food insecurity fell by 32 percent in 2025 compared with the previous year, with no major natural disasters reported.
The report, however, highlighted worsening conditions among forcibly displaced Myanmar nationals in two districts, amid a fresh influx of Rohingya refugees, flooding and cuts to humanitarian assistance.
Bangladesh is also listed among countries facing a moderate nutrition crisis, alongside Niger, parts of Nigeria and Sudan, and the Syrian Arab Republic, even as overall food security indicators improved.
Qu Dongyu, director-general of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), said acute food insecurity had become structural rather than temporary. "Acute food insecurity today is not just widespread -- it is also persistent and recurring.”
Conflict remained the primary driver, accounting for more than half of all people facing severe hunger. More than 39 million people in 32 countries faced emergency levels of food insecurity, while the number experiencing catastrophic hunger had risen ninefold since 2016.
Children bore a heavy toll. In 2025, 35.5 million children were acutely malnourished, including nearly 10 million suffering from severe acute malnutrition.
Ricardo Pires, spokesperson for the UN Children's Fund (Unicef), warned that children with severe wasting faced heightened mortality risk, as weakened immune systems left them vulnerable to ordinarily non-fatal illnesses.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres, writing in the foreword, called for scaled-up investment in aid and an end to the conflicts driving the crisis.
The report also states that the outlook for 2026 remains bleak. Ongoing conflict, climate shocks, economic instability and Middle East-linked supply chain disruptions are expected to sustain critical food insecurity levels across multiple countries.
Bangladesh’s macroeconomic outlook is fragile as it faces three concurrent adverse external headwinds, including the Middle East crisis and the country’s impending graduation from the least developed country (LDC) category, said the Policy Research Institute (PRI) of Bangladesh yesterday.
Presenting the institute’s Monthly Macroeconomic Insights at its Dhaka office, Principal Economist Ashikur Rahman said uncertainty around US tariff policies is another factor casting a shadow over the economy’s prospects for a faster recovery.
“These shocks are feeding through energy prices, weakened trade flows, and supply chain disruptions, with broad economy-wide implications,” he said.
At the same time, pressure is building on the balance of payments amid weaker exports and higher energy costs, with limited policy buffers heightening overall vulnerability amid the US-Israel war on Iran.
Rahman noted that around 31 percent of Bangladesh’s energy imports originate from the Middle East, largely transiting the Strait of Hormuz. A study by Zero Carbon Analytics found that severe price shocks could raise the country’s energy bill by 40 percent to $16-$17 billion in the ongoing fiscal year 2025-26 (FY26).
The PRI economist noted that Bangladesh has seen a fragile recovery over the 18 months to February 2026, with reserves rising from about $18 billion to $30 billion, inflation easing to 8-9 percent, and deposit growth strengthening.
“Yet, this recovery was underpinned by core vulnerabilities,” said Rahman, noting growth slowed to 3 percent in the second quarter of FY26, the weakest since Covid. Non-performing loans stand at around 30 percent, dampening private credit growth to 6 percent, while limited fiscal space is pushing the government toward costly bank borrowing.
Against this backdrop, Rahman warned that rolling back reforms now would be self-defeating. “If we step back from economic reforms at this stage, it would be an economically suicidal decision. It must be treated as a national economic imperative.”
The reforms, he stressed, should not be framed as conditions set by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). “These are essential for strengthening our own economy and ensuring long-term growth.”
ICC Bangladesh President Mahbubur Rahman, speaking as the chief guest, said persistent uncertainty is making it harder for businesses to plan.
He pointed to a disconnect between policy direction and business expectations as a drag on private investment — and, by extension, on foreign direct investment. “In Bangladesh, politics and business often operate in parallel rather than in coordination. In reality, they should be deeply interconnected. Government, businesses, and investors are part of the same ecosystem.”
Besides, he said weak domestic investment is also constraining foreign direct investment inflows. “Local investment is not picking up, and naturally that raises a question: how will foreign direct investment come if domestic investors themselves are hesitant? Even machinery imports are declining because investors lack confidence.”
Uncertainty over energy supply and financial sector risks are key concerns, he said. “There is deep uncertainty among investors about whether they will get gas or electricity tomorrow. This lack of predictability is holding back decisions.
“On top of that, fears of becoming loan defaulters and difficulties in accessing finance are further increasing risk perception.”
Khondokar Shakhawat Ali, a visiting research fellow at the BRAC Institute of Governance and Development at BRAC University, stressed that economic stability requires structural reforms rather than short-term fixes.
He also pointed to the close nexus between political actors, bureaucrats, and sections of the private sector, saying, “It has blurred lines of responsibility and made reform more urgent.”
With Bangladesh facing both internal and external shocks, he cautioned that without prudent fiscal management, the country risks sliding into a deeper economic crisis.
Meanwhile, highlighting rising external risks, PRI Chairman Zaidi Sattar said geopolitical tensions, particularly around the Strait of Hormuz, are posing systemic risks to global supply chains and fertiliser trade.
“Rising food, fuel, and fertiliser prices are pushing up import costs and intensifying inflationary pressures,” he said.
On Bangladesh’s LDC graduation, he said preparedness remains limited due to gaps in export diversification and competitiveness.
He also noted slow reform progress, stressing that “comprehensive tax reform is essential to strengthen domestic resource mobilisation.”
Former National Board of Revenue (NBR) chairman Muhammad Abdul Mazid said revenue reform is essential for economic stability, warning that delays will deepen fiscal risks.
“We must stop thinking that reforms are imposed from outside; these are reforms we need for our own survival,” he said, adding that continued failure to meet revenue targets is pushing the government into a cycle of borrowing that weakens the financial system.
“You cannot fix the economy without fixing the revenue system. This is where the foundation lies,” he said, noting that while reforms take time, postponing them will only raise long-term costs.
“If the economic ‘bleeding’ continues and we fail to act, recovery will become extremely difficult,” he added.
Top business leaders have urged the market regulator to be flexible on the use of initial public offering (IPO) funds for loan repayment, including allowing repayment of rescheduled loans amid a challenging business climate.
They made the request at a meeting organised by the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC) at its Dhaka office yesterday to discuss the use of IPO proceeds.
Syed Nasim Manzur, managing director of Apex Footwear Limited, said many countries, including neighbouring ones, do not impose restrictions on the use of IPO funds for loan repayment.
Considering global standards, the scope for using IPO proceeds to repay loans could be expanded, he added.
In 2025, the regulator introduced the Public Offer of Equity Securities Rules, 2025. Under the new rules, companies may use up to 30 percent of IPO proceeds for debt repayment or investment, subject to conditions.
For loan repayment, the borrowing must have been used for a company project, business, machinery, renovation or expansion, and an auditor report must confirm proper utilisation of the funds.
The loans being repaid cannot be classified or rescheduled. In other words, they must not be overdue or deferred because of repayment problems.
These provisions are stricter than those under the 2015 rules, which allowed up to one-third of IPO funds to be used for debt repayment or working capital without linking the loans to specific projects or imposing conditions on their classification status.
Riad Mahmud, president of the Bangladesh Association of Publicly Listed Companies, said even well-performing companies may incur losses because of global crises and economic challenges, and may have rescheduled loans.
It is not sufficient to follow strict policies based only on ideal situations; flexibility is also necessary considering real-world circumstances, he said.
Taking into account economic conditions and global crises, he called for allowing the repayment of rescheduled loans using IPO proceeds.
Mominul Islam, chairman of the Dhaka Stock Exchange, also spoke in favour of allowing IPO funds to be used for loan repayment.
Khondoker Rashed Maqsood, chairman of the BSEC, thanked stakeholders for their opinions and proposals. He said the regulator would evaluate their views and recommendations, adding that one of its key mandates is to protect investor interests in the capital market.
He said, “The commission will ensure overall market development while safeguarding investor interests.”
Maqsood also said efforts are ongoing to bring fundamentally strong companies to the capital market.
Tapan Chowdhury, chairman of the Central Depository Bangladesh Limited and managing director of Square Group, said regulators must assess whether IPO funds are used properly and whether they genuinely benefit the company or project.
He noted that many large and reputed groups in the country have highly ambitious projects, and merely relying on the group’s reputation should not justify using IPO proceeds to repay loans for such projects.
Abdul Hai Sarker, chairman of the Bangladesh Association of Banks, said a strong and developed capital market is an effective solution for maintaining competitiveness in the global market and ensuring economic growth.
He called for the proper development and expansion of the market.
Mashrur Arefin, chairman of the Association of Bankers Bangladesh, said companies should have an opportunity to restructure capital by repaying loans taken for productive or expansion purposes using IPO funds.
Considering the country’s economic conditions and various crises, he said loans that have not been rescheduled more than twice could be allowed under such provisions, while maintaining appropriate control mechanisms.
Kamran T Rahman, president of the Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Dhaka, said, “In the country, short-term deposits are being used to finance long-term investments. This practice should be discouraged, and long-term financing should be ensured through the capital market. To achieve this, policy and regulatory alignment are necessary.”
AKM Habibur Rahman, chairman of the Chittagong Stock Exchange, Saiful Islam, president of the DSE Brokers Association of Bangladesh, and senior BSEC officials also attended the meeting.
Citing three major economic challenges, the government has prepared its position paper ahead of a United Nations hearing on Bangladesh’s request to defer its graduation from the least developed country (LDC) category.
In a virtual meeting of the United Nations Committee for Development Policy (UNCDP) on April 29, Bangladesh will seek a three-year deferral of its scheduled graduation in November this year.
Dhaka plans to highlight a serious gap in preparedness, incomplete core reforms and the economic fallout from the US-Israel war on Iran as key reasons for postponement.
In addition, Bangladesh will raise concerns over vulnerabilities in the financial sector, weaknesses in the banking system, an export slowdown due to volatile global supply chains, high interest rates and an uncertain business and investment climate, said Md Abdur Rahim Khan, additional secretary to the commerce ministry.
Khan, who is also in charge of the commerce secretary, told The Daily Star over the phone that Bangladesh’s case for deferment has strengthened after Nepal, another South Asian LDC set to graduate, also applied to the UN for a three-year extension.
Bangladesh, Nepal and Lao PDR are scheduled to graduate from LDC status on November 24 this year. However, Bangladesh and Nepal have now sought to delay the transition until 2029, citing domestic and external economic pressures.
Earlier on February 19, the newly elected government sent a letter to Jose Antonio Ocampo, chair of the UNCDP, requesting that the preparatory period be extended until November 24, 2029, mentioning that more time is needed to ensure readiness.
Following Bangladesh’s request, the UNCDP discussed the issue at its annual meeting in February and agreed on a process to assess the proposal.
The UNCDP has now called a public hearing on Bangladesh’s request on April 29. After the hearing, the committee will submit its recommendations to the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) in June.
ECOSOC will then forward its assessment to the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), which is scheduled to meet in September. The final decision on the deferment will be taken through a vote at the UNGA.
A UN assessment report last month said Bangladesh still faces serious gaps in its readiness for graduation, as its economy continues to be affected by both domestic and international shocks, including the US-Israel war on Iran.
The report highlighted a series of disruptions between 2017 and 2026, including climate vulnerability, the Rohingya crisis, a prolonged macroeconomic slowdown that predated the regime change, the Covid-19 pandemic, the Russia-Ukraine war, inflation, and pressure on the balance of payments.
It also noted that while Bangladesh meets all three criteria for graduation, significant risks persist, including the loss of trade preferences, fiscal and financial vulnerabilities and weak institutional coordination.
The report stressed the need for urgent reforms, stronger implementation capacity, adequate policy space and a whole-of-society approach to ensure a smooth and sustainable transition.
It added that a difficult political changeover and prolonged macroeconomic stress have eroded socio-economic gains, increasing risks linked to graduation.
Rising import costs for fossil fuels have created operational constraints, with gas shortages worsening due to the Middle East conflict, the report said. Economic growth slowed from 7.1 percent in FY22 to 3.5 percent in FY25, weakening momentum ahead of graduation.
Inflation has outpaced wages, pushing millions into hardship and vulnerability.
Private investment has also weakened, with capital machinery imports falling from $5.1 billion to $2.8 billion during the 2019-2024 period. The labour market has also come under pressure, with nearly 1.9 million jobs lost between 2023 and 2024, disproportionately affecting women.
The Bank Resolution Act-2026, passed with new provisions added overnight, is effectively rehabilitating bank looters and putting the entire banking sector at risk, economic experts, academics, and activists said yesterday.
Clause 18(a) of the law could allow those who previously looted the sector in a planned manner to regain ownership, the speakers warned at a roundtable organised by Voice for Reform at the BDBL building in Karwan Bazar, Dhaka.
Badiul Alam Majumdar, secretary of Shushashoner Jonno Nagorik (Shujan), noted that many of those who looted the sector are yet to be brought to justice.
He said all masterminds behind the takeover of Islami Bank Bangladesh, including S Alam, should be held accountable.
He outlined three steps needed to put the banking sector on a firm footing. First, identifying and ensuring exemplary punishment for perpetrators of banking fraud. Second, implementing systemic reforms such as cashless transactions to prevent recurrence. Lastly, completing institutional reforms, including making Bangladesh Bank an independent constitutional body.
AKM Waresul Karim, dean of the School of Business and Economics at North South University, said the government had resorted to “very low-grade tactics” over the proposed ordinance.
He criticised the Bank Resolution Act as one of its provisions allows shareholders who held ownership immediately before a bank was placed under resolution to apply for reinstatement.
He said the provision blocks the return of long-standing institutional owners like Kuwait Finance House while opening the door for those who acquired ownership by creating “pressure through the DGFI” or through other unethical means.
Toufic Ahmad Choudhury, former director general of the Bangladesh Institute of Bank Management (BIBM), called for bringing willful defaulters to book, saying that no resolution measures would yield results unless those responsible for the current crisis are punished.
He also cautioned that rescheduled loans should not have their default status changed until fully repaid – a rule routinely flouted as elections approach, when defaulters reschedule debts.
“Through this process, they remove themselves from the list of defaulters and become ‘regular’ borrowers. Subsequently, they take the opportunity to secure hundreds of crores of taka in additional loans from the same banks,” he said.
Shawkat Hossain Masum, head of online at Prothom Alo, said it was inevitable that some banks in the country would reach the point of insolvency.
He stated that in November 2022, the central bank claimed that there were no problems in the banking sector, even though the real situation was more or less known to everyone. “It was not that Bangladesh Bank was unaware; rather, it was either helpless in the face of politicisation, complicit in it, or both.”
He claimed that the interim government opted for merging troubled banks as “no government wants to bear the stigma” of closing banks.
Considering various realities, he said merging two weak banks and making the initiative successful is already very difficult. “Expecting five weak banks to merge and succeed together is a very remote aspiration.”
Meanwhile, Professor Mushtaq Khan of SOAS University of London said the interim government should have nationalised or confiscated assets of individuals involved in bank looting.
“Failing to do so was a major mistake,” he said, noting that the manner of the looting makes recovery through collateral seizure difficult.
Sarwar Tusher, a joint convener of the National Citizen Party (NCP), accused the current BNP-led government of setting “extreme examples of politicisation” in the economy within two months of taking office.
Criticising BB Governor Md Mostaqur Rahman, the NCP leader said the governor was a “politically affiliated individual” who reportedly has “past links with S Alam”.
He went on to allege that several ministers of the new government have connections with the controversial business group, warning that a major crisis in the banking sector, similar to that in the energy sector, may be imminent.
Shams Mahmud, former president of the Dhaka Chamber of Commerce & Industry, said Islami Bank was captured through the stock market.
Instead of direct acquisition as entrepreneurs, the bank’s shares were quietly purchased through various anonymous groups and later transferred to a specific group, he added.
“Even if the front door is closed through banking laws, such looting cannot be stopped if the back door, like the stock market, remains open,” said Mahmud.
Asif Khan, president of CFA Society Bangladesh, suggested issuing long-term bonds to depositors as an immediate measure to heal the deep wounds in the banking sector.
He said that while small depositors could be fully repaid, larger depositors might need to accept some “haircut,” or partial losses.
Bangladesh’s mobile and broadband internet services rank among the worst in the world despite a large subscriber base, and a connectivity-led reform plan is being prepared to address the challenge, Rehan Asad, the prime minister’s adviser on telecom and ICT, said yesterday.
Speaking at a seminar titled “New Telecom Policy: Expectations of Entrepreneurs”, organised by the Telecom and Technology Reporters Network Bangladesh, he said the government sees better connectivity as the key to solving long-standing structural problems in the sector.
“Nothing is more important than connectivity for this government. And that connectivity means both mobile and broadband services. It is not either-or -- it is both,” he said.
Asad said Bangladesh is among the top 10 countries by mobile subscriptions, but service quality remains very poor.
“Even in South Asia, Nepal and Bhutan are ahead of us,” he said.
He added that broadband services are also weak. “In broadband, we are in an equally bad or worse position -- 141st out of 153 countries in terms of service quality,” he said.
“These are not my findings. They come from global reports by GSMA and the International Telecommunication Union,” he added.
He said the government plans to fix these problems by rapidly expanding mobile and broadband infrastructure.
“We want to connect 90 percent of the population with 5G and provide 100 Mbps internet to 90 percent of users,” he said.
He said the goal is to ensure consistent internet service across both urban and rural areas, so users no longer face uncertainty in accessing basic connectivity.
The second priority is to build a unified digital ecosystem through a nationwide digital identity system.
He explained that each citizen will receive a digital ID linked to a digital wallet that can connect with banking and mobile financial services.
The government is studying global models such as Singapore’s Singpass and Estonia’s digital system, with plans to begin rollout within the next 12 to 18 months.
The third priority is to turn Bangladesh into an AI-enabled economy, he said, adding that artificial intelligence will be introduced in education and industry.
The fourth priority is reforming the telecom tax system.
“When someone recharges Tk 100, they receive only Tk 62 worth of service. The remaining Tk 38 goes to the government,” he said.
“We want to examine the whole value chain so that a person can receive Tk 80 to Tk 90 worth of service.”
He added that Bangladesh is the third-largest collector of telecom taxes globally, which also affects affordability, including access to smartphones.
Asad said the reforms will require coordination between industry players and government agencies, and that discussions with stakeholders are already underway.
Not all problems will be solved immediately, he said, adding that the current work marks the start of a longer reform process.
Sumon Ahmed Sabir, deputy managing director of Fiber@Home, said at the event that policies and guidelines enacted by the interim government unfairly allowed foreign entities to obtain licences across multiple layers.
“The cross-layer empowerment of foreign entities could ultimately lead to ‘super-dominance’ in mobile infrastructure by one or two companies,” he said.
He also warned of risks to national security and data governance.
Some representatives of local companies at the event also alleged that the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC) formulated policies and guidelines without adequate consultation with industry stakeholders.
Md Emdad Ul Bari, chairman of the BTRC, stated that their claims were unfounded.
BTRC had conducted extensive consultations with industry players, academia, and government bodies during the policy formulation process, he said.
Bari added that the primary objective of the regulator was to ensure that the policies serve the industry as a whole.
He also noted that the guidelines and policies are currently being reviewed again, in consultation with the newly elected government.
The Ministry of Finance has earmarked Tk 1.17 trillion, or 39 per cent of the proposed Tk 3.0-trillion Annual Development Programme (ADP), for the next fiscal year, as block and special allocations across various sectors.Banking sector news
The remaining Tk 1.83 trillion, or 61 per cent of the ADP, is set to be allocated to ongoing projects under different ministries and divisions, according to sources at the Ministry of Planning.
Officials said the Finance Division on Tuesday sent the final ministry-wise expenditure ceilings for ADP allocations for the next fiscal year to the Programming Division of the Planning Commission.
The allocations will be finalised after distribution among projects before being placed at a meeting of the National Economic Council (NEC) for approval.
A review shows that more than Tk 1.07 trillion of the proposed allocation has been kept as block allocation to facilitate approval of new projects. In addition, Tk 97.98 billion has been set aside to meet special needs of local government bodies.
Around 80 per cent of the proposed allocations for several ministries and divisions -- including the Medical Education and Family Welfare Division, Health Services Division, and the Ministry of Primary and Mass Education -- has been kept as block allocation.
Experts and economists say several ministries and divisions often fail to utilise even their project-specific allocations, raising concerns that block allocations may remain underutilised and merely inflate the size of the ADP.
The Local Government Division has proposed the highest allocation in the proposed ADP at Tk 362.28 billion, reflecting continued priority on local infrastructure and service delivery.
It is followed by the Road Transport and Highways Division with Tk 310.65 billion, underscoring strong emphasis on transport connectivity.
The Health Services Division ranks third with Tk 268.08 billion, while Tk 213.48 billion has been proposed for the Ministry of Primary and Mass Education.
The Secondary and Higher Education Division has been allocated Tk 208.35 billion, indicating sustained focus on human capital development.
In the energy sector, the Power Division has been earmarked Tk 192.86 billion, while the Science and Technology Division will receive Tk 173.16 billion. The shipping sector has received the lowest allocation among the listed divisions at Tk 109.69 billion.
Overall, the allocation pattern highlights continued priority on infrastructure, energy and social sectors.
In terms of block allocation, the Health Services Division tops the list with Tk 208.0 billion, accounting for 77.59 per cent of its total allocation, followed by the Ministry of Primary and Mass Education with Tk 162.99 billion.
Secondary and Higher Education has received Tk 115.0 billion, representing 55.19 per cent of its total allocation, while the Medical Education and Family Welfare Division shows the highest reliance on block allocation at Tk 68.0 billion, or 80.52 per cent.
In other key sectors, the Technical and Madrasha Education Division has received Tk 30.79 billion in block allocation, more than half of its proposed allocation, while agriculture shows a relatively lower share at Tk 17.0 billion, or 25.99 per cent.
Economist Dr Mustafa K Mujeri, former director general of the Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies (BIDS), said several ministries -- particularly in health and education -- are unable to utilise even their project-based allocations effectively.Bangladesh market report
"In this context, it is questionable what role block allocations would play for such ministries," he said, raising concerns over their efficiency and absorption capacity.
"Utilisation of block allocations depends on approval of new projects, which is very difficult," he added,
warning that such allocations may only serve to expand the size of the ADP.
Former Planning Division secretary Md Mamun Al Rashid also criticised the practice, saying block allocations are not earmarked for specific projects and may lead to inefficient spending.
"When there is no defined project or sector, such funds often end up being spent on unnecessary areas later," he said, adding that large block allocations create scope for misuse and wastage of public resources.
Sources said the ADP size for the current fiscal year was initially set at Tk 2.3 trillion but later revised to Tk 2.0 trillion.
The proposed ADP for the next fiscal year stands at Tk 3.0 trillion, with Tk 1.9 trillion expected from domestic sources and Tk 1.1 trillion from external financing.
Even though fuel supply in the country has increased, with higher allocations and improved depot dispatches easing some of the earlier pressure at filling stations, persistent gaps in supply management and uneven distribution continue to blunt the impact on the ground.
On paper, availability appears more stable, but in reality, public ordeal has not eased as expected, with long queues and persistent pressure still visible across most areas.
Agriculture-dependent regions such as Naogaon are facing an added strain from diesel shortages, with farmers often returning empty-handed as pumps run out of fuel needed for irrigation, putting them at risk of significant crop losses amid ongoing watering difficulties.
Dhaka: Queues shorten, but demand pressure remains
In the capital, fuel supply has improved, with most filling stations receiving higher volumes of petrol and octane. This has reduced extreme congestion, but queues remain visible.
At 1:30pm yesterday (22 April), the queue at Ramna Filling Station stretched from Matsya Bhaban past Shilpakala Academy to Birdem Hospital – still long, but significantly shorter than earlier weeks when it extended up to the Public Works Department.
Motorcycles were receiving Tk800-Tk1,000 worth of fuel, while cars were supplied Tk2,000 worth.
Pump owner Nazmul Haque said daily supply has increased from 18,000 litres to 22,500 litres. "From my long experience, to eliminate long waiting times at filling stations, the government will have to increase supply further," he said.
At Meghna Model Star Service in Paribagh, a steady flow of vehicles moved in and out throughout the afternoon. Assistant Manager Ahmed Rushd said supply has doubled compared to earlier levels.
"We started sales this morning with 27,000 litres of octane and 10,000 litres of petrol. More fuel will arrive again at night," he said.
However, nearby Purbal Traders had no fuel stock. Cashier Dulal said the station received 13,500 litres on 20 April but none on 21 April. Despite a 20% announced increase in octane supply, he said the benefit has not materialised due to the pump's tanker capacity limits of 13,500 litres.
Savar: Supply improves, congestion unchanged
In Savar, queues persist despite increased supply. Around 65% of stations reportedly have no petrol or octane, while operational outlets face concentrated pressure. Birulia Filling & LPG Station had only 268 litres of octane yesterday morning.
Consumers continue to feel the strain. Md Shoaib Hossain said, "I have been waiting for three hours and still haven't received fuel." Motorcyclist Sakib added, "The same long lines remain. If I get Tk300 worth of fuel after hours of waiting, how far will that take me?"
Operators say depot-level rationing prevents simultaneous distribution, shifting demand to a limited number of functioning pumps.
Around 70% of stations have diesel, but frequent load-shedding continues to disrupt supply.
At Lalon CNG & Refuelling Station, manager Ahmed said supply has remained inconsistent since the shortage began, and the promised increase in allocation has yet to arrive.
SI Chowdhury Filling Station manager Mostak Ahmed echoed the same experience, saying supply has improved in volume but remains irregular. "Earlier, we wouldn't get octane for five to six days; now it comes every three to four days in 4,500-litre batches. But the issue is consistency. Because supply is not regular and not all pumps receive fuel at the same time, pressure remains. Supply may have increased, but customer pressure is still the same," he said.
The same pattern is reflected at the association level. Bangladesh Petroleum Dealers, Distributors, Agents and Petrol Pump Owners Association convener Syed Sazzadul Karim Kabul told The Business Standard there is still no real improvement. "The lines may look shorter, but nozzles are running nonstop as customer flow continues," he said.
He added that queues alone do not capture the full picture, as oil companies continue to supply fuel in an uncoordinated way, often sending 2,000, 3,000 or 4,000 litres per station at their own discretion rather than through a uniform distribution system.
Sazzadul also noted that ongoing load-shedding is worsening diesel shortages, with rural areas facing 7-8 hours of power cuts. He warned that rising irrigation demand in the coming days is likely to put additional strain on already stretched supplies.
Sylhet: Demand surge offsets supply gains
In Sylhet, small increases in depot supply have not translated into real relief at the pump level. Dealers say what looks like an improvement on paper is not being felt in reality.
Riasad Azim Adnan, acting president of the Sylhet District Petrol Pump Owners Association, said, "The increase exists on paper rather than in practice." He noted allocations have risen from 100 litres to 120 litres, but added, "We are not actually receiving higher quantities as announced."
At the same time, demand has shot up sharply. "Earlier, my pump sold 6,000-7,000 litres of octane per day. Now it is 14,000 to 16,000 litres," he said. "We cannot fully explain this surge. It could be panic buying or even smuggling across the border."
Zubayer Ahmed Chowdhury, divisional committee president of petroleum dealers, said local production should first meet local demand. "If local demand is met, there will be no shortage," he said. He added that one extra truck every four days is being supplied, but "this is not having any meaningful impact."
Naogaon: Farmers under irrigation pressure
The fuel situation in Naogaon is hitting hardest where it matters most – agriculture. With the irrigation season underway, diesel shortages are directly affecting farming activity.
Farmer Atikul Islam said around 90% of the land in the area is agricultural. "Even after going to nearby filling stations for diesel for irrigation pumps, most of the time we do not get fuel," he said.
UNO Shaheen Mahmud said supply has not kept pace with demand. "We have sent letters, requesting increased diesel supply to agricultural areas. We hope the situation will stabilise within a week," he said.
Bogura coordination committee official and Deputy District Magistrate Md Masud Hossain confirmed that supply has increased after price adjustments, but said exact figures are not available: "I can confirm that supply has been raised."
Atithi Filling Station representative Abu Toha added, "Fuel supply has increased slightly, but it is still below current demand."
Although Expat Welfare Minister Ariful Haque Choudhury said yesterday that the situation should return to normal within two to three days, consumers remain sceptical. Truck driver Habibur Rahman, waiting in a fuel queue, said, "The situation will take time to normalise."
Pressure eases in Khulna
Unlike most other areas, field observation at Ferry Ghat intersection in Khulna, Meghna Filling Station, was seen to have a relaxed demand. Around noon, only 10-12 motorcycles were in the queue, with each receiving Tk500-Tk700 worth of petrol or octane.
Just five days earlier, hundreds of motorcycles would crowd the same station, with a cap of around Tk300 per vehicle.
Station manager Masud said supply has improved significantly. "Earlier, we received one tanker a day. Now supply has increased by nearly one and a half times," he said, adding that higher allocations across stations have reduced the need for long queues.
At the Power House intersection, the KCC Filling Station also showed lighter pressure. Motorcyclist Humayun Ahmed said, "There used to be 20-30 vehicles ahead of me. Now there is almost no queue. I can even fill a full tank these days."
A Jamuna Oil official said earlier supply disruptions had halted open-market drum sales, forcing all demand onto filling stations. "Now, limited drum supply has resumed, which has eased pressure slightly," he said, adding that further supply in the open market would gradually help stabilise the situation.
State Minister for Power, Energy and Mineral Resources Anindya Islam Amit announced yesterday that the government has secured sufficient fuel supply to meet demand in May, with preparations underway for June and July.
Stocks at the Dhaka Stock Exchange extended their gains today (22 April), with turnover crossing the Tk1,000-crore mark for the first time in two months as investors increased purchases of oversold and fundamentally strong shares.
Turnover at the premier bourse rose 13.67% to Tk1,056 crore from Tk929 crore in the previous session, marking the highest level since 17 February, when turnover stood at Tk1,222 crore.
The benchmark DSEX index gained 41 points to close at 5,299, while the blue-chip DS30 index rose 20 points to 2,005. The Shariah-based DSES index also edged up by 3 points to finish at 1,066.
Total market capitalisation increased by Tk2,587 crore to Tk6,86,184.18 crore, reflecting stronger investor participation and improved trading activity.
Market breadth remained sharply positive, as 213 issues advanced compared to 121 declining, with 57 stocks unchanged.
According to market insiders, the stock market had been maintaining a positive momentum following the election, but the ongoing Middle-East conflict interrupted that trend and created pressure throughout the month. As a result, the market moved into an oversold position, creating fresh buying opportunities for investors seeking fundamentally strong stocks at lower prices.
Declining yields on government securities encouraged a portion of funds to shift towards the stock market in search of better returns.
At the same time, investors are showing growing interest in December closing companies that are expected to declare attractive dividends. This buying interest has increased trading floor activity despite continued geopolitical uncertainty in the Middle East, leading to a higher volume of share transactions in the market.
However, large investors are still closely monitoring both domestic and international economic uncertainties. Analysts warn that if the Middle-East conflict worsens further, the market could face renewed pressure. For this reason, institutional and major investors are still maintaining a cautious investment approach despite the recent recovery in market activity.
Among the top gainers, Desh Garments led with a 9.96% rise, followed by Purabi Gen Insurance 9.95% and Samata Leather Complex, up 9.92%. Besides, Bangladesh Lamps, Bangas, Rupali Bank, Agni Systems, Monno Fabrics, Anwar Galvanising, and Mir Akhter Hossain Limited were placed at the top ten gainer list.
On the losing side, Shepherd Industries suffered the biggest drop at 7.59%, followed by Nahee Aluminum down 7.52%, and ICB Employees Provident MF 1: Scheme, which fell 7.89%.
In its daily market review, EBL Securities said that the capital bourse staged a strong recovery, buoyed by improved investor sentiment following the emerging signals of a potential ceasefire extension in the Middle East conflict, prompting continued accumulation of beaten-down scrips in anticipation of improved market momentum.
Market indices tracked a firm upward trajectory from the outset of the session with predominant buying interest, while investor participation strengthened steadily as the session progressed, driving broad-based price appreciation across most of the scrips, according to the commentary.
On the sectoral front, Engineering dominated turnover with a 17.3% share, followed by Textile at 13.9% and General Insurance at 13.5%.
Most sectors ended the session on a positive note. Financial Institutions rose 2.0%, Banks gained 1.7%, and Paper advanced 1.4%, leading the gainers.
On the other hand, a few sectors saw corrections. Tannery declined 0.7%, Ceramic fell 0.7%, and Services slipped 0.6%.
Meanwhile, the Chittagong Stock Exchange also closed in positive territory today. The Selective Categories' Index gained 37.0 points, while the All Share Price Index rose 60.4 points.
In the rolling, wind-swept grasslands of Chifeng in northern China's Inner Mongolia, towering white wind turbines line hilltops like sentinels over a hydrogen industry Beijing is trying to prise away from coal.
They are part of a $2 billion project - the biggest of its kind - that harnesses renewable energy to run banks of electrolysers that produce the molecules needed for fertiliser, marine fuel and low-emission steelmaking.
India shares China's "green hydrogen" ambitions, but its commitments are even more concrete and aggressive. Backed by subsidies worth some $2.1 billion, New Delhi is targeting 5 million metric tonnes of green hydrogen annually by 2030 - five times the current size of the global market and about double what analysts estimate Chinese output will be by then.
The massive bets by the world's two most populous nations come at the same time that the West has quietly backed away from its ambitious green hydrogen goals from the start of this decade after cost constraints proved stickier than anticipated.
What China and India have in common - despite very different motives - is the power and political will to force a market into existence, by underwriting projects, steering demand and pushing costs down through scale.
India has drawn private capital by pairing subsidies with offtake guarantees from refineries, fertiliser plants and steelmakers, making projects bankable from the outset.
The motivation is energy security. Hydrogen in India is overwhelmingly derived from imported natural gas, whose supply has suffered a sequence of shocks from the Middle East, Ukraine and the pandemic.
For China - able to deploy state-owned giants or attract private firms with large-scale, planning-led industrial projects - the aim is to preserve its dominance in hydrogen as the industry shifts towards cleaner energy.
In its five-year plan announced in March, Beijing listed green hydrogen alongside quantum computing, brain-computer interfaces and AI-enabled robotics as a frontier industry - an elevation in status that signals more capital will flow its way.
China: speed and scale
China invested $3.7 billion in green hydrogen production last year, more than double US levels, said Rystad Energy's head of hydrogen, Minh Khoi Le.
By 2031, China will have some 2.6 million tonnes per year online, representing $26 billion in investment, according to Rystad projections.
Much of 2025's outlay went into the Chifeng project, operated by Chinese wind turbine maker Envision Energy. It aims to sell green hydrogen and ammonia to markets in Asia, Europe, Latin America and the Middle East, and delivered its first green ammonia cargoes to South Korea's Lotte Fine Chemical in February.
"If we go back a year or two ago, China was not very visible on this situation of green hydrogen, and then two years later they have almost all the biggest projects in the world," said the International Energy Agency's hydrogen lead, Jose Bermudez.
China last year likely doubled its renewables-based hydrogen production capacity to 250,000 tonnes - more than half of the global total, and surpassing a 2022 target to produce 100,000 to 200,000 tonnes annually by 2025 - said Agora Energy China managing director Kevin Tu.
In Inner Mongolia and other places with high winds and strong sunlight, costs can fall to around $2 per kilogram for green hydrogen, close to parity with coal-based hydrogen, Tu said. On average, producing green hydrogen in China costs around $4 per kilogram, he said.
India: aggregating domestic demand
India has brought the price of producing green hydrogen as low as 279 rupees (around $3) per kilogram, from around $5 in 2023, when the government launched the National Green Hydrogen Mission under the clean energy ministry.
Abhay Bakre, who heads the mission, told Reuters that the cost should drop to near $2 by 2032 as technology improves, processes become more efficient and more components are made domestically.
Projects will begin delivering "large quantities" of green hydrogen as soon as next year, he said, and "scale up very fast" to hit the target of 5 million tonnes by 2030.
Under the initiative, industrial heavyweights including Larsen & Toubro, Bharat Petroleum Corp, GAIL and JSW Steel produce about 8,000 tonnes of green hydrogen and its derivatives annually.
New Delhi is kick-starting demand through state-run reverse auctions, where sellers try to undercut each other to win long-term contracts, effectively revealing the lowest price producers can bear.
The government said last month that suppliers and fertiliser companies had signed offtake agreements for 724,000 tonnes of green ammonia, which could cover one third of the country's hydrogen requirements.
Maintaining momentum will require "bold, sector-specific domestic initiatives, coupled with strategic international partnerships to unlock export potential", analysts at the Institute of Energy Economics and Financial Analysis wrote in a report.
"With one of the lowest costs of renewable power generation in the world, India is well placed to capture a significant portion of the export market."
US stock futures rose and the dollar wavered on Wednesday after President Donald Trump said he would indefinitely extend the Iran ceasefire, keeping sentiment buoyed, although with the Strait of Hormuz still closed, oil prices stayed near $100.
Trump's announcement appeared to be unilateral, and it was not immediately clear whether Iran, or US ally Israel, would agree to extend the ceasefire, which began two weeks ago.
Markets took the latest development in stride as investors weighed the extension with no signs of resumption in talks yet. Iran had rejected a second round of negotiations before Trump's announcement.
S&P futures EScv1 rose 0.4% while Nasdaq futures NQc1 gained 0.5%. European futures STXEc1 eased 0.3% pointing to a subdued open.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS fell 0.7% after hitting a seven-week top on Tuesday. Japan's Nikkei .N225, South Korea's KOSPI .KS11 and Taiwan stocks .TWII hit record highs on renewed AI wagers.
Thomas Mathews, head of markets for Asia-Pacific at Capital Economics, said the earlier ceasefire was widely seen as indefinite so it was not surprising the latest announcement had not moved markets much.
"Obviously, any news on the re-opening of the Strait is a good candidate for the next big market flashpoint," Mathews added.
Hormuz remains key
After a sharp selloff in March due to the war in the Middle East, markets across the globe have swiftly rebounded this month and are back at pre-war levels as the prospect of a peace deal and the ceasefire spurred a risk-on rally.
That has also left the US dollar, which benefited from safe haven demand in March, on the back foot, giving up most of its war-induced gains.
"It appears markets were right to assume peak war uncertainty is behind us," said Matt Simpson, a senior market analyst at StoneX. "Risk seems likely to remain buoyant and dips viewed favourably by equity bulls. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz is already priced in."
Trump said he would continue the US Navy's blockade of Iran's ports and shores. Tehran has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz through which one-fifth of the world's energy supply usually flows, causing a global energy shock.
Oil prices swung between gains and losses, with Brent crude futures LCOc1flat at $98.47 per barrel. US West Texas Intermediate crude CLc1 futures slipped 0.25% to $89.45 a barrel. O/R
While oil prices have come down from their March peaks they are still well above pre-war levels, worrying investors that elevated energy prices could quicken inflation and keep global rates higher for longer.
"We expect markets to remain volatile for now given the uncertainty with Hormuz and because the duration and scale of the crisis remain unclear," said Vasu Menon, managing director of investment strategy at OCBC.
Warsh senate appearance
Investors parsed comments from Federal Reserve chief nominee Kevin Warsh as he tried to assure US senators considering his confirmation to lead the central bank that he would act independently of the White House.
Warsh said he had made no promises to Trump about cutting rates and called for a new approach to controlling inflation and a communications overhaul that could discourage his colleagues from saying too much about the direction of monetary policy.
Separately, data on Tuesday showed US retail sales rose more than expected in March as the war with Iran boosted gasoline prices and led to a record surge in receipts at service stations, while tax refunds underpinned spending elsewhere.
Bangladesh is witnessing a steady rise in remittance inflow, offering renewed support to the country's foreign exchange reserves and overall economic stability, officials and analysts observed.
According to data from Bangladesh Bank, the country has maintained a significant upward trajectory in remittance earnings over the last two fiscal years, achieving historic milestones that have surpassed all previous benchmarks.
During the 2023-24 fiscal year, the nation recorded $23.9 billion in inflows. Growth accelerated sharply in FY 2024-25, reaching a record high of $30.3 billion, which represented a year-on-year increase of more than 25 per cent.
The momentum has continued into the current 2025-26 fiscal year, with the July-March period alone bringing in $26.21 billion, compared to $21.79 billion during the same period in the previous year.
Most recently, data from July through April 20 of FY 2025-26 shows that remittance inflows reached $28,426 million, significantly outpacing the $23,666 million collected during the same timeframe last year.
The central bank has attributed the growth to a combination of incentives, stricter monitoring of informal transfer systems, and the gradual recovery of global labour markets.
Economists noted that remittance earnings remain one of the key pillars of Bangladesh's economy, alongside exports. The inflow has helped ease pressure on the balance of payments and stabilise the exchange rate amid ongoing global economic uncertainties.
The government has been encouraging migrant workers to send money through official banking channels by offering a 2.5 per cent cash incentive for sending money through formal channels.
Officials from the Ministry of Expatriates' Welfare and Overseas Employment mentioned that awareness campaigns and digital financial services have also contributed to the increasing trend.
Bangladeshi workers in the Middle East, Europe, and Southeast Asia continue to be the main contributors to remittance inflows. Countries such as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Malaysia remain among the top sources.
Experts, however, emphasised the need for diversification of overseas job markets and skill development initiatives to sustain long-term growth in remittance earnings.
They also called for further reduction in transaction costs and expansion of mobile financial services to each rural household more effectively.
Renowned economist Dr Zahid Hussain stated that Bangladesh's macroeconomic stability has been restored, albeit modestly, and external indicators like the balance of payments and foreign exchange reserves remain in a comfortable position.
He credited the economy's current stability to the adoption of a flexible exchange rate system.
The economist said that the remittance surge played a crucial role in replenishing reserves, noting that issues faced during the dollar crisis, such as difficulty opening letters of credit (LC) for banks, have already become normal.
The economist, however, urged the government to urgently explore alternative overseas labour markets as the ongoing Middle East conflict threatens to disrupt migration and remittance inflows, a key pillar of the country's economy.
He said Bangladesh's heavy dependence on Gulf countries for overseas employment has created vulnerability, particularly at a time when geopolitical tensions are affecting labour demand, recruitment processes and worker mobility.
"Any prolonged conflict in the Middle East could significantly affect manpower export and remittance inflow. It is now crucial to diversify labour markets to minimise risks," he added.
Bangladesh Bank Executive Director and Spokesperson Arif Hussain Khan said remittance inflows to the country remain stable despite ongoing tensions in the Middle East, although the situation is being closely monitored due to Bangladesh's heavy reliance on migrant workers in the region.
"Remittance inflow has shown a positive trend in recent months, which is helping stabilise the foreign exchange market," he said.
"Remitters now feel encouraged to send their money through formal banking channels instead of the illegal 'Hundi' system, which can help boost the country's foreign exchange reserves," he added.
Foreign exchange reserves, according to Bangladesh Bank data released on 16 April, currently stand at $35.04 billion.
However, when calculated using the International Monetary Fund (IMF) methodology under the Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual (BPM6), the reserves total 30.37 billion.
Deputy Managing Director (DMD) of the Dutch-Bangla Bank Limited, Mohammed Shahid Ullah, confirmed that demands for 'Hundi' and 'Hawala'-illegal cross-border money transfer channels-have declined following a crackdown on operators after the political changeover, diverting more remittances through formal banking channels.
He added that the positive effects of the remittance boom are highly visible across Bangladesh, particularly in rural communities that rely heavily on money sent from relatives working abroad.
He noted that remittances have consistently increased since August 2024, providing the interim government with a respite following the rapid depletion of foreign exchange reserves.
Mohammed Shahid Ullah, however, noted that remittance enhances financial inclusion by encouraging recipients to engage with formal banking systems.
"It also supports domestic investment through increased savings and liquidity in the financial sector. In times of global economic stress, remittance has proven more stable compared to foreign direct investment or portfolio flows, thus acting as a buffer against external shock," he added.
Despite progress, he mentioned, there remains substantial scope for further improvement.
"Reducing transaction costs and ensuring near real-time fund transfers (T+0 settlement) would make formal channels more competitive. Expanding banking access in rural areas and strengthening partnerships with international money transfer operators can further streamline inflows," he added.
He described that remittance is not merely a financial inflow; it is the lifeblood of Bangladesh's socio-economic progress.
"It strengthens macroeconomic stability, uplifts millions of households, and fuels sustainable development. While the country has made commendable strides in increasing remittance through formal channels, sustained policy innovation, technological advancement, and global labour market integration will be key to unlocking its full potential in the years ahead," he added.