Apex Footwear PLC, the country's leading footwear manufacturer and exporter, reported a staggering turnover of Tk616 crore during the January-March quarter of the 2025-26 fiscal year, yet managed to retain only Tk1.06 crore as net profit.
This disparity reflects a razor-thin profit margin of just 0.17%, a figure that trails significantly behind industry peers such as Bata Shoe.
The company's latest unaudited financial statement reveals that despite a 14% growth in revenue compared to the same period last year, the bottom line was heavily weighed down by a combination of surging finance costs, higher tax burdens, and rising operational expenses.
During the third quarter, spanning January to March 2026, Apex Footwear's revenue climbed to Tk615.96 crore from Tk540 crore in the corresponding period of the previous year. While the net profit saw a modest 9% year-on-year increase, it reached only Tk1.06 crore, yielding an earnings per share of Tk0.54.
The financial data indicates that the cost of doing business has escalated sharply, with the cost of goods sold rising by 10% to Tk488 crore.
Furthermore, marketing, selling, and distribution expenses grew to Tk93.37 crore, while finance costs – primarily driven by rising interest rates on loans – jumped by 16% to reach Tk16.99 crore.
On a broader scale, the company's performance for the first nine months of the current fiscal year (July-March) showed a similar trend of high volume but constrained profitability. Cumulative revenue for the nine-month period reached Tk1,559 crore, up from Tk1,369 crore in the previous year.
Cumulative net profit for the period stood at Tk8.91 crore, compared with Tk6.99 crore in the same period of the previous financial year, indicating improved earnings but continued pressure on margins.
Despite the thin margins, the company maintained a strong financial position, with a net asset value per share of Tk351.89 and net operating cash flow per share of Tk122.92 as of March 2026.
The significant squeeze on profit margins has been attributed largely to the current taxation framework governing export proceeds.
A senior official of the company said the sharp decline in margins has been worsened by the nature of tax deduction at source (TDS).
He noted that in the export business, banks deduct tax at the source immediately upon the receipt of export proceeds. "Because these deductions are not strictly tied to the export revenue of a specific accounting period, the tax cost often appears disproportionately high relative to the quarterly profit."
Industry insiders further elaborated that footwear exporters are required to pay 1% of their total export value as TDS. Although this amount can be adjusted against final income tax at the end of the year, it is not refundable.
This creates a systemic hurdle for companies operating on low margins; if the final calculated tax on income is lower than the amount already deducted as TDS, the company cannot claim a refund, effectively turning the deduction into a final tax that erodes the actual profit.
Following the disclosure of these financial results, investor sentiment on the Dhaka Stock Exchange remained cautious. Shares of Apex Footwear closed 0.83% lower at Tk202.60 today.
Based on the latest quarterly data, the company's price-to-earnings ratio stands at 33.47, while its dividend yield is 1.23%.
Bangladesh witnessed a spike in energy inflation during the January-March quarter of the current fiscal year 2025-26 (FY26), driven by gas price hikes, according to a Bangladesh Bank (BB) report published yesterday.
Energy inflation rose to 14.9 percent in the third quarter of FY26 from 14.4 percent in the previous quarter, the central bank said in its report titled Inflation Dynamics in Bangladesh.
The report said solid fuels such as firewood, agricultural by-products, cow dung, and jute sticks have consistently been a major driver of energy inflation.
However, inflation of solid fuels declined to 21.5 percent in the January-March period from 23.1 percent in the previous quarter. Gas inflation surged to 11.3 percent in the third quarter, rebounding from a 6.2 percent inflation in the preceding quarter.
Solid fuels such as firewood, agricultural by-products, cow dung, and jute sticks have consistently been a major driver of energy inflation
During the January-March period of FY26, inflation averaged 8.81 percent, up from 8.3 percent in the preceding October-December quarter, mainly driven by increased food prices, especially vegetables and spices.
However, protein-based foods remained the top contributor, accounting for 44.6 percent of overall food inflation, the report said.
The average contribution of vegetables to food inflation rose to 22.7 percent in the January-March period of this year. The contribution of cereal items to food inflation saw a notable decline, dropping to 8.1 percent from 41.4 percent in the previous quarter.
In contrast, non-food inflation remained broadly stable at a high level of approximately 8.9 percent.
During the quarter, the BB report said that the contribution of domestic items to inflation increased to 71.7 percent, while the share of import-concentrated items fell to 28.3 percent.
Despite a spike in inflation, the wage-price gap slightly narrowed compared to the previous quarter. “This narrowing was primarily driven by a decline in headline inflation rather than any significant improvement in wage growth,” the report said.
“Despite some positive momentum effects, wage growth remained sluggish throughout the quarter, as the negative base effect persisted,” it added.
The government needs to urgently design a comprehensive framework to bring Bangladesh’s fast-growing digital economy under the tax net to boost the country’s tax-to-GDP ratio, the Bangladesh Economic Association (BEA) said.
It warned that a large and expanding segment of income remains outside the formal revenue system.
The association placed the recommendation before the National Board of Revenue (NBR) during a pre-budget discussion at its headquarters in Dhaka.
The economists’ body said sectors such as e-commerce, freelancing, digital advertising, and streaming services are growing rapidly but remain either fully or partially untaxed. This includes Facebook-based businesses, sellers on platforms like Daraz, freelancers on global marketplaces, and users paying for services such as Netflix and Spotify.
According to the BEA, the lack of a structured taxation regime is causing revenue losses and creating an uneven playing field between compliant businesses and largely untaxed digital operators.
It also flagged rising cross-border digital transactions, noting that firms like Google, Meta Platforms, and Amazon earn significantly from Bangladesh but contribute limited taxes.
The BEA proposed mandatory tax registration for foreign digital service providers and an automated withholding system through payment gateways to deduct tax or VAT at source.
It also recommended forming a specialised digital unit within the NBR to monitor cross-border transactions in real time, improve compliance, and reduce revenue leakages.
Prof Mahbub Ullah, convener of the BEA, and Mohammad Masud Alam, member of the committee, spoke at the event presided over by Md Abdur Rahman Khan, chairman of the NBR.
Oil prices rose nearly 3 percent on Tuesday, extending the previous session’s gains, as efforts to end the US-Iran war appeared to have stalled, with the crucial Strait of Hormuz waterway still mainly shut, starving markets of key Middle East energy supply.
Brent crude futures for June climbed $2.99, or 2.76 percent, to $111.22 a barrel by 0758 GMT, after gaining 2.8 percent to close the previous session at its highest since April 7. The contract is up for a seventh straight day.
At their intra-day peak on Tuesday, Brent was up 3.4 percent on the day at $111.86 a barrel.
US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude for June rose $2.54, or 2.64 percent, to $98.91 a barrel, after gaining 2.1 percent in the previous session.
US President Donald Trump is unhappy with the latest Iranian proposal to end the war, a US official said on Monday, as Iranian sources disclosed that it avoided addressing the nuclear program until hostilities cease and Gulf shipping disputes are resolved.
Trump’s displeasure with the offer leaves the conflict deadlocked, with Iran shutting shipping flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a conduit for about 20 percent of global oil and gas supplies, and the US retaining its blockade of Iranian ports.
“Oil above $110 per barrel reflects a market that is rapidly repricing geopolitical risk,” said Rystad Energy analyst Jorge Leon.
“With peace talks stalled and no clear path to reopening the Strait of Hormuz, traders are factoring in a prolonged disruption to a critical artery of global supply,” he added.
“Even in a best-case scenario, any US–Iran agreement is likely to be narrow and partial, leaving the Strait issue unresolved, which means the upside risks to prices remain.”
An earlier round of negotiations between the United States and Iran collapsed last week after face-to-face talks failed.
Ship-tracking data showed significant disruptions in the region, with six Iranian oil tankers forced to turn back due to the US blockade.
But a liquefied natural gas tanker managed by the United Arab Emirates’ Abu Dhabi National Oil Co crossed the Strait of Hormuz and appears to be near India, the on Monday.
Prior to the US-Israeli war on Iran, which began on February 28, between 125 and 140 vessels transited the strait daily.
The loss of about 10 million bpd of crude and products through Hormuz will continue to exceed falling consumption as inflationary pressures and demand destruction loom, PVM analyst Tamas Varga said, leading to an ever-tighter oil market balance.
Bangladesh Bank has eased rules for banks to award incentive bonuses to staff, provided that a few criteria are met.
According to a central bank circular issued yesterday, a bank’s boards of directors may approve up to one month’s basic salary as a bonus in recognition of “special achievements” during the year, even if the usual eligibility criteria are not met.
However, this discretionary payment will only be permitted if the institution records an operating profit. In addition, the bank must ensure that regulatory capital is maintained at least at the previous year’s level (excluding adjustments for deferred provisions approved by Bangladesh Bank) and that no fresh applications are made for deferred provisioning facilities.
Banks may approve up to one month’s basic salary as a bonus in recognition of “special achievements” during the year, even if the usual eligibility criteria are not met
Officials said the move aims to boost morale among officers and employees while preserving competitiveness in the banking sector. Meanwhile, Bangladesh Bank stressed that compliance with the outlined conditions is essential to ensure financial discipline and safeguard stability.
Cement manufacturers in the country are under growing pressure as the US-Israel war on Iran disrupts Middle Eastern supply routes, forcing them to import key raw materials -- especially clinker -- from Asian countries at higher prices.
The conflict has also increased freight costs, further raising overall import expenses. At the same time, weak domestic demand is preventing producers from passing on higher costs to consumers, leaving manufacturers squeezed between rising input costs and a fragile market.
The situation also highlights the sector’s heavy dependence on imported raw materials. Key inputs such as clinker, limestone, granulated slag, fly ash and gypsum are largely imported. Nearly 90 percent of clinker is brought from abroad.
“Bangladesh’s cement sector is under new cost pressure as clinker imports shift away from the Middle East,” said Mohammad Iqbal Chowdhury, chief executive officer of LafargeHolcim Bangladesh PLC.
“Earlier, imports were largely sourced from Gulf countries at competitive prices, but that advantage has now disappeared. The country is now increasingly relying on China, Vietnam and Thailand, where clinker is being imported at higher prices,” he added.
Chowdhury said the shift is linked to a widening geopolitical crisis following joint US–Israel strikes on Iran and Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a key global trade route.
“This has cut shipping traffic, pushed up freight and insurance costs, increased logistics risks and war-risk premiums, and forced rerouting of shipments,” he said.
“The impact on Bangladesh’s cement industry has been immediate, as it depends heavily on imported clinker and stone aggregates.”
He added that clinker import costs have risen from about $42 to $43 per tonne to nearly $53 due to tighter supply and higher freight charges.
“With demand already weak, companies are struggling to pass on these costs, putting pressure on profit margins and forcing them to cut spending,” he said.
Md Abul Mansur, general manager of Royal Cement Ltd, echoed these concerns. “Sourcing raw materials has become increasingly difficult due to global disruptions. Clinker is no longer coming from the Middle East, while gypsum and limestone from Oman now face sharply higher freight costs,” he said.
He added, “Clinker prices have risen from around $43 per tonne to about $57 to $58 per tonne, while slag prices have increased from $16 to around $23 to $24 per tonne, driven by war-related disruptions in global shipping.”
Mansur linked the surge in freight costs to higher oil prices, increased insurance premiums and greater risks on maritime routes, saying shipping costs have effectively doubled.
He said the impact is already visible in the domestic market. Cement prices have increased by Tk 30 to Tk 50 per bag, even though actual costs have gone up by Tk 70 to Tk 80. Weak demand has prevented companies from passing on the full increase.
“Costs are rising, but the market is unable to absorb the full impact,” he added.
He also noted that construction activity has slowed as developers delay projects in hopes of greater stability, further affecting the industry.
The country’s broader construction sector is also under strain due to weak public spending, subdued private investment, policy uncertainty and rising costs. These factors have already dampened project approvals, demand and growth across real estate and related industries, including cement.
Mohammed Amirul Haque, president of the Bangladesh Cement Manufacturers Association and managing director of Premier Cement Mills PLC, said the sector has faced multiple shocks over the past five years, making business difficult.
He added that many companies are still operating despite losses in the hope of recovery, but warned that this situation is not sustainable.
He stressed the need for a profit margin and cautioned that sharp price increases could harm the market.
“A quick recovery is unlikely,” he added.
Ryanair, Transavia, Volotea and other low-cost airlines are feeling the financial pain from high jet fuel prices as a result of the Middle East war and are cutting flights.
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has taken a huge chunk of oil supplies off the market, sending the price of jet fuel soaring and triggering fears of shortages that could force airlines to cancel flights.
Airlines aren’t waiting for a lack of supplies to react.
“Travel alert: airlines are cutting thousands of flights right now,” Travel Therapy TV host Karen Schaler said in an Instagram reel this past weekend. “Book early.”
That advice would win the approval of Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary, who expressed concern earlier this month that fears of fuel shortages were making people put off booking flights.
Low-cost carriers -- which control a little more than a third of the global market, according to various estimates -- are feeling the pinch first due to the nature of their business model.
With cheaper tickets, they have less capacity to absorb the rise in fuel costs.
Some of the cancellations may be the normal adjustments airlines tend to make when demand doesn’t meet expectations on certain routes.
“It is not unusual for carriers to adjust their schedules at this time of the year,” financial analyst Dudley Shanley at investment bank Goodbody told AFP.
But “if jet fuel prices remain at this level, there will have to be a little bit more trimming for low-cost airlines”, he added.
If before the war airlines were able to maintain marginally profitable routes or even unprofitable routes, the surge in jet fuel prices will force them to make difficult choices.
That will start with many during the peak summer travel season.
“Unfortunately, it’s very likely that many people’s holidays will be affected, either by flight cancellations or very, very expensive tickets,” the EU’s energy commissioner Dan Jorgensen told Sky News last week.
The speed with which airlines are reacting depends in part upon the extent to which they secured fuel supplies in advance at fixed prices.
European airlines tend to do this to a greater extent than their rivals in other parts of the world. Air Transat, a low-cost Canadian airline, has cut six percent of its May-October flight schedule.
Southeast Asia’s largest low-cost carrier, AirAsia X, announced on Friday it was cutting more flights and even some connections, without providing an overall figure.
Earlier this month the Malaysia-based no-frills airline said it was raising fares by up to 40 percent and about 10 percent of its overall flights had been cut so far.
Hungary’s low-cost airline Wizz Air has so far resisted cutting flights.
“We are not taking capacity out, because I think the other guys will take capacity out,” its chief executive Jozsef Varadi was quoted as saying recently by trade magazine Aviation Week.
“You don’t have to run faster than the bear, but faster than the guy next to you,” he added.
He may have been thinking of the most spectacular cuts made in the industry by German group Lufthansa, which had just announced it was chopping 20,000 flights from its schedule through October, along with halting its regional feeder airline CityLine.
Its European rival Air France-KLM has trimmed two percent of flights in May and June at its low-cost Transavia subsidiary.
KLM has kept cancellations down to one percent of its European flights.
Ryanair didn’t cite fuel prices but high costs and taxes when announcing last week it would reduce flights to and from Berlin starting in October.
It is also cutting 10 percent of flights from Dublin, criticising limited capacity at the airport.
Since the beginning of the month, Spain’s Volotea has trimmed nearly one percent of flights from its summer schedule.
A prognosis comes from the regulator that the prevailing high inflation may intensify further following fuel-price rises, which indicates pricey commodities could be pricier.
"….near-term inflationary pressures are expected to intensify due to higher global oil prices, domestic fuel-price adjustments, and ongoing energy-supply constraints," the Bangladesh Bank (BB) says in its latest report on Inflation Dynamics in Bangladesh January-March 2026. Bangladeshmarket analysis
The central bank's latest observation comes just nine days after the government raised domestic fuel prices in response to continued increases in global petroleum- product prices, underscoring mounting external cost pressures on the economy.
Officials and economists, however, says these cost-push factors are likely to transmit through higher transportation and production costs, potentially broadening price pressures across the supply chain and complicating efforts to anchor inflation expectations.
Bangladesh's headline consumer price index (CPI) inflation (y-o-y) continued to rise, averaging approximately at 8.8 per cent in the third quarter (Q3) of the current fiscal year (FY) 2025-26, up from 8.3 per cent observed in the previous quarter, according to the quarterly report released Tuesday.
"Fuel-price adjustments may trigger a one-off spike in inflation, which would then ease gradually over time," Md. Ezazul Islam, Director-General of Bangladesh Institute of Bank Management (BIBM), says while explaining to The Financial Express (FE) the potential economic impact of the latest fuel-price hike.
"Fuel-price adjustments have a multiplier effect on the economy, as fuel is a key input across all sectors," explains Dr. Islam, also a former executive director of the central bank. Economicanalysis reports
Talking to the FE, a BB senior official has said transport costs have already risen following the latest fuel-price adjustments, which may further add fuel to inflationary pressures on the economy. Energy inflation rose to 14.9 per cent in the third quarter of FY'26 from 14.4 per cent in the previous quarter.
On the other hand, food inflation edged up during the period under review, primarily driven by an increased contribution from vegetables and spices. However, protein-based foods remained the top contributor.
The central bank in its report says the increased contribution of protein-based food items, along with 'clothing and footwear', can be partly attributed to seasonal demand associated with Eid-ul-Fitr, which typically leads to higher consumer spending on food and apparel.
The average contributions of import-concentrated food items and domestic food items to headline inflation increased in the Q3 of FY'26 from the previous quarter.
On the other hand, the contribution of import-concentrated non-food items to inflation declined, according to the report.
Meanwhile, the wage-price gap narrowed slightly by the end of Q3 of FY'26 compared to the previous quarter, driven by a fall in headline inflation (y-o-y) to 8.7 per cent in March 2026, while wage growth remained stable at 8.1 per cent. This led to a modest deterioration in household purchasing power, reflecting sluggish real wage growth.
"Given these developments, sustained policy vigilance is essential to anchor inflation expectations, contain elevated food and core prices, and safeguard household purchasing power, thereby supporting a stable macroeconomic environment conducive to long-term, inclusive growth," the central bank notes in its report.
Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury yesterday placed two amendment bills in the parliament proposing the removal of age limits for appointing the heads and members of two of the country’s key financial regulators.
The Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (Amendment) Bill, 2026 seeks to abolish the existing maximum age limit of 65 years for appointing the chairman and commissioners of the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC).
Also placed the same day, the Insurance Development and Regulatory Authority (Amendment) Bill, 2026 proposes scrapping the current age cap of 67 years for appointing the chairman and members of the Insurance Development and Regulatory Authority (Idra).
Placing the bills before the House, the finance minister recommended that they be sent to a special parliamentary committee for scrutiny, with a report to be submitted within one day.
In the statement of objectives and reasons, the minister said the proposed amendment to the securities commission law aims to make it more suitable for present circumstances by allowing the appointment of experienced, skilled and knowledgeable individuals to top positions.
Regarding the amendment to the Insurance Development and Regulatory Authority Act, 2010, he noted that the existing provision, which sets the maximum appointment age at 67 years, has limited the opportunity to recruit capable and experienced individuals to leadership roles in the insurance sector.
He argued that removing this restriction is necessary in the public interest to strengthen decision-making in the sector.
Earlier, on April 23, the cabinet approved the draft amendments to both laws.
Private investors aiming to launch Bangladesh's first privately funded submarine cable face mounting delays from inter-ministerial red tape, despite sinking $53 million (equivalent to Tk650 crore) into preparatory work.
The Bangladesh Private Cable System consortium – Summit Communications, CdNet Communications, and Metacore Subcom Ltd – awaits critical no-objection clearances from the foreign affairs and home affairs ministries, and the National Security Intelligence.
This bottleneck halts cable-laying vessels from entering Bangladesh's territorial waters.
The project links to the UMO Cable System's 2,227-km main route from Singapore to Myanmar, plus a 1,300-km branch to Cox's Bazar.
Without April approvals, investors risk missing the 31 August 2026 rollout deadline, pushing implementation back a full year due to the Bay of Bengal's narrow November-to-mid-May laying window.
In a letter sent on 31 March to the foreign affairs ministry, the consortium sought no-objection clearance for Panama- and Indonesia-flagged vessels to enter Bangladesh's territorial waters to lay the cable.
However, officials say procedural gaps between ministries have stalled progress.
A foreign ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told The Business Standard that the consortium had been asked to obtain authorisation from the posts, telecommunications and information technology ministry, adding that no such communication had yet been received.
"According to protocol, one ministry cannot act on a letter issued by an agency under another ministry," the official said.
Posts, Telecommunications and Information Technology Secretary Bilquis Jahan Rimi said the ministry has not received any letter on this matter. "A decision will be announced once the letter is received."
However, official documents show that the consortium had written to the ministry in September last year seeking inter-ministerial support.
Project status
The consortium has already reached all critical technical milestones.
These include a comprehensive feasibility study, a detailed subsea route survey, the demarcation of the route from Myanmar's Exclusive Economic Zone to Cox's Bazar, and the activation of the Singapore-Myanmar segment.
The project is currently in the "shovel-ready" phase, with construction of the landing station and beach manhole progressing at full pace.
Furthermore, specialised cable-laying vessels and a team of international experts have been contracted and are awaiting final approval to proceed.
Looming deadlines
The project faces a critical "roll-out obligation" to be completed by 31 August 2026. However, technical experts note that seabed installations in the Bay of Bengal are only feasible between November and mid-May.
If the April window is missed due to the upcoming monsoon and lack of approvals, the project is feared to be delayed by at least another year, leading to massive financial demurrages.
"We have already invested nearly 50% of the total project cost," said Md Arif Al Islam, managing director of Summit Communications.
"We are stuck in a complex situation. If the government did not want private submarine cables, why were we encouraged to spend millions on infrastructure and licences?"
The consortium has already spent $53 million on licensing, VAT and other expenses. Of the amount, it has paid $43.76 million to the cable owner, Compana Pvt Ltd, for the UMO trunk cable, which includes $36 million in IRU fees and $7.96 million in maintenance charges.
Market monopoly vs competition
Currently, the state-owned Bangladesh Submarine Cables PLC controls the majority of the market through two cables, SE-ME-WE-4 and SE-ME-WE-5, with a combined capacity of 7,220 Gbps. A third state-owned cable, SE-ME-WE-6, is expected to launch next year with a massive capacity of over 40,000 Gbps at a cost of Tk1,000 crore.
Bangladesh Submarine Cables has expressed concerns that private entry will create "extreme instability" and reduce the revenue of the state-owned listed company. In a recent internal report, the company suggested that the government should set a minimum threshold to ensure state-owned cable usage does not fall below 50%.
An official from Bangladesh Submarine Cables noted that as a listed company, the government must consider the interests of its shareholders when making strategic decisions.
Entrepreneurs in the IT sector have pointed out that the provision of internet services via submarine cables is currently a monopoly held by the state-owned company. In this context, the approval of private submarine cables was a significant milestone towards increasing private sector participation, they say.
Industry stakeholders maintain a consensus that increasing private sector participation will foster a more competitive market, ultimately driving down internet costs for the public.
They argue that making connectivity more affordable will enable the inclusion of a larger segment of the population, thereby significantly boosting the country's per-capita internet consumption.
Internet penetration scenario
According to a report by the Asian Development Bank published in December last year, Bangladesh's current internet penetration stands at 53%, remaining behind regional countries like Bhutan at 88% and 85% in the Maldives; both countries show high access.
The report said Bangladesh's digital infrastructure is expanding but faces connectivity, capacity, and rural access gaps. International connectivity relies on two undersea cables, both following similar routes, creating risks, it pointed out.
The government has approved five proposals for $1.9 billion in loans from development partners of which $1.6 billion is non-concessional.
Of the amount, $1.3 billion will be set aside as budget support to help tackle urgent financial pressures, according to finance ministry officials.
The approval for loans under relatively tough terms were granted yesterday (28 April) at a meeting of the Standing Committee on Non-concessional Loan chaired by Finance and Planning Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury at the Planning Ministry in Sher-e-Bangla Nagar.
Sources present at the meeting said the budget support package includes $450 million from the Asian Development Bank (ADB), $500 million from Japan International Cooperation Agency (Jica), $250 million from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), and $100 million from the OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID).
Officials said these loans come with higher interest rates, shorter grace periods and faster repayment schedules than concessional financing.
Under the programme titled Strengthening Economic Management and Governance, Subprogram 2, ADB will provide a total of $750 million, consisting of $300 million in concessional financing and $450 million through its regular Ordinary Capital Resources (OCR) window.
The concessional portion carries a 2% interest rate, a repayment period of 25 years, and a five-year grace period.
The $450 million OCR loan is classified as non-concessional and carries an interest rate of SOFR plus 0.50%, which based on the 20 April 2026 SOFR rate of 3.63%, brings the effective rate to 4.13%.
It also includes a 0.15% commitment charge on undrawn balances.
This ADB OCR loan has a 15-year tenure, including a three-year grace period. According to ERD analysis, the loan's grant element is 6.61%, making it highly non-concessional.
Negotiations with ADB were completed on 15 April 2026, and the package is now awaiting board approval.
The government is also seeking $500 million from JICA to help manage immediate fiscal challenges. The proposed loan carries an indicative interest rate of 3.05%, a 30-year repayment period, and a 10-year grace period.
Officials said the Japanese financing would be used in line with IMF recommendations, including expanding social protection spending, strengthening revenue administration, and improving macroeconomic stability.
AIIB is set to provide $250 million as co-financing alongside ADB. The proposed loan carries an interest rate of SOFR plus 1.45%, which based on the same benchmark rate would bring the effective cost to around 5.08%.
It has a 35-year maturity, a five-year grace period, and a 0.25% front-end fee. ERD analysis found the grant element to be negative 0.68%, meaning it is considered extremely hard borrowing.
The government is also pursuing $100 million equivalent from OPEC Fund for International Development, denominated at approximately €85.3 million. Indicative terms include an interest rate of six-month EURIBOR plus 1.20%, giving an effective rate of about 3.616%.
The loan has an 18-year maturity, a three-year grace period, and a 0.25% commitment fee. Its grant element is estimated at 11.38%, also placing it in the non-concessional category.
Beyond budget support, the committee also approved a separate $300 million ADB loan for the SASEC Dhaka-Sylhet Corridor Road Investment (Tranche-2) project.
The project will upgrade around 210 kilometres of highway from Dhaka (Kanchpur) to Sylhet into a four-lane corridor, with separate service lanes for slow-moving vehicles.
The goal is to better connect the Dhaka-Sylhet route with regional transport networks including the Asian Highway, SASEC (South Asia Subregional Economic Cooperation) and BIMSTEC corridors.
The total project cost is estimated at Tk16918.58 crore, of which the government will provide Tk3,674 crore, while ADB will finance Tk13,244.68 crore.
The road loan will come from ADB's OCR window at an effective rate of around 4.23%, with a 25-year repayment period and a five-year grace period.
Officials said the Standing Committee on Non-concessional Loan also adopted several policy measures to improve management of costly foreign borrowing.
Non-concessional loans will be approved only where concessional financing is unavailable or impractical. Borrowers receiving government or central bank guarantees must demonstrate repayment capacity from their own income.
Loans with excessive conditions or mandatory down payments will be discouraged.
The committee also decided that annual debt servicing on non-concessional external loans must remain below the lower of 10% of export earnings or 15% of government revenue, while total non-concessional external debt stock must remain below 10% of GDP.
ERD officials said these measures are expected to improve transparency, reduce risks and strengthen long-term sustainability in Bangladesh's external debt management.
Bangladesh’s exports are order-based and free of overcapacity, Commerce Minister Khandakar Abdul Muktadir said yesterday amid an ongoing US investigation into forced labour and surplus production across 60 countries, including Bangladesh.
Speaking at a luncheon meeting on US-Bangladesh partnership hosted by the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) at the Sheraton in Dhaka, he also said Bangladesh has made substantial progress regarding labour rights.
The minister said Bangladesh’s exports are driven by demand. Particularly, the garment industry produces strictly against international orders. “This is indicative of global demand, rather than excess capacity.”
He pointed out that many factories are currently running below capacity due to energy and infrastructure constraints.
On forced labour, the minister mentioned that Bangladesh has enacted reforms in workplace safety and labour rights in partnership with the International Labour Organization (ILO) and other partners, establishing one of the most rigorously regulated and secure garment sectors in the world.
Stating that Bangladesh is committed to maintaining international labour standards, he said the government believes that the most constructive course of action to that end is continuing engagement and collaboration.
On partnership with the US, the minister said the government is confident that the bilateral relationship will continue to grow through trade, increased investment, technology collaboration, and continued dialogue.
He said the government is diversifying its export base by incorporating sectors such as pharmaceuticals, leather, agro-products, and light engineering, in addition to a booming ICT sector.
The minister stated that improving market access is imperative as the country is set to graduate from the least developed country status. “We look forward to continued US assistance to guarantee a seamless transition and maintain our global competitiveness.”
He noted that although Bangladesh has established robust manufacturing capabilities and exports pharmaceuticals to more than 150 countries, the entry into the US market is still restricted by the intricate, expensive, and time-consuming regulatory processes.
“We are of the opinion that there is potential to improve the coordination between pertinent authorities, expedite the approval process, and simplify procedures,” he said.
Also speaking at the event, AmCham President Syed Ershad Ahmed said in today’s shifting global economic environment, the Bangladesh–US partnership remains vital for both growth and resilience.
The partnership plays a strategic role in sustaining export competitiveness, ensuring essential imports, and strengthening broader economic and industrial development, he added.
Bangladesh exported roughly $9.5 billion in goods to the US in 2025, with the garment sector alone accounting for $8.2 billion, capturing over 10 percent of the US apparel market, he said.
During the same period, the country imported about $2.3 billion from the US, primarily cotton and agricultural products.
Muktadir, meanwhile, stated that US foreign direct investment in Bangladesh rose from $193 million in fiscal year 2019-20 (FY20) to $426 million in FY22, before falling sharply to $89 million in FY24 and partially recovering to $132 million in FY25.
On a separate matter, he informed that the government may recruit foreign companies for loading and unloading at the Chattogram port to increase efficiency.
The minister also said for easing the business, the government will launch provisional permission for launching a business. Currently, it takes many months and more than 25 signatures to obtain the permission for the business entrepreneurs to start a business in Bangladesh.
Once an entrepreneur starts with the provisional permission, he can manage the original permission gradually in one to two months, he added.
When launched in 2011, bKash, the country's largest mobile financial service provider (MFS), offered only a few basic services, but today it provides more than 200 services.
bKash has invested heavily in building a strong technology infrastructure and driving product innovation over the years, introducing features tailored to customer needs.
As a result, the platform has evolved from a simple transaction service into a comprehensive personal finance platform, reshaping customer behaviour.
The company's long-term strategic investments over the past decade in building a digital ecosystem are now paying off, making it one of the highest profit earners in the industry.
bKash, a subsidiary of BRAC Bank, reported its highest-ever profit of Tk676.33 crore in 2025, more than double the Tk315.77 crore recorded in 2024, according to the bank's latest annual financial disclosure statement.
Back in 2021, the company incurred a strategic loss of Tk117.29 crore.
The surge in profit in 2025 was driven by new services and technological advancements, which expanded access across business sectors. The company's market share doubled to over 60% in 2021, while registered customers rose by 150% to 8.2 crore by the end of 2025.
From the beginning, the company's investors have followed a "patient capital" approach. Instead of taking dividends, they have continuously reinvested profits back into the business. This strategy has enabled bKash to build a strong technological foundation and scale its services effectively.
The company incurred strategic losses for three consecutive years from 2019 to 2021, as it focused on growing the industry and advancing financial inclusion rather than pursuing immediate profit.
Even during this loss-making period, foreign investors continued to join the company, drawn by its long-term vision and sustained investment in technology, which was expected to yield returns in the coming years.
For instance, SoftBank came on board as an equity partner in 2021, when the company was still incurring losses.
Since its inception, bKash has secured about $381 million in foreign direct investment, equivalent to over Tk4,500 crore.
bKash's journey demonstrates how a long-term vision, continuous investment in technology, and a focus on changing customer behaviour can reshape an entire industry.
How bKash became personal financial manager in daily life
Earlier, people used MFS mainly for mobile recharge and sending money, which were the core services. However, bKash continued investing in product innovation to make money movement easier for users.
The company built a vast distribution network to enable money transfers across locations. In rural areas, where digital money often needed to be converted into cash, it developed a wide agent network.
Initially, its services were limited to four: send money, cash out, cash in, and mobile recharge.
As users became familiar with the platform, services expanded significantly. Today, the bKash app offers more than 200 services.
For example, mobile recharge now includes several added features. Customers can use auto-pay, removing the need for manual recharges each time.
There are many such incremental services. For instance, if a customer regularly sends money to a relative at the beginning of each month, the transaction can now be automated, eliminating the need to remember it manually.
If you look at our journey, it began with financial inclusion. We then focused on empowering daily transactions, followed by strengthening the ecosystem.
Shamsuddin Haider Dalim, head of Corporate Communications, bKash
Similarly, for electricity bills, customers receive due-date reminders. They can also view graphical insights, such as how much they have spent on utilities over the past six months or a year.
These features help users manage their finances more effectively, particularly those on limited incomes. bKash is increasingly acting as a facilitator of everyday financial management, giving users greater control.
At the same time, bKash is building a digital financial ecosystem by integrating with businesses and financial institutions. It is currently connected with about 45 banks and has partnerships with Visa, Mastercard, American Express, and others.
The platform has also simplified remittance channels. Expatriates can now send money directly to a bKash number, while money transfer organisations and local banks handle processing and settlement in the background.
bKash is connected with around 140 money transfer organisations across 170 countries.
Initially, receiving remittances was a basic service. Now, customers have additional features, such as the ability to download remittance statements for tax purposes.
'Seems small, but serious investment behind it'
Shamsuddin Haider Dalim, head of Corporate Communications, said some features may seem small, but they require serious investment and dedicated teams working continuously.
"For example, when sharing a payment screenshot, users previously had to hide their balance manually," he told The Business Standard. "Now the app automatically conceals it. This small change has significantly improved the user experience."
There are many such features, he said, including saving card details, adding or removing cards, and storing bill information so users no longer need to search for paper bills.
"We continuously work to improve every moment of the user experience. That is why each app update introduces new features," he said.
Dalim said bKash's broader goal is to expand the payment network. "If we want a cashless society, payments must be possible everywhere. We have already onboarded around 10 lakh merchants. Customers can now pay at these outlets using QR codes."
He added that the next step is to reach roadside vendors, noting that a truly cashless society will emerge only when daily payment habits evolve.
"If you look at our journey, it began with financial inclusion. We then focused on empowering daily transactions, followed by strengthening the ecosystem," he said.
He added, "Today, customers can pay tuition fees at around 1,800 educational institutions and for more than 2,400 utility services. Around 10 lakh garment workers now receive salaries through bKash."
The platform has also introduced savings and loan services through partnerships with banks and financial institutions, allowing many previously unbanked users to access formal financial products, he said.
"For example, users can start saving from as little as Tk250 per month up to Tk20,000. After we introduced this, many banks began offering similar products," said Dalim.
He mentioned that bKash is now connected with about 45 banks, and savings services are available through several banks and non-bank financial institutions.
He added that banks are increasingly using transaction data to offer loans more easily, allowing customers to access credit without collateral based on their financial behaviour.
"One example is IDLC, which had around 50,000 clients before partnering with bKash. That number has since grown to 14 lakh," he said.
bKash's role is to innovate, introduce new products, and promote digital literacy. We continuously invest in technology and infrastructure," he mentioned.
"This includes regular upgrades to servers, cloud systems, and security. Technology evolves quickly, so constant investment is essential. Our investors understand this, which is why they reinvest rather than take dividends," added Dalim.
He said the company's current profitability reflects years of sustained investment in technology, infrastructure, product innovation, and digital literacy.
"We also focus on awareness, teaching users how to conduct digital transactions safely and avoid fraud. As a result, not only bKash but the entire industry benefits."
Dalim further noted that the company has introduced major app upgrades, including the 'My bKash' feature, which personalises the interface based on user behaviour.
"Each user's app looks different, showing frequent contacts, preferred agents, savings, loans, and more. This requires advanced technology, including AI and secure data storage," he said. "All these efforts over the past 15 years have contributed to our current position and profitability."
The country is one step closer to nuclear power generation as fuel loading begins today (28 April) at Unit 1 of the Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant (RNPP), the country's largest electricity project.
Bangladesh is a newcomer to the nuclear power industry, with the first unit of its maiden nuclear power plant entering the phase before trial run today, more than eight years after its construction began with financial and technical assistance from Russia.
The first concrete pouring for Unit-1 of RNPP, in Pabna on the banks of the Padma River, was done on 30 November 2017 and for Unit-2 on 14 July 2018. When completed, Rooppur NPP's two units will contribute a total of 2400MW to the national electricity grid, sharing roughly 12% of the country's total electricity generation.
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Fuel loading is not a trial run, but it is a critical milestone for a nuclear plant for transitioning from construction to operational phase. This marks putting uranium into the reactor, initiating a safety check procedure that may take weeks before trial run.
Marking the occasion, a ceremony will begin at 2:30pm today at the plant site, 160km northwest of Dhaka. Science and Technology Minister Fakir Mahbub Anam, Secretary Md Anwar Hossain will speak at the event.
Officials said electricity from Rooppur's unit 1 will enter the grid for the first time about three to three and a half months after fuel loading begins. This means power from Rooppur is expected to be added to the grid in late July or early August.
Following that, electricity generation will gradually increase by around 10-15% each month. By the end of December, the full 1,200 MW capacity of Unit-1 is expected to be supplied to the national grid.
Fuel loading for Unit-2, also 1200MW capacity, is scheduled to begin towards the end of the current year. Initially, the plant has an estimated economic life of 60 years, which can later be extended by an additional 20 to 30 years.
In August last year, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) sent a pre-operational safety review mission to inspect safety standards and operating practices at Unit 1 of the Rooppur plant.
How costly Rooppur electricity will be
Md Anwar Hossain, secretary of the Ministry of Science and Technology, told TBS that nuclear plants involve high upfront construction costs but relatively low long-term generation costs, as fuel prices are stable and less volatile than other energy sources.
He said the Rooppur plant has an expected lifespan of 60-80 years, which helps reduce average electricity costs over time. Power is expected to be supplied at rates comparable to other low-cost sources.
"No specific tariff has been finalised yet. Pricing will be determined through consultations with relevant agencies and stakeholders, the power purchase agreement, and detailed financial analysis," he added.
However, a senior project official said Rooppur electricity may be slightly more expensive than gas-based power but cheaper than coal and furnace oil-based generation. "Considering total installation and production costs, the per-unit tariff could range between Tk4 and Tk8," he said.
Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission officials said a tariff proposal has already been submitted to the Power Division. A final meeting will be held before fuel loading and grid connection to finalise the tariff.
M Shamsul Alam, energy adviser at the Consumers Association of Bangladesh (CAB), said consumers would benefit if tariffs are set based on actual production costs.
In India, nuclear tariffs range between $0.03 and $0.05 (Tk3.94-6.52) per kWh for older plants, while newer projects cost around $0.074 (Tk9.11) per kWh, according to the World Nuclear Association. India, which operates seven nuclear plants, has opened the sector to private investment to expand capacity to 100GW by 2047, from 8.7GW at present.
In Pakistan, which runs six nuclear plants, average generation costs are around $0.06 (Tk7.02) per kWh. China's benchmark tariff for new nuclear projects stands at $0.06-0.07 (Tk7.38-8.62) per kWh.
65-year dream coming true
The Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant's site was selected in 1962 during the Pakistan era. After independence, successive five-year plans prioritised the power sector, with international cooperation sought for nuclear development.
The issue got momentum after 2009, when nuclear power was integrated into the country's development strategy. In 2011, Bangladesh signed an agreement with Russia, paving the way for implementation.
In 2015, the Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission signed a contract with Russia's JSC Atomstroyexport to build two VVER-1200 reactors with a combined capacity of 2,400 MW. Bangladesh and Russia signed a general construction contract worth $12.65 billion in December 2015 for the two-unit project.
Officials said the cost of Rooppur is aligned with international benchmarks for VVER-1200-based nuclear plants.
Hungary spent about $13.2 billion for two units, Egypt around $30 billion for four, Turkey roughly $20 billion for four, and Belarus about $11 billion for two. Vietnam's Ninh Thuan project is expected to require at least $22 billion, according to its Ministry of Industry and Trade (March 2026).
India presents a different structure, with two units costing about $6.7 billion, which largely reflects reactor and equipment costs. Infrastructure, training, safety systems and other components were accounted for separately. As a result, experts said direct comparisons may be misleading and do not fully reflect total project scope.
Green energy, technology transfer
Secretary Md Anwar Hossain said the plant will bring significant changes to energy security, the economy and technological capability.
"This is an environmentally friendly source of energy. Carbon emissions from nuclear power are very low, so it will play an important role in addressing climate change," he said.
He added that the project is enabling technology transfer and helping develop a high-tech sector, with local engineers, scientists and technicians receiving training and building expertise.
So far, around 25,000 people have been directly involved in the project, contributing to employment generation and human resource development. Anwar said the project is also expected to support the growth of allied industries.
"Bangladesh is heavily dependent on imported energy such as gas, oil and coal. Once Rooppur is operational, this dependency will decline, saving foreign currency and boosting energy security," he said.
He added that the plant is expected to supply 10-12% of the country's electricity demand, providing reliable power to 20-25 million people, with positive impacts on industry, agriculture and daily life.
Global picture
Around 31 countries operate nuclear power plants, generating roughly one-tenth of global electricity. According to the International Energy Agency, France has the highest nuclear share at 65%, followed by the Slovak Republic, Ukraine, Hungary and Finland, ranging between 63% and 41% as of 2023.
In other major economies, nuclear accounts for 18% of electricity in the US and Russia, 9% in Japan, 5% in China, 20% in the UAE and 2% in Iran. In South Asia, Pakistan generates about 16% of its electricity from nuclear power, while India stands at around 3%.
The US leads global nuclear capacity, while China is rapidly expanding its nuclear fleet as part of its shift towards cleaner energy.
Operating costs of nuclear plants are generally lower than coal- and gas-fired power stations. In India, nuclear electricity generation costs about $48.2/MWh, compared to $64-95/MWh for coal. In Russia, nuclear power is the cheapest at $27.4/MWh, while in China it is $50/MWh, compared to $71 for coal and $81 for gas.
An OECD study also finds that nuclear power is often cheaper than coal and gas in most countries.
Global oil price shocks are likely to affect Bangladesh’s economy mainly through higher inflation, a weaker exchange rate, and limited output losses, according to a study by the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD).
The study says that the overall impact will depend on the scale of global oil price increases, but the main transmission channels are expected to remain the same over the medium to long term. Rising energy costs are likely to feed into domestic prices, weaken the taka, and slightly slow economic growth.
By analysing different scenarios based on a 20 percent to 60 percent rise in global oil prices and using an econometric model, the CPD said losses in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) -- a measure of the value of goods and services produced in an economy -- would remain relatively contained, ranging between 0.21 percent and 0.53 percent.
In contrast, the inflationary impact could be far more pronounced, with price pressures rising from 0.6 percent in the first quarter to as high as 13.6 percent in the fifth year. This reflects the strong pass-through of fuel costs across Bangladesh’s supply chains, the CPD said in a paper presented at the fourth Bangladesh-China Renewable Energy Forum at Lakeshore Hotel in Dhaka yesterday.
The analysis shows that consumer prices, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), would rise across all scenarios -- mild, moderate, and severe -- with the impact becoming stronger over time.
In the short term, inflation is projected to increase by 0.60 percent, 1.11 percent, and 1.55 percent within the first quarter under the three respective scenarios. The pressure would continue to build, reaching 1.12 percent, 2.06 percent, and 2.87 percent after one year.
Over the longer term, the impact becomes much sharper. By the fifth year, inflation is expected to rise to 5.27 percent under mild shocks, 9.72 percent under moderate shocks, and as high as 13.57 percent under severe shocks.
At the same time, the Bangladeshi taka is projected to depreciate by between 0.56 percent and 4.5 percent under different scenarios, driven by higher fuel import bills and related balance-of-payments pressures.
The CPD warned that Bangladesh will continue to bear the burden of the ongoing energy shock for years, as structural vulnerabilities and accumulated costs will not disappear immediately even if global tensions ease.
Given the limited fiscal space, the think tank suggested that the government may need to scale down its budget estimates for the fiscal year 2026-2027 to accommodate rising energy-related expenditures.
It also cautioned that the crisis could further intensify the country’s debt burden. Increased government borrowing may crowd out private sector access to credit, tightening financial conditions across the economy.
To address these challenges, the CPD recommended accelerating the transition towards renewable energy while using domestic natural gas as a “transition fuel” to reduce dependence on imports.
Policy momentum appears to be building. The BNP government has recently announced a target to generate 10,000 megawatts (MW) of electricity from renewable sources by 2030 and has formed a committee to prepare the necessary roadmap.
The CPD urged the Ministry of Power, Energy and Mineral Resources to prepare a clear roadmap to achieve the 10,000 MW renewable energy target through both utility-scale and distributed systems.
The think tank said the target could unlock around $10 billion in investment. It also recommended reviving viable cancelled projects through transparent tendering to speed up implementation.
Times are bad for Bangladesh’s farmers. Right when they needed a steady diesel supply to irrigate vast swathes of cropland — Boro paddies, seasonal vegetables, maize — the world entered what the head of the International Energy Agency called “the biggest energy security threat in history.”
The fuel is in short supply. The government has just hiked its price by 15 percent. Many farmers are now fearing losses of both crops and investment. But not Afzal Hossain from Fulpukuria village in Gobindaganj of Gaibandha, who cultivated Boro paddy on six bighas this season and gets his water from a solar-powered pump.
“I am not really worried about irrigation,” he said. “My neighbours who rely on diesel or electric pumps are suffering due to the fuel crisis and load-shedding.”
Bangladesh requires over 40 lakh tonnes of diesel a year, with a large chunk of it going towards the running of more than 12 lakh irrigation pumps, according to data from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and government agencies. Besides, there are more than 430,000 electric pumps that provide minor irrigation.
According to the Department of Agricultural Extension (DAE), the country currently has 754 diesel-powered deep tube wells, 10,39,337 shallow tube wells, and 1,84,384 low-lift pumps in operation.
While this reliance could be a devastating blow for many farmers, those using solar-powered pumps are enjoying immunity from the whole crisis.
In Rangpur Division, across five districts, 5,09,095 hectares of Boro paddy have been planted this year. Around 35 to 40 percent of cultivable land in the region depends entirely on diesel-powered shallow machines. The recent price hike has pushed service providers to raise charges for irrigation, harvesting, and maize threshing.
According to Hussain Mohammad Altaf, executive engineer at Rangpur office of the Bangladesh Agricultural Development Corporation (BADC), 596 solar-powered irrigation machines were active during the last irrigation season in the division.
“If each generates an average of 10 kilowatts, total output comes to 5.9 megawatts, enough to run 80,000 to 85,000 fans daily,” he said. Over a four-month irrigation season, those machines save approximately 75 lakh litres of diesel.
In Lalmonirhat, Atiar Rahman manages a solar-powered deep tube-well run by the BADC at Doani village of Hatibandha upazila, supplying water to around 15 bighas of maize and vegetable land.
“Even if diesel is unavailable or its price rises, farmers no longer have to worry,” he said, “because this irrigation machine runs on solar power.”
He added that the panels sit idle for eight months after the irrigation season ends, and that connecting surplus electricity to the national grid through net metering could benefit farmers, institutions, and the government alike.
Further into the char lands of Kurigram, farmer Meher Jamal of Char Paschim Bajra at Ulipur upazila said vast areas surrounded by the Teesta River once sat uncultivated because irrigation was out, but it meant increased costs and labour.
“For the last few years, many char lands are now being cultivated regularly because of irrigation facilities through solar power,” he said. “Land that once remained unused is now producing crops.”
Sudhan Chandra Sen, a farmer from Madhupur village at Kaunia upazila of Rangpur, said the difference is simple. “There is no worry about fuel. Electricity comes from solar power, and we get water. Crops are better, and costs are lower.”
He noted that while electricity is less reliable, as it often comes and goes, delaying irrigation, solar power is sustainable and consistent. “Water is always available.”
In Bogura, Abdul Hamid from Kachua village at Shibganj upazila cultivated Boro on five and a half bighas. He said solar-powered pumps have reduced both his costs and stress. “I planted Boro paddy after harvesting potatoes. So far, I haven’t had to worry about irrigation or the cost. I can pay the irrigation fees after harvesting the crop.”
Abu Hasan, another farmer from the same village, said crops under solar pumps yield better because the water supply is uninterrupted. “I face no water shortages. I have to pay Tk 1,500 per bigha for irrigation after the harvest.”
Beyond individual farms and government initiatives, private operators have built businesses around solar irrigation. Abu Jafar Sujan, regional manager of Salek Solar Power Limited, said his company runs 122 solar pumps across Bogura, Gaibandha, Meherpur, and Panchagarh districts.
“Each pump has a lifting capacity of 5 to 20 horsepower. Smaller pumps cover 30 to 40 bighas, while the larger ones irrigate up to 120 bighas of Boro land, he added.
Abu Bakkar Siddique, who looks after a 20-horsepower irrigation pump owned by Salek Solar in Kachua, said 100 bighas of Boro land were irrigated under this pump this year.
Nationally, the state-run renewable project financer Infrastructure Development Company Limited (Idcol) has funded the installation of approximately 1,523 solar pumps through six companies, covering around 15,000 hectares.
“There are 152 such pumps in Bogura, Sirajganj, Gaibandha, and Naogaon. However, some remain inactive due to various complexities and a lack of technical spare parts,” an official of the organisation said on condition of anonymity. “We plan to install 10,000 solar pumps across the country by 2030.”
The ADB, in a December 2023 report on scaling up solar irrigation pumps in Bangladesh, said irrigation costs in Bangladesh account for 43 percent of total agricultural costs.
It estimated that replacing diesel pumps with solar could displace consumption of 10 lakh tonnes of diesel annually, avoiding 30 lakh tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent each year.
But installation has slowed sharply. After peaking at 12.88 MWp in 2019, new installations had fallen to just 4.65 kWp by 2025, according to the state-owned Sustainable and Renewable Energy Development Authority (Sreda), responsible for increasing renewable energy production.
Rangpur BADC’s Altaf confirmed that no new solar irrigation projects have been launched in Rangpur division since 2022, and some existing pumps remain inactive due to technical problems and missing spare parts.
Mizanur Rahman, chief engineer (operation) of Northern Electricity Supply Company PLC (Nesco) in Rangpur, believes that if diesel-dependent irrigation can be quickly transformed into solar-powered irrigation, it would save foreign currency and reduce carbon emissions.
For climate-vulnerable Bangladesh, this could be an effective path toward sustainable agriculture, he added. “Most solar-powered irrigation machines are located in areas under the Rural Electrification Board. Therefore, implementation would be possible if the relevant authorities take initiatives to introduce net metering at those installations.”
Rights activists noted that solar projects are highly important for increasing agricultural production, ensuring food security, and modernising agriculture.
“Government and private initiatives should further expand solar-powered irrigation projects to improve the fortunes of marginal farmers,” said Shafiqul Islam, president of the Lalmonirhat district unit of Nodi Bachao Teesta Bachao Sangram Parishad.
After more than 35 years in commercial banking, I have seen a troubling pattern: persistently high non-performing loans, limited product innovation, weak risk management, a shortage of capable and transformational leadership, and undue interference by owner directors. Over time, these have become almost normal. They are compounded by uneven central bank supervision, outdated technology and limited institutional capacity to respond to shocks.
Meanwhile, global banking is changing rapidly. Technological advances, shifting customer expectations and new economic realities are reshaping how banks operate. Some institutions are struggling to keep up; others are moving ahead with stronger governance, modern systems and forward-looking strategies. This widening gap poses a pressing question: what will banking look like in the coming decade, and can our local banks remain competitive?
There are signs of progress. Several commercial banks in Bangladesh have begun centralising operations to improve efficiency and oversight. Effective centralisation brings large corporate and retail branches under unified control, strengthening governance while improving risk management and customer service. At the same time, the expansion of digital banking services is making transactions quicker, simpler and more accessible.
Banks are also placing greater emphasis on customer relationship management (CRM). Many have invested heavily in technology and staff training, and that effort is set to continue. Customers initially faced disruption, but many are now seeing the benefits. Banks are working to understand each client’s overall financial needs and to offer tailored solutions. Relationship managers (RMs) are being deployed to integrate corporate banking, foreign exchange and personal financial services, enabling clients to access a full range of services through a single point of contact.
Lending strategies are shifting as well. Banks increasingly recognise that heavy reliance on traditional instruments such as cash credit is unsustainable. The focus is moving towards mobilising low-cost deposits and boosting profitability through a more balanced mix of corporate and retail banking.
To support this transition, banks are investing in digital platforms, data analytics, artificial intelligence and blockchain. AI, including generative AI, is beginning to transform financial services by enabling personalised advice and sharper market insights. Robo-advisers, for example, can analyse market trends and customer behaviour to provide recommendations aligned with individual risk profiles.
AI is also improving efficiency. Chatbots now handle routine enquiries such as account balances or transaction histories, cutting waiting times and operating costs. More advanced tools can assess financial statements, support credit decisions, detect fraud in real time and streamline processes, including customer onboarding, loan approvals and regulatory reporting. These innovations enhance service quality while reducing administrative pressure.
The revenue model must evolve, too. A balanced bank should aim for an equal split between interest income and fee-based income. Leading institutions are placing greater weight on fee-based services such as corporate advisory, foreign exchange, structured finance and syndication, where risks are shared. This reduces dependence on traditional lending and strengthens balance sheet resilience.
Risk management will determine future success. To manage interest rate volatility, banks are prioritising short-term, low-cost deposits over long-term liabilities. At the same time, they must develop robust credit policies aligned with emerging investment trends and economic needs.
Ultimately, the future of banking will be shaped by technology, market forces and rising customer expectations. Banks can no longer confine themselves to deposit-taking and lending. They must expand into wealth management, integrate with fintech platforms and ensure secure, technology-driven transactions.
In an era defined by globalisation and rapid technological change, continuous transformation is essential for survival. Banks that fail to adapt will become irrelevant. The message is unmistakable: banking cannot continue the way it is.
A reversal of the five Islamic bank merger begins as former shareholders of Social Islami Bank Ltd officially appeal for regaining the troubled bank's conditional control through a new legal window.
The much-talked-about insertions into the newly enacted Bank Resolution Act 2026 that modified the merger-related ordinance of the post-uprising interim government, thus, begin to come into action.
Former chairman and sponsor shareholder of the shahirah-based bank Major (Retd.) Dr Md. Rezaul Haque, on behalf of the former board of directors, submitted Monday an application to Governor of Bangladesh Bank (BB) Md. Mostaqur Rahman in pursuant to the section 18(Ka) of the Bank Resolution Act, officials said.Bangladesh market analysis
Apart from Mr. Haque, the other signatory shareholders in the application are managing director of Hamdard Laboratories Dr Hakim Md. Yusuf Harun Bhuiyan, Alhaj Sultan Mahmood Chowdhury, Afia Begum and Md. Zahedul Alam Chowdhury.
With the submission of the application, uncertainty looms large over operation of the emerging Sammilito Islamic Bank which was formed through merging five severely liquidity-hit shariah-based commercial banks last year.
The merged banks were Social Islami Bank, First Security Islami Bank, Union Bank, Global Islami Bank and EXIM Bank.
Talking to The Financial Express, the former chairman of Social Islami Bank, Mr. Rezaul Haque, said they had submitted the application under the section 18(Ka) of the act, which has created a window for the former shareholders to get back conditional control over the problem bank.
He thinks the bank can be revived as an independent bank through fresh capital injections, stronger governance, recovery of classified loans and improved liquidity support.
They pledge to restore transparency and accountability if the former board members are reinstated.Financial news subscription
"We hope the central bank governor will give serious attention to our application and give us time to share our plans to make the bank rebound," he says.
Mr. Haque says they will comply with all the conditions in the Bank Resolution Act to get back their ownership in the bank.
"We are capable as we had given 20-percent cash dividend to the shareholders regularly since 2013 till 2016 before it was forcibly taken away by a controversial business group," he says, adding that their employees enjoyed 5-7 bonuses annually.
According to the interpolation of changes into section 18(Kha) of the Bank Resolution Act, former directors or shareholders of banks, merging or listed for mergers, can pay 7.5 per cent upfront of the amount injected by the government or the central bank to reclaim the banks. The remaining 92.5 per cent is to be repaid within two years at 10-percent interest.
Seeking anonymity, a BB official says they will scrutinize the application on various aspects. Thereafter, it will be placed before the BB board of directors.
"If the board members are satisfied, it will be sent to the ministry of finance for next course of action."
On a question over the operational fate of Sammilito Islami Bank, the central banker couldn't give any satisfactory response. "We are in the dark now as the progress of the newborn bank gets caught in limbo after the latest change in the Bank Resolution Act," he says.
The section 18(Ka) of the act, which was passed by parliament on April 11 last, sparked widespread criticism from various quarters who fear representatives from the group who looted public money from the banks might get back in the ownerships through using the amended law.
Before the mergers, the central bank on November 5 last year declared net asset value (NAV) of the shares of the five banks zero, citing deeply negative capital positions, and officially classified the institutions as non-viable.
Although all the five remain listed on the stock market, trading in their shares was suspended by the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC).
Under the merger plan, the government injected Tk 200 billion into the newborn bank, while another Tk 150 billion was to come from the deposit-insurance fund, creating a paid-up capital base of Tk 350 billion.
Of the government funds, it invested Tk 100 billion in Sukuk bonds while the remaining Tk 100 billion in cash remains almost intact in the Sammilito Islami Bank current account with the regulator.
According to the financial review of the bank, the ratio of classified loans rose to 64 per cent by end of August last year, which prompted the banking regulator to take it under its merger plan along with four other Islamic banks.
The total investment the bank had made until August 2025 was Tk 391 billion. Of the volume, around Tk 248 billion turned bad loans and it created severe liquidity crisis in the bank.
Bangladesh continues to trail its regional competitors in attracting foreign direct investment (FDI), according to a report by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).
The report said that while Bangladesh performs better than the average least developed country (LDC) in absolute FDI inflows, it falls behind when investment is measured against the size of its population, economy and gross fixed capital formation.
On those indicators, it underperforms not only individual comparator countries but also the average for LDCs and for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) and the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), two blocs it aims to join.
FDI accounts for just 1 percent of the country’s gross fixed capital formation and 0.4 percent of gross domestic product, the report said.
Despite steady economic growth in recent years, Bangladesh has yet to convert its potential into sustained foreign investment inflows, according to the “Investment Policy Review Implementation Report”, launched at the Bangladesh Investment Development Authority (Bida) office yesterday.
Between 2019 and 2024, Bangladesh received an average of $1.5 billion in FDI a year, less than half the level of Cambodia.
The difference becomes even wider when measured against larger regional economies. Vietnam attracted more than $17 billion a year on average over the same period, while Indonesia also drew substantially higher inflows.
In terms of FDI stock, Bangladesh lagged behind Cambodia, Vietnam and Indonesia, as well as the ASEAN and RCEP blocs. It performed better only than the average least developed country in 2024.
The UNCTAD said that inflows have declined over the past six years, although early data for 2025 suggest a tentative rebound.
Investment inflows to the country peaked at more than $1.8 billion in 2019 before entering a downward trend. Since then, inflows have fallen by nearly one-third, dropping below levels recorded during the early phase of the Covid-19 pandemic.
The fall has occurred even as the overall FDI stock has remained broadly stable at around $18 billion since 2021. This suggests that existing investors have retained capital, but new investment has slowed, according to the report.
The report attributed the weakness to macroeconomic instability and operational constraints.
Local currency taka has depreciated by about 36 percent against the US dollar since 2021, while foreign exchange shortages have made it harder for companies to repatriate profits and pay for imports, it said.
“These pressures have been compounded by energy disruptions, particularly fuel import constraints, which have raised production costs and disrupted industrial activity.”
At the same time, inflation has surged to nearly 10 percent and economic growth has slowed from about 8 percent to 4 percent between 2019 and 2024, further dampening investor sentiment.
The report mentioned that political uncertainty around the election cycle and labour unrest in key sectors, especially garments, have added to caution.
Although early indicators for 2025 point to a modest recovery in FDI inflow, the report said that the composition of the rebound raises concern.
The recent uptick has been driven mainly by reinvested earnings and intra-company loans rather than new greenfield projects. In effect, existing investors are expanding their exposure, but few new entrants are arriving, the report said.
The UNCTAD said that while confidence may be stabilising, Bangladesh has yet to regain momentum in attracting fresh foreign capital.
“A national investment policy and a consolidated investment law would help reinforce investor confidence and focus on attracting and leveraging FDI in support of national development objectives through a whole-of-government approach,” the report said.
As a second priority, UNCTAD recommended strengthening investment promotion and facilitation, focusing on sectors identified in its FDI heatmap and adopting targeted measures to support their growth in coordination with other institutions.
“Mitigate the impact of losing preferential LDC status by engaging with key investment and trade partners and by strengthening the capacities of the local private sector.”
Kiyoshi Adachi, a legal officer at UNCTAD, said most recommendations from earlier reviews have only been partially implemented.
He cited outdated legislation, including the Investment Act of 1980, which does not clearly define investor protections or consolidate FDI rules. Entry procedures remain complex and require multiple approvals, while digitalisation efforts are undermined by continued reliance on manual processes.
Challenges such as foreign exchange repatriation, access to land, infrastructure shortages and limited skilled labour mobility continue to weigh on investor confidence, he said.
Ashik Chowdhury, executive chairman of Bida, said Bangladesh needs to accelerate its efforts to attract foreign investment by strengthening competitiveness and aligning more closely with global standards.
Stefan Liller, resident representative of the United Nations Development Programme in Bangladesh, said coherent policies and strong institutional capacity are essential to attract responsible investment that creates jobs and supports inclusive growth.
Among others, Sohana Rouf Chowdhury, managing director of Rangs Motors, M Masrur Reaz, chairman and CEO of Policy Exchange of Bangladesh, Ariful Hoque, former director general of Bida, Md Hafizur Rahman, trade policy and facilitation expert, and Humayun Kabir, executive member of Bida, were present at programme.
Rising global protectionism and trade fragmentation could slow economic progress across the wider developing Asia-Pacific region, potentially delaying graduation from least developed country (LDC) status for countries including Bangladesh, according to a new United Nations survey.
The 2026 edition of the Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific, published last week, said the average additional effective tariff rate imposed by the United States on developing economies in the region has climbed to around 15 percent from about 2.8 percent in 2024.
As a result, several smaller and least developed countries, including Bangladesh, Cambodia, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic and Myanmar, now face 19-40 percent tariffs on exports to the United States.
The report said that such barriers are likely to hold back economic development and delay LDC graduation.
Bangladesh, Nepal and Lao PDR are scheduled to graduate to developing country status on November 24 this year. However, Bangladesh and Nepal have applied to the UN for a three-year deferment until 2029.
The report noted that further tariff adjustments were announced after a United States Supreme Court ruling in February 2026. Policy changes remain highly unpredictable.
As of February this year, tariff rates faced by developing economies in Asia and the Pacific were still higher than in 2024.
The report by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) also said weaker export orders are likely to hit employment, wages and business investment in affected sectors, with knock-on effects for growth and government revenue.
The impact will extend beyond direct exports to the United States. Economies supplying raw materials, parts and components to regional value chains may also see demand fall, according to the report.
In Bangladesh, about one-third of textile and textile product exports depend on imported inputs or upstream trade partners. Disruptions to value chains and trade diversion could also curb productivity growth over time, limiting longer-term economic potential.
“Tariff hikes are estimated to have sizable employment impacts,” said the report. The impact on workers would vary by gender, age, skill level and sector.
Around 3 percent of total employment in the region, roughly 56 million jobs, is linked to final demand in the United States through trade and supply chains. Manufacturing is the most exposed sector.
Lower exports could suppress wages and push vulnerable workers into poverty.
In countries such as Bangladesh, Cambodia, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, the garment industry employs large numbers of informal workers, many of them women.
Compared with registered workers, informal employees have weaker bargaining power, limited legal protection and little access to social security. Many earn below minimum wage levels.
Even if trade tensions ease, lingering uncertainty may discourage firms from rehiring displaced workers. That could force households to cut spending on food, health and education, with long-term consequences.
Bangladesh, Cambodia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Vietnam, which face tariffs of about 20 percent, are particularly exposed because labour-intensive goods such as garments, textiles, footwear and leather account for a large share of their exports to the United States.
In Bangladesh and Cambodia, garments and textiles alone make up 50 percent to 80 percent of total goods exports to the US market.
The report also said that women dominate employment in these sectors, especially in lower-skilled, routine jobs such as sewing, cutting and finishing. Women account for around seven in ten readymade garment workers in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, and about eight in ten in Cambodia.
Pay in these industries often sits at or just above the minimum wage, and access to unemployment benefits or other safety nets is limited.
In Bangladesh, about 32 percent of RMG workers earn below the minimum wage, and roughly 7 percent earn incomes below the international poverty line.
Gender pay differences persist across these labour-intensive sectors.
In Vietnam’s garment sector, female wages are estimated to be about 15 percent lower than those of men. With limited opportunities to shift into alternative employment, women and low-skilled workers are especially vulnerable to job losses and wage cuts.
Informal and subcontracted workers face the greatest risk if export demand weakens. These jobs usually offer no notice period, little job security and no social protection. They are usually the first to be cut and the last to return.
The survey also finds a clear divergence in firm performance.
Companies linked to the United States market were 14 percentage points less likely to report production growth. By contrast, firms supplying the European Union were 16 percentage points more likely to post increases.
The report added that many firms will struggle to diversify export markets quickly, given intensifying global competition and uncertain demand in major economies.