Oil prices were little changed on Wednesday as investors assessed prospects for renewed US–Iran talks and the potential for supply to be released from the Middle East, where exports remain constrained by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
Brent crude futures were up 43 cents, or 0.5 percent, to $95.22 a barrel at 0821 GMT, after falling 4.6 percent in the previous session. US West Texas Intermediate crude was down 17 cents, or 0.2 percent, to $91.11. The contract dropped 7.9 percent the session before.
The war has mostly shut the Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway for crude and refined product flows out of the Gulf to global buyers, particularly in Asia and Europe.
US President Donald Trump said talks with Tehran on ending the war could resume this week after ending over the weekend without any agreement.
But the US has also enacted a blockade of shipping leaving Iranian ports that its military said on Wednesday has completely halted trade going in and out of the country by sea.
Despite a two-week ceasefire, transit through the strait remains uncertain, with traffic at only a fraction of the 130-plus daily crossings that moved through the waterway before the war, sources said on Tuesday.
“The trajectory of oil prices will likely hinge less on battlefield developments and more on diplomatic momentum. Markets are increasingly reacting to headlines around negotiations rather than troop deployments,” said Priyanka Sachdeva, senior market analyst at Phillip Nova.
“Each signal of renewed dialogue has been met with price declines, suggesting that traders are systematically unwinding the ‘war premium’ embedded into crude earlier this month.”
Refiners are desperately seeking alternative crude supply, pushing up the premiums they are willing to pay for oil from areas such as the US Gulf Coast and North Sea. A cargo of WTI Midland for delivery to Rotterdam traded at a record premium of $22.80 a barrel above benchmark European prices on Tuesday.
A US destroyer stopped two oil tankers from leaving Iran on Tuesday, a US official said.
“The Strait of Hormuz is not Trump’s alone to reopen,” said SEB analyst Ole Hvalbye. “Iran has its own calculus, and the regime may find it strategically useful to keep flows restricted even after any peace deal, whether to extract reparations, guarantee security, or simply to inflict political pain ahead of the November US midterm elections.”
The market stands to lose some access to further supply after two US administration officials told Reuters on Tuesday the US will not renew a 30-day waiver of sanctions on Iranian oil at sea that expires this week, and quietly let a similar waiver on sanctions on Russian oil expire over the weekend.
Later in the day, markets will be watching for official US inventory data from the Energy Information Administration, due at 10:30 a.m. ET (1430 GMT).
US crude oil stockpiles were expected to have risen slightly last week, while distillate and gasoline inventories likely fell, a Reuters poll showed.
Market sources familiar with American Petroleum Institute figures said on Tuesday US crude oil inventories jumped for a third straight week.
President Donald Trump's administration plans to launch next Monday the system it will use for issuing refunds to American importers for $166 billion the companies paid in tariffs that the U.S. Supreme Court struck down in February as unlawful.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection said in a court filing on Tuesday that it has completed the development of the initial phase of the refund system, known as CAPE. The system will consolidate refunds so importers will receive one electronic payment, with interest when applicable, rather than processing refunds on an entry-by-entry basis.
Agency official Brandon Lord made the declaration in the filing with the New York-based Court of International Trade. The agency disclosed the CAPE launch date in a separate announcement on Friday.
The Supreme Court ruled that Trump overstepped his authority in imposing sweeping global tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, a 1977 law meant for use in national emergencies.
Tuesday's filing said that as of April 9 some 56,497 importers had completed the process to receive electronic refunds for tariffs affected by the court's ruling, an amount totaling $127 billion.
The agency has said it plans to roll out the refund system in phases.
Lord said in his declaration that the agency is considering options for processing refunds on a subset of entries that were subject to $2.9 billion in tariffs. Lord said these normally would require manual processing, which would dramatically increase the workload and divert personnel from the agency's trade operations and enforcement.
After the Supreme Court's decision, importers sued for refunds in the Court of International Trade, which is monitoring the development of the refund system.
More than 330,000 importers paid the tariffs at issue on 53 million shipments of imported goods, according to court documents.
Customs and Border Protection has said the CAPE system will initially process refunds on recently imported goods and straightforward entries.
Many smaller importers feared the cost of the refund process would outweigh the benefits of trying to get reimbursed, forcing some companies to explore creative financing options related to refunds.
Trump denounced the Supreme Court after its ruling and imposed a new temporary global tariff under a different law, though that also has been challenged in court.
Bangladesh Bank (BB) has resumed purchasing US dollars from the market after one and a half months, driven by higher inflows than outflows amid strong remittance earnings.
Yesterday, the central bank bought $70 million from Islami Bank Bangladesh at a cut-off rate of Tk 122.75 per US dollar.
Earlier, on March 2, BB purchased $25 million from two commercial banks through multiple auction methods.
During the 2025-26 fiscal year, total US dollar purchases stood at $5.56 billion, according to BB data.
Remittance inflows reached an all-time high of $3.75 billion in March, as Bangladeshis working abroad sent increased amounts to their families ahead of Eid-ul-Fitr.
In addition, remittance inflows stood at $1.60 billion between April 1 and April 14 this year, up 25.2 percent year-on-year, data showed.
The banking regulator began purchasing dollars at the start of the current fiscal year as supply increased, supported by higher export earnings and remittance inflows.
However, between FY21 and FY25, Bangladesh Bank sold more than $25 billion from its foreign exchange reserves to meet import payments for fuel, fertiliser, and food.
Due to BB’s recent dollar purchases, gross foreign exchange reserves rose to $34.87 billion yesterday, up from $34.60 billion two days earlier.
Demand for crude oil will likely decline this year for the first time since the Covid pandemic slammed the global economy six years ago, weighed down by Mideast war disruptions, the IEA warned Tuesday.
Surging prices caused by the Strait of Hormuz’s closure and damage to production facilities will force countries and industries to curtail oil use, and “demand destruction will spread as scarcity and higher prices persist”, the International Energy Agency said in its monthly report.
It noted that its forecasts assume a “base case” of oil shipments resuming in May through Hormuz, which Tehran has effectively closed since the US and Israel began bombing Iran on February 28.
This would lead to a decline in demand of 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) in the second quarter, “the sharpest since Covid-19 slashed fuel consumption”, the agency said.
Overall demand is forecast to have contracted by 800,000 bpd in March and is seen dropping by 2.3 million bpd in April.
Surging prices caused by the Strait of Hormuz’s closure and damage to production facilities will force countries and industries to curtail oil use
But a “protracted case” if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed would lead to persistently high prices that crimp demand by an even higher average of five million bpd through the rest of this year.
“In this case, energy markets and economies around the world need to brace for significant disruptions in the months to come,” the agency warned.
Global oil use is expected to fall over 2026 as a whole as a result of the Hormuz closure and the destruction of energy infrastructure across the Gulf from retaliatory Iranian attacks.
The IEA now sees a demand drop of 80,000 bpd this year, compared with its previous forecast of growth of 730,000 bpd.
It called it “the largest disruption in history” to the market and cautioned that with “the prospects for a lasting negotiated settlement to the conflict still unclear”, the economic pain could be worse.
Already the supply cuts took more than 360 million barrels off the market in March, a figure expected to rise to 440 million barrels for April.
Oil supplies overall plunged to 97 million bpd in March, down by 10.1 million bpd as the Mideast fighting rocked the market.
Oil prices have nearly doubled since the Mideast war began and remain near $100 a barrel, with prices of refined products like petrol and jet fuel rising even higher.
Many governments have already imposed measures to conserve use, but if the fighting continues “energy markets and economies around the world need to brace for significant disruptions in the months to come”.
Countries are also tapping into crude stock reserves to soften the blow from lost Gulf exports, and inventories fell by 85 million barrels overall in March.
IEA executive director Fatih Birol has repeatedly said the agency stands ready to approve the release of more reserves if needed.
But some analysts say energy traders are increasingly betting that neither Iran nor the United States want the war to continue, and are banking on talks producing a ceasefire.
Kathleen Brooks, research director at the investing platform XTB, said that even though tensions are high, “the market is comfortable that this war has entered a new stage, one that will lead to the end of fighting and a pathway to reopening the waterway”.
Bangladesh-based agri-tech startup iFarmer has secured $1.5 million in foreign funding as it aims to strengthen the country’s agricultural value chain.
The funding comes from Symbiotics, a Switzerland-based market access platform for impact investing, according to a statement.
The investment will support iFarmer’s working capital requirements, enabling it to expand agricultural input distribution and strengthen market linkages for farmers across Bangladesh.
iFarmer said the investment marks another important milestone, as international investors continue to back technology-driven agricultural platforms that improve efficiency, transparency, and access to financing in emerging markets.
Bangladesh’s agriculture sector employs nearly 40 percent of the workforce and contributes significantly to the national economy, supporting around 25 million farmers across 17 million farms and accounting for about 12 percent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP). However, farmers continue to face challenges related to financing, input quality, and market access.
iFarmer is addressing these challenges by building an integrated agricultural platform that connects farmers, retailers, suppliers, and institutional buyers through financing, digital advisory, input supply, and output market linkages.
With this new financing from Symbiotics, iFarmer will expand its agri-input distribution platform, KriShop, and strengthen its supply chain operations to ensure farmers have access to quality inputs and reliable market access for their produce, according to the statement.
The funding will also support iFarmer’s broader platform operations that connect farmers directly with large buyers, improving efficiency across the agricultural value chain.
Founded in 2019, iFarmer has grown into one of Bangladesh’s leading agri-fintech platforms, currently working with over 300,000 farmers and 24,000 agricultural retailers across the country.
The company combines embedded finance, digital advisory, input supply, and market linkage services into a single platform designed to increase farmers’ income and improve agricultural productivity.
Fahad Ifaz, co-founder and CEO of iFarmer, said, “This partnership with Symbiotics is an important step in our journey to build the digital and financial infrastructure for agriculture in Bangladesh.”
“Access to working capital is critical for scaling agricultural supply chains. With this investment, we will be able to expand our operations, reach more farmers and retailers, and strengthen market linkages across the agricultural ecosystem.”
“We believe this is just the beginning, and we look forward to working with more global partners who want to invest in building the future of agriculture in emerging markets.”
Aldric Luyt, head of fintech at Symbiotics, said, “This investment reflects our commitment to supporting underserved agricultural communities in Bangladesh. iFarmer’s innovative model improves supply chain efficiency and expands economic opportunities. Our investment will help scale their impact, contributing to more resilient and sustainable food systems.”
Uber has committed more than $10 billion to buying thousands of autonomous vehicles and taking stakes in their developers, breaking from its asset-light "gig economy" business model to avoid disruption from robotaxis, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday.
Reuters could not immediately verify the report. Uber did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
Uber is positioning itself as a marketplace for multiple robotaxi operators, and has partnered across much of the autonomous vehicle industry, including with Baidu, Rivian and Lucid, and has outlined plans to launch robotaxi services in at least 28 cities by 2028.
These deals put Uber on track to invest more than $2.5 billion in equity stakes and spend over $7.5 billion on robotaxi fleets in the next few years, FT reported, citing its calculations based on analyst estimates and people familiar with Uber's deals. The agreements are contingent on its partners hitting certain deployment milestones.
Interest in driverless taxis has surged in recent months after years of missed promises, with artificial intelligence and tech partnerships offering hopes of solving complex traffic scenarios faster and mitigating high costs.
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, after holding a video conference with leaders from Southeast Asia, told reporters that the assistance, dubbed "Power Asia," is aimed at providing loans needed to secure crude oil, petroleum products, and to maintain the supply chain in an emergency response to help hard-hit nations.
The fund also aims to expand an oil reserve system within Asia, diversify energy, and promote energy conservation and industrial advancement, Takaichi said.
Japan, which imports petroleum-related products such as medical supplies from Southeast Asia, is increasingly worried that the region's oil supply shortages would affect the Japanese economy.
The fund is one year's worth of oil imports for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations member countries, or about 1.2 billion barrels, Takaichi said. The assistance is not meant to just provide oil, but for Asian nations to support each other.
Stocks at the Dhaka bourse slipped back into losses yesterday after a brief rebound in the previous session, as persistent sell-offs driven by cautious investor sentiment eroded early gains.
The downturn came amid heightened global uncertainty following the failure of talks between the US and Iran, prompting investors to offload shares and adopt a wait-and-see approach.
The benchmark index, DSEX, of the Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) fell by 41 points to close at 5,230. Market turnover also declined by 5%, while total market capitalisation dropped by Tk2,555 crore to Tk6.85 lakh crore, according to DSE data.
Market breadth remained negative, with 55% of traded stocks declining, compared to 31% advancing, while 14% remained unchanged.
The decline follows a modest recovery in the previous session when the market snapped a losing streak.
On Sunday, the DSEX gained 14 points after shedding around 60 points in earlier sessions.
Yesterday's trading began on a positive note, with indices staying in the green for the first 38 minutes until 10:38am, supported by early buying interest. However, the momentum proved short-lived as selling pressure, particularly in blue-chip stocks, pulled the indices into losses.
By the end of the session, the Shariah-based index DSES fell by 3 points to 1,057, while the blue-chip DS30 index declined by 31 points to 1,981.
Data showed that around 60% of A-category stocks, typically known for offering over 10% dividends, registered price declines. Meanwhile, 40% of Z-category stocks, considered junk stocks, also lost value.
In contrast, mutual funds posted gains, with 73% of traded funds closing higher.
In its daily market commentary, EBL Securities said the market failed to sustain the previous session's recovery as geopolitical concerns dampened investor confidence.
"Although the market opened on a positive note, the momentum quickly faded as jittery sentiment triggered broad-based sell-offs," the brokerage firm noted.
"Selling pressure intensified in large-cap stocks as the session progressed, dragging the broad index into negative territory and reflecting a lack of confidence among investors," it added.
Among the gainers, Mir Akhter Hossain Ltd topped the chart with a 9.82% rise to Tk31.3 per share. It was followed by Yeakin Polymer (9.03%), Fareast Finance (8.69%), Phoenix Finance 1st Mutual Fund (8.61%), and Premier Leasing (8.3%).
On the losing side, Meghna Condensed Milk Industries led the decliners, falling 4.67% to Tk36.7 per share, despite its operations remaining suspended for years. Other major losers included Apex Tannery (4.33%), KDS Accessories (4.27%), Sena Insurance (4.22%), and Peoples Insurance (3.86%).
The US military began a blockade of Iran's ports, angering Tehran and adding uncertainty around the crucial waterway, although hopes for dialogue to end the war provided some relief to oil markets, where benchmark prices fell below $100 on Tuesday (14 April).
After a breakdown of weekend talks in Islamabad between the two adversaries, a US official said there was continued engagement and forward motion on trying to get to an agreement. Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif also said efforts were still underway to resolve the conflict.
US President Donald Trump said Iran had been in touch on Monday and wanted to make a deal but that he would not sanction any agreement allowing Tehran to have a nuclear weapon.
Since the United States and Israel began the war on 28 February, Iran effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz to all vessels except its own, saying passage would be permitted only under Iranian control and subject to a fee.
The fallout has been widespread, since nearly a fifth of the world's oil and gas supplies flowed through the narrow waterway before the start of the conflict.
Trump has said Washington would block Iranian vessels and any ships that paid such tolls and that any Iranian "fast-attack" ships that went near the blockade would be eliminated. Tehran has threatened to hit naval ships going through the strait and to retaliate against its Gulf neighbours' ports.
Shipping data on LSEG showed Chinese-owned oil-and-chemicals tanker Rich Starry passed through the strait on Tuesday - the first since the US blockade began at 10am EDT (1400GMT) on Monday. The vessel, which departed Sharjah anchorage off the coast of Dubai on Monday heading for China, had earlier turned back minutes after approaching the strait.
The US's blockade has further clouded the outlook for global energy security and the supply of a vast array of goods that rely on petroleum, and has little, if any, international backing.
Nato allies including Britain and France said they would not be drawn into the conflict by taking part in the blockade, stressing instead the need to reopen the waterway.
Despite the breakdown of talks between the US and Iran on Sunday, Vice President JD Vance, who led the US delegation, told Fox News on Monday the US "made a lot of progress" by communicating to Tehran where the US "could make some accommodation" and where it would remain inflexible.
He said Trump was adamant that any enriched nuclear material must be removed from Iran and a mechanism must be established to verify that Iran is not developing nuclear weapons.
Tehran "moved in our direction, which is why I think we would say that we had some good signs, but they didn't move far enough," Vance said, without disclosing details.
Ceasefire under strain
The ceasefire that halted six weeks of US-Israeli airstrikes and retaliatory fire from Iran across the Gulf looked in jeopardy, with only a week left to run.
The US military's Central Command said the blockade would be "enforced impartially against vessels of all nations" entering or leaving Iranian ports in the Gulf and Gulf of Oman. It would not impede neutral transit passage through the Strait of Hormuz to or from non-Iranian destinations, it said in a note to seafarers seen by Reuters.
An Iranian military spokesperson called any US restrictions on international shipping "piracy," warning that if Iranian ports were threatened, no port in the Gulf or Gulf of Oman would be secure. Any military vessels approaching the strait would violate the ceasefire, Iran's Revolutionary Guards said.
Trump said Iran's navy had been "completely obliterated" during the war, adding that only a small number of "fast-attack ships" remained.
"Warning: If any of these ships come anywhere close to our BLOCKADE, they will be immediately ELIMINATED, using the same system of kill that we use against the drug dealers on boats at Sea. It is quick and brutal," Trump said on social media.
He was apparently referring to the US strikes carried out against suspected drug boats in the Caribbean and Pacific. The strikes, which began in September, killed more than 160 people. The US military has not provided evidence that the vessels were ferrying drugs.
Lebanon faces attacks
With the war unpopular at home and rising energy prices causing political blowback, Trump paused the US-Israeli bombing campaign last week after threatening to destroy Iran's "whole civilisation" unless it reopened the strait.
In a letter to the United Nations, Iran's UN delegation on Monday asked for reparations from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar and Jordan, alleging they have allowed their territory to be used in the US-Israeli war against Iran.
Israel has continued to bombard Lebanon and on Monday troops launched an attack it said was intended to seize a key south Lebanon town from Iran-backed Hezbollah. The Israeli military said on Tuesday that an Israeli soldier was killed and three reservists were wounded during combat in southern Lebanon.
Israel and the US have said the campaign against Hezbollah was not part of the ceasefire, while Iran has insisted it is.
With Islamic banking now commanding 30% of Bangladesh's market, the shift from interest-based to asset-backed models is accelerating. Bank Asia is at the forefront, boasting a 70% deposit-investment ratio and a portfolio where Musharakah-based financing – true risk-sharing – hits 50%.
In a recent conversation with The Business Standard, the Bank's AMD ANM Mahfuz discusses the sector's trajectory and evolving strategic priorities
What is your outlook for the Islamic banking sector in the near future?
Islamic banking in Bangladesh has experienced remarkable growth since its introduction in 1983.
The sector has built deep public trust by aligning financial services with ethical and religious values.
With rising demand for Shariah-compliant products, expansion in SME and retail segments, and supportive regulatory frameworks, the outlook is highly promising.
In my view, Islamic banking will continue to increase its market share and play a transformative role in building a more inclusive, ethical and value-driven financial system.
What is driving the preference for Islamic banking over conventional banking?
Islamic banking is gaining popularity, particularly in Muslim-majority countries such as Bangladesh, primarily because it complies with Shariah principles, where interest (riba) is prohibited.
Beyond religious considerations, it is based on real economic activities involving tangible assets, unlike conventional banking, which is largely interest-based.
This asset-backed, risk-sharing approach enhances transparency and fairness. As a result, Islamic banking is increasingly regarded as a more ethical, stable and socially responsible alternative to traditional banking.
How has your bank's Islamic banking segment performed in recent years?
Bank Asia's Islamic banking segment has demonstrated strong and steady growth in recent years. The deposit–investment ratio has improved significantly, rising from around 50% to nearly 70%, indicating better fund utilisation and operational efficiency.
We remain fully committed to uncompromised Shariah compliance across all operations. A key strength of our portfolio is Musharakah-based financing, which accounts for approximately 50% of total investment, ensuring genuine risk-sharing and ethical financing.
In addition, we have built a strong presence in Sukuk investments and expanded our network from five to 15 Islamic banking windows. These achievements reflect our growing footprint and commitment to excellence in Islamic banking.
What strategies are you adopting to restore depositor confidence in Islamic banks?
Rebuilding depositor confidence in Islamic banking depends fundamentally on strict Shariah compliance and transparency.
Since its inception on 24 December 2008, Bank Asia Islamic Banking has upheld the principle of "Shuddhotai Apnar Munafa", emphasising purity and compliance in all operations.
Confidence is strengthened through a robust Shariah Supervisory Committee, regular Shariah audits and monitoring, skilled Islamic banking professionals, and transparent communication regarding fund utilisation and profit generation.
What opportunities exist to develop the Islamic bond market to support business capital-raising?
The Sukuk market offers significant opportunities for raising Shariah-compliant capital.
Globally, it has grown rapidly, particularly in countries such as Malaysia and Saudi Arabia. In Bangladesh, Sukuk issuance has already laid a strong foundation for further market expansion.
Sukuk can play a crucial role in financing infrastructure, supporting corporate growth, and attracting both individual and institutional investors, including non-resident Bangladeshis.
With appropriate regulatory support, Sukuk can become a key instrument for sustainable and ethical financing, aligning economic growth with social and environmental objectives.
What regulatory support is needed to diversify Islamic banking products?
To diversify Islamic banking products, strong regulatory support is essential.
This includes clear Shariah-compliant guidelines for products such as Sukuk, Takaful and structured investments, tax neutrality for Islamic financial contracts, standardised profit-sharing frameworks, and the development of secondary markets for Islamic instruments.
There is also a need for Shariah-compliant liquidity and risk management tools. Furthermore, promoting fintech integration, innovation and professional training will strengthen the overall ecosystem.
How can Islamic banking products be leveraged to attract NRBs?
Islamic banking products provide a strong platform to attract non-resident Bangladeshis (NRBs). Shariah-compliant options such as Mudarabah deposits, Sukuk investments and Islamic savings schemes offer halal and ethical returns.
Transparent profit-sharing, asset-backed investments and digital banking facilities enhance trust and accessibility, while remittance-linked Islamic accounts simplify fund transfers.
These initiatives can boost foreign currency inflows and strengthen diaspora engagement in Bangladesh's economic development.
How can Islamic banking contribute to sustainable growth and financial inclusion?
Profit-and-loss sharing models such as Mudarabah and Musharakah support SMEs, agriculture and infrastructure, driving job creation and economic development.
Financial inclusion is further enhanced through microfinance, micro-Takaful and Shariah-compliant savings products targeting underserved populations.
In addition, instruments such as green Sukuk finance environmentally sustainable projects.
By combining ethical finance with inclusivity, Islamic banking contributes to long-term economic stability and social equity.
The capital market in Bangladesh faces persistent problems with trust. IPO fraud and manipulation continue despite reforms, undermining investor confidence and impeding economic growth. Long-term stability and national development are at stake.
The nation has learned painful lessons. An estimated $27 billion in market value—roughly 22 percent of GDP at the time—was destroyed by the crashes of 1996 and, more catastrophically, 2010–2011. Millions of investors suffered losses, leaving social repercussions that still shape public perception of the stock market. The same structural flaws remain more than a decade later.
Recent enforcement data highlight the severity. The Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC) fined individuals nearly Tk 1,488 crore in the past 18 months for manipulation and misconduct. Yet only a fraction has been recovered due to lengthy legal battles. This gap between punishment and accountability sends the wrong signal: wrongdoing is costly on paper but not in practice.
Systemic weaknesses drive these failures—coordinated trading through omnibus accounts, abuse of placement shares, diversion of IPO proceeds, and lack of real-time surveillance. Bangladesh’s market capitalization remains low, around 6 percent of GDP in mid-2025, compared to over 100 percent in deeper, better-run markets. This underdevelopment hampers financing for infrastructure, SMEs, and industrial growth—key to Vision 2041 and the “Smart Bangladesh” agenda.
Globally, fraud persists but is increasingly managed with technology. Scandals like Enron and Madoff spurred regulators to adopt AI for real-time surveillance. Exchanges are also testing blockchain-based settlement systems that are faster, cheaper, and more transparent. Emerging economies such as India and Brazil have embraced digital reforms, strengthening disclosure, monitoring, and enforcement.
Bangladesh, however, still relies on manual oversight and fragmented data. In an era of cyber-enabled scams, this is insufficient. For a small, fragile market, each crisis inflicts disproportionate damage and deters investors. Modern technology offers a transformative opportunity.
Blockchain can fundamentally change IPOs and securities transactions. In a permissioned blockchain, every transaction is permanently recorded, time-stamped, and visible to authorized participants. Smart contracts can automate IPO rules—ensuring funds are released only when verified conditions are met, allocations follow transparent logic, and lock-up periods cannot be bypassed. Immutable records eliminate manipulation.
AI complements this as a real-time watchdog. It can analyze trading patterns, detect unusual movements, and identify coordinated networks far faster than traditional monitoring. Leading exchanges report fewer false alarms and quicker enforcement after adopting AI-driven systems.
Together, blockchain and AI create a powerful regulatory architecture: blockchain ensures data integrity, AI provides intelligence and early warning. Such systems could flag suspicious IPO activity, trigger halts during abnormal behaviour, and deliver regulators immediate, evidence-based alerts. Privacy-preserving technologies safeguard data.
For Bangladesh, implementation can be phased. Pilot IPOs integrated with the central securities depository would allow testing and scaling. International experience shows such reforms reduce fraud risk, shorten settlement cycles, improve liquidity, and restore confidence.
A regulatory sandbox led by BSEC, with Bangladesh Bank, could test blockchain-based e-IPO systems and AI surveillance. Capacity building is vital—training regulators, auditors, and intermediaries to oversee data-driven systems. Collaboration among exchanges, the depository, banks, and technology providers will be essential.
Implementation should begin with targeted pilots: blockchain-enabled IPOs and AI surveillance in the secondary market, before scaling. This gradual approach limits disruption while signaling decisive reform.
Bangladesh is well-positioned to leapfrog. High mobile penetration, a young tech-savvy population, and strong policy backing under the Smart Bangladesh Master Plan provide a solid foundation. While advanced economies refined systems over decades, late adopters can now deploy mature technologies quickly.
The cost of inaction is clear: repeated scandals will cap growth, deter foreign investment, and push savings into informal channels. The benefits of action are equally clear: a transparent market that channels savings into productive investment, lowers risk premiums, and supports sustainable transformation.
Fraud is not inevitable—it is a governance problem that can be solved. By adopting blockchain and AI as core regulatory tools now, Bangladesh can protect investors, strengthen institutions, and become a regional leader in financial innovation. Decisive reform today will yield economic, social, and strategic dividends for decades.
The year 2025 will be remembered as a period of significant contraction for dividend-seeking investors in Bangladesh's capital market, as multinational companies faced an unprecedented squeeze on profitability.
Historically regarded as the bedrock of the Dhaka and Chattogram bourses for their consistent and generous payouts, these global giants saw their collective dividend distributions plummet by 46% compared with the previous year.
Currently, out of the 13 multinational companies listed on the two stock exchanges, the status of dividend declarations remains mixed. While eight have already announced their payouts for the year, others are at various stages of their financial cycles.
Bata Shoes and Marico Bangladesh have declared interim dividends but are yet to finalise their year-end figures. Meanwhile, firms such as Berger Paints and Marico follow a financial year that ends in March, meaning their full annual performance will not be clear for several more months. Heidelberg Materials also yet to declare its stance for 2025.
Data from ten major multinational entities show they declared a total of Tk5,070 crore in dividends for the 2025 financial year, a sharp retreat from the Tk9,411 crore in 2024.
This massive shortfall of Tk4,341 crore reflects a broader story of operational challenges, ranging from inflationary pressures and site relocations to historic losses and shifting macroeconomic conditions.
Downturn driven by heavyweights
The downturn in payouts was driven largely by the market's heavyweights, with British American Tobacco (BAT) Bangladesh and Grameenphone recording the most substantial declines.
BAT Bangladesh, a long-term favourite for income investors, saw its cash dividend drop from 300% in 2024 to just 30% in 2025. In monetary terms, this represented a collapse from Tk1,620 crore to Tk162 crore.
According to the company's price-sensitive disclosure, its net profit for the year ending December 2025 decreased by 67%, primarily due to a Tk715 crore one-off impact caused by the forced closure of its Dhaka factory and the subsequent relocation of machinery to Savar. This restructuring, combined with rising operating expenses and a decline in turnover, forced the tobacco giant to adopt a much more conservative stance on profit distribution.
Similarly, the telecommunications leader Grameenphone declared a 215% cash dividend for 2025, which, while substantial in the context of the broader market, was significantly lower than the 330% payout offered in 2024.
The company's total dividend amount fell from Tk4,456 crore to Tk2,903 crore as its net profit dipped to Tk2,958 crore from the previous year's Tk3,630 crore. The telecom sector, which is highly sensitive to consumers' purchasing power, felt the weight of persistent high inflation throughout the year, leading to a more cautious approach to cash preservation.
Perhaps the most startling development of the year came from Singer Bangladesh. For the first time in its listed history, the electronics giant failed to recommend any dividend.
The company suffered a loss of Tk225 crore in 2025, a sharp deterioration from a loss of Tk48.93 crore in 2024. The depth of the financial crisis at Singer led to negative retained earnings of Tk150 crore, making a dividend payout legally and financially impossible.
Industry insiders pointed to the double blow of a depreciating currency and a slowdown in consumer demand for durable goods as the primary drivers of this historic outcome.
Linde Bangladesh also saw a drastic change in its payout profile. While it had declared a record-breaking 4,500% cash dividend in 2024 – fuelled by the disposal of assets and special capital gains – it returned to a more standard 100% cash dividend in 2025. Consequently, the total amount disbursed by the industrial gas provider fell from Tk684 crore to just Tk15 crore.
Other firms such as Unilever Consumer Care and Marico Bangladesh also trimmed their payouts, with Marico's interim dividend standing at 1,575% cash compared with a total of 3,840% in the preceding year.
RAK Ceramics, grappling with a loss of nearly Tk40 crore, limited its 10% cash dividend to general shareholders only, reflecting the immense pressure on the construction and real estate supply chain.
Against the trend
Despite the prevailing gloom, a few multinationals managed to defy the trend. Robi Axiata reported a significant improvement in its bottom line, with net profit rising to Tk938 crore from Tk702 crore. This allowed the mobile operator to increase its cash dividend to 17.5%, up from 15% in 2024.
LafargeHolcim Bangladesh also showed resilience, raising its cash dividend to 40% from 38% after posting a robust profit of Tk511 crore. These outliers, however, were not enough to offset the massive dividend erosion seen across the rest of the MNC segment.
Market analysts have characterised 2025 as a "year of survival" for most multinationals operating in Bangladesh. The combination of high inflation, unfavourable macroeconomic conditions, and political uncertainty created a hostile environment for business growth.
Many of these firms found themselves struggling with high import costs due to the dollar crisis, while also facing a domestic market where consumers were increasingly forced to cut back on non-essential spending.
The resulting squeeze on margins meant that even profitable firms had to prioritise liquidity and balance sheet strength over rewarding shareholders.
Bangladesh is entering a period of intense fiscal pressure, with external debt servicing set to surge sharply over the next five years, exposing the limits of its already weak revenue base.
According to an Economic Relations Division (ERD) report, the country will need to pay nearly $26 billion in external debt servicing between the current fiscal year and FY30.
The scale of the burden is clearer in historical context.
In the 54 years since independence in 1971, Bangladesh has paid around $40 billion in debt servicing. Now, nearly two-thirds of that amount will be repaid within just five years.
This comes as the tax-to-GDP ratio has slipped below 7%, the lowest among peer economies, constraining the government's ability to absorb shocks or expand spending.
At the same time, a series of external shocks – including the Covid-19 pandemic, the Ukraine war, domestic political instability, and ongoing tensions in the Middle East – have strained revenue collection, export earnings and remittance flows, further complicating debt servicing pressures.
Total external debt stood at $77.28 billion as of 30 June 2025, up from $68.82 billion a year earlier, according to another ERD report.
Bangladesh paid about $4 billion in the previous fiscal year, which is expected to rise to $4.74 billion in the current year, $4.87 billion in FY27 – peaking at $5.5 billion in FY30.
Economists say the rising obligation will strain public finances at a time of elevated global energy prices. They warn that within five to 10 years, as repayments on new loans begin, the situation could become more complex.
They say avoiding a foreign debt trap requires an urgent push to expand exports, develop skilled manpower, boost remittances, improve investment climate and strengthen revenue.
Why debt pressure is rising
The latest ERD report was prepared ahead of the finance minister's Washington meetings. The finance minister and governor are now in the United States, seeking fresh budget support from the World Bank and the release of IMF loan tranches to ease fiscal stress.
The report estimates are based on external loans contracted up to FY25. Borrowing in the current fiscal year has not been included.
Officials said Bangladesh has financed a series of mega projects through external borrowing, including the $11.3 billion Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant, Padma Rail Link, Karnaphuli Tunnel, Dhaka Metro Rail, Single Point Mooring with Double Pipeline, Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport expansion and the Jamuna Railway Bridge.
Many of these projects have either completed or are nearing the end of their grace periods, triggering principal repayments and steadily increasing debt servicing pressure.
Principal repayments for the Rooppur plant are set to begin in 2028, with annual payments exceeding $500 million. Budget support loans taken during the post-Covid period are also entering repayment phases, further adding to pressure.
Officials also cited implementation delays as a major concern. Delays have slowed the realisation of economic returns, while some completed projects remain idle due to operational bottlenecks.
For instance, electricity generation from Rooppur was expected two years earlier but has been delayed. The Single Point Mooring project, completed in 2024 with $467.84 million in Chinese financing, has yet to begin operations. The Dhaka airport expansion, financed with nearly $2 billion from Japan, also remains idle due to delays in appointing an operator.
Burden peaks in FY30
The report shows Bangladesh will need to repay $25.99 billion over FY26-FY30, including the current fiscal year. Of this, $18.38 billion is principal and $7.6 billion interest. This burden will nearly double to $51.33 billion between FY26 and FY35.
FY30 is projected as the peak repayment year, when Bangladesh will need to service about $5.5 billion based on the debt stock as of June 2025.
The report notes that, based on average monthly remittances of about $2.03 billion during FY21-FY25, less than three months of inflows would be sufficient to cover annual external debt obligations even at the peak.
Existing debt needs 37 years to clear
Based on borrowings up to June of the last fiscal year, Bangladesh would need 37 years to fully repay its existing external debt stock, according to the ERD.
If no new loans are added, the current stock would be cleared by FY63, meaning today's liabilities will continue to be serviced over the long term.
Net external borrowing in FY25 was $5.83 billion, with officials estimating annual increases in debt stock of roughly $8-9 billion.
Debt ratios under pressure
According to the latest Flow of External Resources into Bangladesh report by the ERD, the debt-to-GDP ratio, though still low by global standards, is gradually rising.
It reached 18.99% at the end of FY25, up from 17.03% a year earlier, against a 40% benchmark. The debt-to-revenue ratio also edged higher, climbing to 16.92% from 16.53% over the same period, nearing the IMF's threshold of 18%.
The ERD warned that without stronger revenue growth, Bangladesh could lose its current "comfortable position" in servicing external debt.
Other indicators offer a mixed outlook. The debt-to-exports of goods and services plus remittances ratio improved modestly, falling to 105.87% from 110.09% a year earlier, remaining well below the IMF's 180% threshold.
'Exports, remittances must keep pace'
Terming the situation an "unavoidable reality" for Bangladesh, Zahid Hussain, former lead economist at the World Bank's Dhaka office, said, "If export earnings and remittances fail to keep pace, the economy could slip into distress."
World Bank and IMF analyses show the shift from "low" to "moderate" debt risk is driven less by GDP and more by worsening debt-to-revenue and debt-to-export ratios.
He warned that weak revenue mobilisation and foreign exchange pressures are already staring the economy. "Without improvement, moderate risk could escalate into high risk."
He called for stricter "sanity checks" in selecting loan-funded projects, especially in energy, where investments could ease gas shortages, raise industrial output and support exports.
Loan decisions, he said, must focus on repayment capacity through future exports and fiscal space, not just loan size.
Bangladesh has not defaulted so far, he noted, but warned the buffer may not hold amid global slowdown, LDC graduation pressures and geopolitical shocks. "Debt rescheduling or delays in repayment would carry reputational risks and increase future borrowing costs," he said.
'Capacity-building imperative'
Mustafa K Mujeri, executive director at the Institute for Inclusive Finance and Development, said the economy is at a critical juncture, with rising repayments alongside fresh borrowing.
He warned that mismanagement could trigger a crisis, calling for urgent capacity building based on four pillars: export expansion, skilled manpower development, improved investment climate and stronger revenue collection.
He said reliance on the ready-made garments sector alone is insufficient and called for diversification into agro-products, leather goods and light engineering.
Remittances, he added, remain a key lifeline, requiring alignment with global labour market demand and expanded training programmes. He also urged easier and more attractive legal remittance channels.
He said Bangladesh's tax-to-GDP ratio of around 7-8% is a structural weakness. "This narrow revenue base is insufficient to service large-scale debt while sustaining development."
He called for tax system reforms, anti-evasion measures and broader tax coverage.
He added that energy security is a direct enabler of debt repayment capacity. "Uninterrupted gas and power supply is essential to keep industrial production running."
Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury has unveiled an ambitious vision to transform Bangladesh into a trillion-dollar economy by 2034, even as rising debt and intensifying climate risks threaten to derail progress.
Speaking at the 16th Ministerial Dialogue of the CVF-V20 on April 14, the minister underscored Bangladesh’s position as one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable economies, warning of a tightening fiscal environment driven by recurring disasters and financial strain.
Mr. Chowdhury delivered a stark assessment of the country’s economic trajectory, cautioning that development financing is increasingly constrained by a growing debt burden.
Bangladesh’s debt-to-GDP ratio has climbed sharply – from 26.2 per cent in FY2017 to 36.0 per cent in FY2023 – with further increases expected as repayment obligations rise on large infrastructure projects.
By FY2024, domestic debt is projected to comprise 56 per cent of total liabilities, while external debt will account for 44 per cent, reflecting a shifting financing structure that could heighten internal fiscal pressure.
The fiscal squeeze is already impacting climate-related social protection efforts. Allocations for climate-focused programmes under the Social Safety Net Programme (SSNP) have dropped dramatically to U$592.8 million for FY2025–26, down from U$1.42 billion previously – nearly a two-thirds reduction.Personal Finance Software
To cushion vulnerable populations, the government has introduced targeted initiatives such as “Family Cards” and “Farmers Cards”, aimed at mitigating the combined shocks of climate change and global economic volatility.
Beyond domestic challenges, Bangladesh is grappling with mounting geopolitical and trade pressures.
The World Bank estimates that the ongoing Middle East conflicts could push an additional 1.2 million Bangladeshis into poverty, exacerbating social vulnerabilities.
Meanwhile, the minister criticised unilateral trade measures (UTMs) that bypass global trade norms, arguing that such policies disproportionately affect climate-vulnerable economies like Bangladesh.
In response, Bangladesh has outlined a five-point reform agenda aimed at reshaping international financial support mechanisms.
The points are adoption of a Multidimensional Vulnerability Index (MVI) instead of GNI per capita to determine aid eligibility, large-scale and fast-tracked debt relief mechanisms, expanded risk-hedging tools to attract private climate investment, pre-arranged emergency liquidity facilities for climate disasters and accelerated climate-focused reforms within multilateral development banks.Bangladesh Economic Report
“It is time to translate conference into practice and turn advocacy into action,” Mr. Chowdhury said, urging the global community to step up support.
He also proposed establishing a CVF-V20 Regional Hub in Dhaka, positioning Bangladesh as a leader in climate resilience and policy innovation.
Bangladesh’s trillion-dollar ambition signals confidence in long-term growth, but without urgent fiscal space, climate financing, and global support, the path ahead remains highly challenging.
A high-powered Bangladesh delegation is now staying in Washington D.C. led by the finance minister for joining the Spring Meetings of IMF-WBG.
Finance Secretary Dr Md Khairuzzaman Mozumder, NBR Chairman Md Abdur Rahman Khan, Governor Md Mostaqur Rahman, Basumati Group Chairman ZM Golam Nabi and senior officials of different ministries and divisions are members of the panel.
The Spring Meetings began on April 13 and will conclude on April 18.
The International Monetary Fund cut its growth outlook on Tuesday due to Iran war-driven energy price spikes and supply disruptions and warned that the global economy would teeter on the brink of recession if the conflict worsens and oil stays above $100 per barrel through 2027.
With massive uncertainty over the Middle East conflict gripping finance officials gathering for IMF and World Bank spring meetings in Washington, the IMF presented three growth scenarios: weaker, worse and severe, depending on how the war unfolds.
The World Economic Outlook's most optimistic "reference scenario" assumes a short-lived Iran war and forecasts 3.1% real GDP growth for 2026, down 0.2 percentage point from its previous forecast in January. Under this scenario, oil prices average $82 per barrel for all of 2026, a decline from recent levels of around $100 for the Brent benchmark futures price .
Absent the Middle East conflict, the IMF said it would have upgraded its growth outlook by 0.1 percentage point to 3.4%, due to a continued technology investment boom, lower interest rates, less-severe US tariffs and fiscal support in some countries.
But the war has created a far bigger risk to the global economy than President Donald Trump's initial wave of steep tariffs did a year ago, IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas told Reuters in an interview.
"What's happening in the Gulf is potentially much, much larger, and that's what our scenarios are kind of documenting," he said.
Under an "adverse scenario" of a longer conflict that keeps oil prices around $100 per barrel this year and $75 in 2027, the IMF predicts global GDP growth would fall to 2.5% this year. The IMF in January had forecast that oil would decline to about $62 in 2026.
And the IMF's worst-case "severe scenario" assumes an extended and deepening conflict and much higher oil prices that prompt major financial market dislocations and tighter financial conditions, slashing global growth to 2.0%.
"This would mean a close call for a global recession," the IMF said, adding that growth has been below that level only four times since 1980 - with the last two severe recessions in 2009, following the financial crisis, and in 2020 as the COVID-19 pandemic raged.
Inflation pressures
Gourinchas said that a number of countries would be in outright recessions under this scenario, with oil prices averaging $110 per barrel in 2026 and $125 in 2027. Prices at this level for an extended time would also increase expectations "that inflation is here to stay," prompting wider price increases and wage hike demands.
"That change in inflation expectations is going to require central banks to step on the brakes and try to bring inflation back down," he said, adding that this may require more pain than in 2022.
The IMF said, however, that central banks may be able to "look through" a short-lived energy price surge and hold rates steady amid weaker activity, which would be a de facto monetary easing, but only if inflation expectations remain anchored.
Global inflation for 2026 would top 6% in the severe scenario, compared to 4.4% in the most-optimistic reference scenario, which is the assumption for the IMF's country and regional growth forecasts.
Major economy outlooks
The IMF shaved its US growth outlook for this year to 2.3%, down just a tenth of a percentage point from January, reflecting the positive effect of tax cuts, the lagged effect of interest rate cuts and continued AI data center investment partly offsetting the higher energy costs. These effects are expected to continue in 2027, with growth now forecast at 2.1%, up a tenth of a point from January.
The euro zone, still struggling with higher energy prices caused by Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, takes a bigger hit from the Middle East conflict, with its growth outlook falling 0.2 percentage points in both years to 1.1% in 2026 and 1.2% for 2027.
Japan's growth is largely unchanged under the most benign scenario at a weak 0.7% for 2026 and 0.6% for 2027, but the IMF said that it expects the Bank of Japan to hike rates at a slightly faster pace than anticipated six months ago.
The IMF forecast China's growth for 2026 at 4.4%, down a tenth of a point from January as the higher energy and commodity costs are partly offset by lower US tariff rates and government stimulus measures. But the IMF said headwinds from a depressed housing sector, a declining labor force, lower returns on investment and slower productivity growth will cut China's 2027 growth to 4.0%, a forecast unchanged from January.
Emerging markets, Middle East hit hard
Overall, emerging market and developing economies, where GDP tends to be more dependent on oil inputs, take a bigger hit from the Middle East conflict than advanced economies, with 2026 growth seen falling 0.3 percentage points to 3.9%.
Nowhere is this more pronounced than at the epicenter of the conflict in the Middle East and Central Asia region, which will see its 2026 GDP growth fall by two full percentage points to 1.9% amid widespread infrastructure damage and sharply curtailed energy and commodity exports.
GDP declines for 2026 are forecast at 6.1% for Iran, 8.6% for Qatar, 6.8% for Iraq, 0.6% for Kuwait and 0.5% for Bahrain.
But under the assumption of a short-lived conflict, the region bounces back quickly, with 2027 GDP growth rebounding to 4.6%, a jump of 0.6 percentage point from the January forecasts.
The one bright spot amid emerging markets is India, which saw growth upgrades of about a tenth of a percentage point to 6.5% for both 2026 and 2027, due in part to momentum from strong growth at the end last year and a deal to lower the US tariff rate on Indian imports.
Fuel cost fiscal support
The IMF said that governments will be tempted to implement fiscal measures to ease the pain of higher energy prices, including price caps, fuel subsidies or tax cuts, but cautioned against these urges amid still-elevated budget deficits and rising public debt.
Gourinchas said it was "perfectly legitimate" to want to protect the most vulnerable, but subsidies in one country could lead to fuel shortages in others that can't afford them.
"You have to do it in a very targeted, very temporary way that doesn't really mess up the fiscal framework" needed by most countries to rebuild their fiscal buffers, he said.
Mobile financial service provider Nagad has consolidated its position as the leading platform for disbursing government allowances—including old-age, widow, and disability benefits—as well as education stipends under the national social safety net programme.
Although the disbursement window is open to all financial institutions, Nagad remains the preferred platform for beneficiaries, according to a press release issued on Monday.
In the January–March quarter of this year, approximately 1.47 crore beneficiaries selected Nagad to receive government allowances and stipends. During this period, total government disbursements through Nagad reached Tk3,049.23 crore across several categories.
Of this total, the largest number of beneficiaries and highest volume of funds were disbursed under the government's social safety net programme. Between January and March, around 1.31 crore beneficiaries received Tk2,878.35 crore through Nagad accounts—Tk300 crore more than in the same period last year.
Nagad also disbursed Tk32.68 crore in education stipends to 4,12,697 primary school students during the quarter.
During the same period, 5,785 students participating in sewing and embroidery training programmes received Tk2.68 crore through Nagad, marking an increase from the corresponding period last year.
In technical education, 1,22,937 students received stipends totalling Tk45.58 crore through Nagad—nearly Tk10 crore more than in the same period a year earlier.
Under the Madrasa Education Directorate, 38,055 students received Tk3.43 crore in stipends via the platform.
Meanwhile, under the Mother and Child Benefit Programme, Nagad disbursed Tk86.50 crore in maternity allowances to 10,11,557 beneficiaries.
The government also distributed funds under the 'Family Card' programme on a pilot basis through Nagad as part of the social safety net during the same period.
Md Samsul Islam, Chief Corporate Affairs Officer of Nagad, stated, "Nagad remains the preferred choice for customers receiving allowances, stipends, and government grants. We are grateful to our customers and the government for their trust. This confidence is a testament to our service quality, and as a result, both the number of beneficiaries and the volume of disbursements through Nagad continue to rise each quarter."
In the 2024–25 fiscal year, the government disbursed Tk9,000 crore in social safety net allowances via Nagad. The amount is expected to increase further in the current fiscal year, according to the press release.
Gold hit a near one-week low on Monday as a stronger dollar and oil’s surge above $100 after the US moved to blockade Iranian ports fuelled inflation concerns, prompting traders to scale back expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts this year.
Spot gold was down 0.4 percent at $4,730.75 per ounce, as of 0735 GMT, after hitting its lowest since April 7 earlier in the day at $4,643. US gold futures for June delivery fell 0.7 percent to $4,753.30.
The dollar strengthened 0.3 percent as the US Navy prepared a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz that could restrict Iranian oil shipments after peace talks between the US and Iran broke down.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards responded by warning that military vessels approaching the strait will be considered a ceasefire breach and dealt with harshly and decisively.
“Ceasefire optimism has unwound following the failure of the peace talks, and the resulting push higher by the dollar and oil prices has put gold on the back foot again,” said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade.
Spot gold has fallen more than 11 percent since the US-Israeli war on Iran began in late February. While inflation and geopolitical risks typically boost gold’s appeal as a safe haven, elevated interest rates weigh on the non-yielding metal.
A stronger dollar also makes greenback-priced bullion more expensive for holders of other currencies.
“As soon as oil prices push back above $100, attention quickly turns to potential central bank rate hikes to curb inflation, and it is this interest rate outlook that is undermining gold’s performance,” Waterer said.
Traders now see little chance of a US rate cut this year, as higher energy prices threaten to feed into broader inflation and limit the scope for monetary easing.
Investors had priced in two Fed rate cuts for 2026 before the start of the war.
Interest payments, subsidies, incentives and cash loans could gobble up big pies of the next budget as the government earmarks over Tk 2.59 trillion on this account and officials predict higher energy costs could bloat the figure.
The sum is roughly 27.86 per cent of the national budget worth Tk 9.3 trillion for fiscal year 206-27, officials at the finance division say.Personal Finance Software
The amount is 7.99-percent higher than the Tk 2.39-trillion revised allocation in the current fiscal year.
They say subsidy allocations have not been estimated taking into account a potential doubling of fuel-import costs amid the ongoing volatility and caution that if the Gulf conflict persists, additional funding will be required for gas, power and fertiliser subsidies.
Finance Ministry officials also warn that government's interest burden on domestic borrowing could rise further if inflation does not ease and liquidity in the financial sector takes longer to recover.
Further fiscal pressure may arise if the BNP government proceeds with its election pledges to implement "family card" and "farmer card", which would require additional allocations, they note.
The projections emerged at a meeting of the Coordination Council on Fiscal, Monetary and Exchange Rate Affairs held last Friday with Finance Minister Ameer Khasru Mahmud Chowdhury in the chair.
According to documents presented at the meeting, the budget deficit for the next fiscal year has been estimated at Tk 2.35 trillion, or 3.4 per cent of GDP, taking into account the heavy burden of subsidies, incentives and debt obligations. In the revised budget for the current fiscal year, the deficit was set at 3.3 per cent of GDP, amounting to Tk 2.0 trillion.
To finance the deficit, the government plans to borrow Tk 1.19 trillion from domestic sources like banks and savings instruments, while Tk 1.16 trillion from foreign sources, an overall increase of Tk 350 billion, or 17.5 per cent, compared to the current fiscal year.
External borrowing alone is set to surge by over 84 per cent, according to the documents.
Officials note that the government is increasingly leaning towards external borrowing to ease pressure from high-cost domestic debt, as a significant share of interest payments is tied to bank loans and savings certificates.
Interest payments alone are estimated at Tk 1.42 trillion in the next budget, including Tk 1.15 trillion for domestic debt and Tk 270 billion for foreign loans.
However, officials caution that interest expenses could rise further if inflation persists, fuel prices increase, or liquidity conditions in the banking sector fail to improve.
Subsidy allocations, meanwhile, remain under pressure amid global energy-price volatility. The government has earmarked Tk 370.0 billion for the power sector, Tk 65.0 billion for LNG, Tk 270.0 billion for fertiliser and Tk 96.0 billion for food-support programmes.
Total spending on subsidies, incentives and cash loans is set at Tk 1.17 trillion, up from Tk 1.12 trillion in the revised budget.
Officials note that subsidy needs could increase further if the ongoing tensions in the Middle East continue to push up fuel-import costs. The finance minister recently informed parliament that higher global fuel prices had already added Tk 360.0 billion in subsidy pressure during March-June of the current fiscal year.
While allocations for agricultural, export and jute incentives are being kept unchanged, remittance incentives are set to rise by Tk 8.0 billion to Tk 70.0 billion, reflecting stronger inflows.
"Expenditures such as interest payments offer little scope for control," says economist and former Director-General of Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies (BIDS) Dr Mustafa K. Mujeri, adding that the government has scope of controlling such spending in future.Local Business Directory
He told The Financial Express that subsidy spending, financed by public funds, needs to be rationalised through careful targeting.
He suggests phasing out blanket subsidies and limiting support to sectors that do not directly benefit the poor, warning that failure to do so would raise the debt burden on future generations.
Pragati Insurance has recommended a 27% cash dividend and a 3% stock dividend for the year ended 31 December 2025, reflecting a continued effort to reward shareholders while strengthening its capital base.
In the previous year, the insurer paid 20% cash and 7% stock dividend for their shareholders.
According to a disclosure on the stock exchange yesterday, the company will hold its Annual General Meeting on 18 June 2026 via a digital platform. For this, the record date has been fixed for 12 May 2026.
Despite this declaration, the share price of the company decreased yesterday by 2.61% to Tk71 on the Dhaka stock exchange.
End of December 2025, the company reported an earnings per share (EPS) of Tk5.31, marking a slight increase from Tk5.24 in the previous year.
The net asset value (NAV) per share also improved to Tk57.36, compared to Tk53.82 a year earlier, indicating a stronger asset base.
However, net operating cash flow per share declined significantly to Tk1.44 from Tk3.13 in 2024, suggesting a reduction in cash generation from core business operations despite improved profitability.
The company explained that the declaration of bonus shares aims to increase its paid-up capital, which is expected to enhance its financial strength and support expansion.
It further clarified that the stock dividend has been declared from retained earnings, ensuring compliance with regulatory requirements.
The company also said that the bonus shares have not been issued from capital reserves, revaluation reserves, or any unrealised gains. Additionally, the retained earnings will remain positive after the dividend distribution, avoiding any negative balance.
The primary objectives of the company are to carry on all kinds of non-life insurance business. The company's non-life insurance products include fire and allied perils insurance, marine cargo and hull insurance, aviation insurance, automobile insurance and miscellaneous insurance.
Market analysts said that while the steady growth in EPS and NAV signals operational stability, the sharp decline in cash flow may raise concerns among investors regarding liquidity and sustainability of earnings.
They suggest investors closely monitor the company's future cash flow trends.
Bangladesh's Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) sector is witnessing a sharp decline in activity, with production down by as much as 30% in recent weeks amid the global energy crisis, rising raw material costs, and frequent load-shedding.
Mirza Nurul Ghani Shovon, President of the National Association of Small and Cottage Industries of Bangladesh (NASCIB), told The Business Standard that the situation is becoming untenable for many small-scale manufacturers.
"The energy crisis has pushed many institutions to the brink of closure. In many cases, production has already dwindled by 25% to 30%," Shovon said.
He noted that without a stable power supply, factories are unable to meet their production target, leading to a massive drop in output across the board.
The sector, which contributes over 28% to the national GDP and employs roughly three crore people, is currently navigating its toughest period since the pandemic.
The leather and chemical-dependent sectors are among the hardest hit. Ilias Hossain, the proprietor of Rajex Leather, revealed that essential production components have become extremely expensive.
"The price of chemicals used in leather processing has doubled, and in some cases, even tripled," Ilias claimed.
He added that the cost of imported raw materials from China – such as gum and pasting – has surged due to global supply chain disruptions linked to the Middle East conflict. "When raw materials cost this much, the price of every finished product, from belts to footwear, must go up, which then kills consumer demand."
While production is dwindling, sales are also being stifled by operational restrictions. Shofiqul Islam, owner of Topex Leather, pointed out that the government-mandated early closing of shops to save electricity has put businesses in a tight spot.
"We are forced to wind down by 7pm or 8pm. But our primary customers, specially service holders, usually come to shop after their office hours in the evening. Our wholesale and retail sales are taking a massive hit," Shofiqul explained.
Monoranjan Sarker Noyon, proprietor of Manikganj-based Noyon Handicrafts, told TBS that the current economic climate has forced a significant reduction in corporate and wholesale orders.
"Our production hasn't been hit significantly yet, but our orders have definitely decreased," Noyon said, noting that even long-term regular clients are unable to maintain their usual purchase volumes as consumer demand falters at the retail level.
Anwar Hossain Chowdhury, managing director of SME Foundation, echoed these concerns, stating that the impact on marginal and rural entrepreneurs is particularly severe.
"The supply chain is broken. Production and marketing are both suffering a negative impact that is easily predictable and deeply concerning," he added.
Despite the challenges, some niche sectors like handmade crafts remain resilient. Jannatul Ferdous, founder of Bhumi Artisan, noted that while her production isn't fuel-dependent, the overall economic slowdown might eventually weigh on even the most specialised markets.
To prevent a total collapse of the sector, industry leaders are calling for immediate government intervention.
"The banks have moved away from single-digit interest rates and returned to higher tiers," Shovon of NASCIB remarked.
"With production down by 30% and costs rising, these high interest rates will finish us off. The government must ensure a return to single digit interest rate to keep the SME economy alive," he said.