More than half of the country’s scheduled banks will not be able to pay dividends this year, as rising bad loans and provisioning shortfalls continue to erode their financial strength.
This follows a dividend payout policy introduced by the Bangladesh Bank (BB) in March last year, which has tightened eligibility rules for profit distribution.
Under the policy, banks using provisioning deferrals are not allowed to issue dividends from 2024. From 2025 onwards, commercial lenders with non-performing loans (NPLs) above 10 percent of their total loan portfolio are also disqualified, regardless of profitability.
As of December last year, 29 banks, both state-owned and private, had double-digit NPL ratios. This accounts for nearly half of all scheduled banks. Of them, 17 listed lenders will be unable to pay dividends this year solely due to high defaulted loans.
Banks are required to finalise their balance sheets by April 30 under regulatory rules, and many have already announced dividend plans.
However, the central bank has withheld approval for more than 20 banks due to high levels of bad loans and the use of deferral facilities to meet provisioning requirements.
Some lenders even met the BB governor seeking approval, but failed to secure permission.
All state-owned banks are ineligible to pay dividends because of their high bad loan ratios. These include Krishi Bank, Agrani Bank, Janata Bank, Sonali Bank, Rupali Bank, Rajshahi Krishi Unnayan Bank, Probashi Kallyan Bank, BASIC Bank and Bangladesh Development Bank.
A large number of private commercial banks have also failed to qualify.
These include AB Bank, Modhumoti Bank, NRBC Bank, Al-Arafah Islami Bank, Standard Bank, One Bank, IFIC Bank, Islami Bank Bangladesh, ICB Islamic Bank, NRB Bank, Mercantile Bank, Global Islami Bank, EXIM Bank, First Security Islami Bank, Social Islami Bank, Union Bank, SBAC Bank, Padma Bank, United Commercial Bank, Shimanto Bank, National Bank, Premier Bank, Meghna Bank, Bangladesh Commerce Bank and Citizens Bank.
They have been disqualified due to elevated bad loans and reliance on provisioning deferral facilities. Some of these banks are still seeking approval to declare at least stock dividends and are continuing discussions with the central bank.
Tarek Reaz Khan, managing director and chief executive of NRB Bank PLC, said the bank will not be able to declare a dividend this year due to the BB policy.
“We are reducing our provisioning shortfall, and other financial indicators of the bank are improving,” he added.
Sharif Zahir, chairman of United Commercial Bank (UCB), said the bank’s financial position is improving.
“We submitted a three-year plan to the central bank and are working in line with it. However, we are still unable to pay dividends this year,” he said.
Md Touhidul Alam Khan, managing director of NRBC Bank, said the lender has improved across several indicators, including governance, but is unable to pay dividends due to the use of provisioning deferral facilities.
As per the BB rules, a bank may only pay cash dividends from the net profit of the relevant financial year and cannot use accumulated profits. Even then, payouts are capped at 30 percent of paid-up capital or 50 percent of net profit, whichever is lower.
Despite the restrictions, a small group of listed banks have declared dividends.
These include City Bank, BRAC Bank, Pubali Bank, Dhaka Bank, Uttara Bank, Eastern Bank, Prime Bank, NCC Bank, Dutch-Bangla Bank, Mutual Trust Bank, Bank Asia, Jamuna Bank, Shahjalal Islami Bank, Southeast Bank, Trust Bank and Midland Bank.
Outside of the listed category, Community Bank and Bengal Commercial Bank have declared dividends.
US President Donald Trump’s war with Iran was always unpopular at home. What made it tenable is that the American economy, buoyed by oil exports and an artificial-intelligence boom, seemed almost recession-proof. With the Strait of Hormuz still disrupted, however, even the world’s largest economy needs to reckon with the possibility of a downturn.
Until recently, economic forecasts were relatively benign, especially for the United States. When the International Monetary Fund (IMF) updated its global projections earlier this month, its so-called baseline scenario still had world output expanding 3.1 percent this year. Only under its “severe scenario,” which assumed crude prices averaging $110 per barrel in 2026 and $125 in 2027, did the IMF foresee global growth falling below 2 percent, a pace consistent with outright contractions in many countries.
That hypothetical future no longer feels far-fetched. The key Brent crude oil price has traded persistently above $110 per barrel over the past week, even briefly surpassing $120 on Thursday.
On Thursday, official data showed a rebound in US GDP in the first quarter: output expanded at an annual 2 percent. This is far above growth rates in the euro zone and the United Kingdom. American unemployment, at 4.3 percent, remains low.
Consider the 1990 Gulf War, though. The US economy enjoyed solid growth and near-full employment at the time. But labour demand was softening and households were starting to get worried amid the savings and loan crisis. When oil prices surged 150 percent, consumer confidence collapsed and real-terms spending stalled. The Federal Reserve, constrained by rising inflation, was slow to ease policy.
Many of those conditions are echoed today, including a divided Fed likely to resist pressure from its new chair to cut rates. Surveys already show depressed consumer sentiment and higher inflation expectations.
Comparing oil shocks across decades is complicated by the fact that richer households now spend a smaller share of income on energy. In recent years, energy goods and services have accounted for less than 4 percent of US disposable income, compared with about 5 percent before the Gulf War and 6 percent ahead of the 1970s crises.
One way to bridge that gap is to examine how much households are forced to raise that share when energy prices jump. One rule of thumb is that a 1 percent increase in American WTI oil prices typically lifts energy spending by roughly 0.22 percent. After July 1990, the energy share of household incomes rose by about 0.3 percentage points, enough to tip the economy into recession, since higher energy bills forced consumers to cut spending elsewhere.
A shock of a similar size would emerge today if crude prices stayed where they are. And if oil hits $150 per barrel, the increase in the energy share would be 0.7 percentage points of disposable income. With oil at $200 per barrel, it would rise by a full percentage point. That would still be milder than the 1970s, but enough to hurt badly. Though far from certain, every new day makes a US recession look less outlandish.
US President Donald Trump will receive a briefing on April 30 regarding plans for new military operations in Iran, according to a report by Axios. It triggered renewed fears among traders of a monthslong standoff in the Middle East, sending oil prices up.
As of 1145 GMT on April 30, Brent crude and US WTI futures were trading at $114 per barrel and $104 per barrel respectively.
President Donald Trump said Friday that he will hike US tariffs on cars and trucks from the European Union next week, charging that the bloc is not complying with an earlier trade deal.
The pact, which was struck last summer, had capped the US tariff on EU autos and parts at 15 percent, which is lower than the 25-percent duty that Trump imposed on many other trading partners.
These sector-specific duties were not affected by a Supreme Court ruling earlier in the year that struck down a swath of Trump's global levies.
But the US leader said Friday: "Based on the fact the European Union is not complying with our fully agreed to Trade Deal, next week I will be increasing Tariffs charged to the European Union for Cars and Trucks coming into the United States."
"The Tariff will be increased to 25%," he wrote on his Truth Social platform.
He told a Florida event later Friday that Washington had informed Germany of his threat because "they and other European nations have not adhered to our trade deal."
He accused German automakers like Mercedes-Benz and BMW of ripping off Americans.
Trump's announcement came a day after his renewed criticism of German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. Trump told Merz to focus on ending the Ukraine war instead of "interfering" on Iran.
Germany would likely be hit hard by a sharp vehicle tariff, as it is responsible for a significant amount of EU auto exports.
Reacting to the announcement, a European Commission spokesperson told AFP: "Should the US take measures inconsistent with the joint statement, we will keep our options open to protect EU interests."
The spokesperson added that the bloc is implementing its commitments "in line with standard legislative practice" and keeping the Trump administration updated during this process.
Last July, the EU had laid the groundwork for possible retaliation if talks with Washington fell through -- preparing a list of US goods that could be targeted.
- 'Light a fire' -
"President Trump has clearly lost patience with EU efforts to implement its commitments under the bilateral trade deal concluded months ago," former US trade official Wendy Cutler told AFP.
She said Trump appeared to be "hoping to light a fire under Brussels to accelerate its domestic procedures."
His threats to the EU are reminiscent of a similar move against South Korea months ago, added Cutler, who is now senior vice president at the Asia Society Policy Institute.
In late March, EU lawmakers gave their green light to the bloc's tariff deal with Trump, but with conditions.
A large majority of EU lawmakers agreed to cut EU tariffs on some US imports, as a first step towards implementing the 2025 deal, but they also sought additional safeguards.
Although the European Parliament has given its conditional approval to the EU-US trade pact, before the deal is implemented by the bloc, it still needs to be negotiated with EU states.
The new threat on European cars "explain why many small businesses expect to be cautious" with Trump's tariffs, said Dan Anthony, who heads "We Pay the Tariffs," a coalition of nearly 1,200 small businesses.
"You never know what might trigger the next tariff threat," Anthony added in a statement.
In April, EU trade chief Maros Sefcovic was in Washington to meet with counterparts including US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and trade envoy Jamieson Greer.
At the time, he said the EU was also seeking more progress in easing the effects of still-steep US steel tariffs, adding that talks were going in a positive direction.
The United States is the second largest market for new EU vehicle exports, after the United Kingdom, according to a 2025 fact sheet by the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association.
Over a fifth of EU vehicle exports went to the United States.
Germany alone exported some 450,000 vehicles to the United States in 2024, according to the VDA industry group. But that figure has since slipped.
The Bangladesh Bank (BB) has waived the requirement to maintain provisions against funds of banks and non-bank financial institutions stuck in five merging shariah-based lenders.
The decision was taken at a recent internal meeting of the central bank, officials familiar with the matter said, at a time when more than Tk 15,000 crore remain tied up in the troubled institutions.
As these funds have not been recovered for a prolonged period, the regulator has lifted the requirement to maintain provisions against them, they added.
The five merging banks are First Security Islami Bank, Global Islami Bank, Union Bank, Social Islami Bank, and Exim Bank. They were brought under the merger process by the interim government through the Bank Regulation Ordinance, 2025.
Around Tk 10,000 crore of the stuck funds belong to Islami Bank Bangladesh alone.
Banks are required to set aside 0.5-5 percent of operating profit against general category loans, rising to 20 percent for substandard loans, 50 percent for doubtful loans, and 100 percent for bad or loss category loans.
Initially, the BB’s bank supervision departments and the financial institutions and markets department had instructed banks to maintain provisions against funds stuck in the troubled banks.
The Bank Resolution Department (BRD) later clarified that such provisioning would not be required, as the funds fall under a specific resolution framework.
“The funds are not considered a total loss. Banks may receive shares after a certain period or recover the money with profit after five years,” a central bank official said, adding that the BRD has provided assurances in this regard.
Affected institutions are expected to either recover the money directly or receive equivalent value through long-term fixed deposits or shares, said the official.
The five banks were previously controlled by politically connected figures. During the Awami League-led government, Exim Bank was under Nazrul Islam Mazumder, former chairman of the Bangladesh Association of Banks. The other four were controlled by family members of Mohammed Saiful Alam, chairman of S Alam Group.
Allegations of widespread irregularities and fund embezzlement during that period led to severe liquidity crises, leaving the banks unable to repay depositors and institutional lenders.
As of September 2024, the total investment or loans of those five banks stood at Tk 1,92,787 crore, while total deposits stood at Tk 1,58,918 crore, BB data show.
Many of the worst-performing companies have outpaced market leaders in price gains in the secondary market over the past four months, as investors focus on short-term returns amid limited investment options.
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Apart from retailers, many institutional investors have not fixed any long-term investment strategy amid the liquidity crisis.
Ahead of the national election held on February 12, investors had been uncertain about the future market direction. After the election, investors' expectations regarding market stability faded as the US and Israel jointly struck Iran and waged war at the end of February.
As a result, the market outlook has become elusive, and investors remain fixated on speculative stocks in the hope of short-term gains.
This is the backdrop in which Dominage Steel Building Systems, despite a significantly negative P/E (price-to-earnings) ratio and one of its factories being shut, has continued its rally on the stock exchanges.
Dominage Steel registered a 131 per cent market price appreciation as of Thursday since January 1, while well-performing multinational company Linde BD experienced a 14.5 per cent decline during the period.
The board of Dominage Steel Building Systems last week disseminated price-sensitive information regarding the sale of their ownership stakes to Akij Resources and two individuals.
Some market operators said insiders, who were aware of the company's intention to sell ownership to the Akij conglomerate, might have played a role in the company's rally.
The rally of Dominage Steel does not reflect any fundamental strength.
Of the other non-performing companies that outperformed market leaders on the bourses, BBS Cables experienced a 30.3 per cent appreciation over the last four months.
The company distributed no dividends and reported a loss of Tk 856 million in FY25, increased from a loss of Tk 133 million in FY24. It has remained in the red in the last three quarters too.
The unjustified rally of BBS Cables, along with other non-performing companies, indicates that investors are hooked on short-term gains from speculative stocks.
Md. Ashequr Rahman, managing director of Midway Securities, said some groups had influenced the rallies of speculative stocks for short-term gains.
The financial performance of some of the companies that have seen a rally is better than that of other poor performers, but that is insignificant compared to blue-chip stocks that experienced correction.
"The absence of any new IPO is another reason why the secondary market has lost its buoyancy," Mr Rahman added.
The country's capital market has seen no new listings since March 2024.
The latest conflict between Iran and the US-Israel alliance disrupted fuel supply through the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.
Local manufacturers said their profitability would be seriously affected due to the abrupt rise in production costs induced by fuel price hikes.
Apprehension over profit decline has been reflected in stock movements.
For example, the stock price of Unilever Consumer Care closed at Tk 2,163.6 each on April 6, which fell further to Tk 2,065.80 by Thursday.
Meanwhile, the stock price of ACI fell to Tk 193.80 each share on Thursday, which was Tk 211.6 on April 15.
Listed multinational companies (MNCs) in Bangladesh had another difficult year in 2025, with most failing to claw back profits eroded by inflation and shrinking consumer demand.
Of the 13 MNCs listed in the stock market, 11 follow a December fiscal year-end. Ten have published results so far.
As per the published data, three saw profits rise in 2025 but remain below the previous year’s level, four hit five-year lows, and two incurred the highest losses in their operational history in the country. Only one, Robi Axiata, posted record profits.
“The economic situation was the main factor,” said Shahidul Islam, CEO of VIPB Asset Management Company, who has tracked the companies’ performances for years as a major shareholder with billions of taka invested.
Inflationary pressure raised raw material costs, but companies could not pass them on to consumers whose demand had already shrunk, he said.
Analysis of financial reports shows that the damage was broad. Most companies saw sales growth slow last year. Four -- Grameenphone, Bata Shoe, Heidelberg Cement, and Linde BD -- saw sales fall outright.
Among the companies, British American Tobacco’s (BATBC) profit fell 67 percent to Tk 584 crore in 2025, from Tk 1,788 crore in 2023, the highest level in the last five years. The figure was Tk 1,750.68 crore in 2024.
The tobacco company said, “2025 was marked by a challenging socioeconomic and geopolitical landscape characterised by inflationary pressures, currency devaluation, and constrained consumer purchasing power.”
The global economic slowdown and rising raw material costs added further complexity to the operating environment. The top two segments of the company recorded a volume decline of approximately 10 percent, it added.
RAK Ceramics posted its highest-ever loss of Tk 39 crore last year, a reversal from Tk 90 crore in profit in 2021.
Singer Bangladesh also incurred a huge loss of Tk 224 crore , the largest in its recent history.
Heidelberg Cement’s profit more than halved from its 2021 peak of Tk 47 crore.
The country’s largest telecom operator, Grameenphone’s profit dropped 18.5 percent year-on-year. The company attributed the decline to economic weakness and political uncertainty following the July 2024 uprising.
“The prolonged political uncertainty weakened business and investor confidence, while persistent inflation subdued job creation, and declining household purchasing power collectively constrained overall market demand,” it said.
Unilever Consumer Care and LafargeHolcim remained profitable but 18 percent and 14 percent below their 2023 levels, respectively.
Linde BD’s profit collapsed to Tk 34 crore after an anomalous Tk 642 crore in 2024, which was inflated by a one-off asset sale.
Robi Axiata bucked the trend, with profits rising 33 percent year-on-year to Tk 937 crore in 2025.
Marico and Berger Paints, which follow a March fiscal year-end, were excluded from the analysis.
The outlook for MNCs, Shahidul said, has darkened sharply in recent months.
A few months ago, conditions looked promising, but the US-Israel war on Iran has introduced new uncertainty.
“Now, the outlook depends on the war, thus the oil price. The overall economic situation may worsen if oil prices rise and the war is prolonged. It will impact the performance of the companies,” he added.
Bangladesh’s business climate is being held back by regulatory bottlenecks, inconsistent policies, weak trust, and institutional inefficiencies, which are reducing investment potential and weakening long-term investor confidence, experts said at a dialogue yesterday.
The remarks were made at a discussion titled “Business climate dialogue on improving the investment climate: why it is critical for the new government priorities the upcoming national budget”, organised by the Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce & Industry, Dhaka (MCCI) at its auditorium at Police Plaza in Gulshan.
“The real challenge is not competition but entering the market itself. Firms must be ready for a long-term commitment because operational hurdles -- from licensing delays to compliance burdens -- can discourage even established companies,” said Zinnia Huq, chief financial officer of Unilever Bangladesh.
She said regulatory approvals often take months due to weak coordination among agencies, which leads to conflicting requirements, such as dividend remittance rules clashing with tax approvals.
She added that legal risks remain high as cases move through multiple channels, reducing predictability.
Huq further said that labour regulations are uncertain because interpretations often change and are sometimes applied retrospectively, making business planning difficult.
Tax administration, she added, sometimes raises large initial claims against compliant firms, which are later adjusted after review.
Nuria Lopez of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in Bangladesh said the main issue is not a lack of opportunity but weak investor confidence, adding that an unfriendly business environment and unclear policy direction continue to discourage foreign investment.
She also said that taxation places additional pressure on businesses, as authorities often rely heavily on compliant firms, especially multinationals, creating an uneven playing field.
Sector-specific lobbying limits competition and makes it harder for new firms to enter the market, she added.
Lopez further said that institutional weaknesses, energy shortages, and the lack of a clear investment roadmap are increasing uncertainty, warning that Bangladesh could fall behind regional competitors.
Margub Kabir of Margub Kabir and Associates said trust is central to investment decisions and depends largely on dispute resolution.
He said Bangladesh remains weak in enforcing contracts and has previously ranked among the lowest globally due to a slow and overloaded judicial system.
Kabir also said arbitration, which foreign investors often prefer as it helps avoid court delays, offers limited benefit. This is because enforcing arbitral awards still requires going through the same lengthy court process, which reduces their effectiveness.
He added that the main problem is not a lack of laws but weak implementation, stressing the need to simplify procedures, appoint specialised commercial judges, and introduce faster enforcement systems.
Mahmud Hasan Khan, president of the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA), said improving the business environment must begin with core infrastructure reforms.
He said a reliable energy supply is the most urgent need, especially for industries moving into higher-value production. He added that man-made fibre manufacturing requires uninterrupted power, as even short outages can stop production completely.
He also pointed to inefficiencies in key logistics routes, including the Dhaka-Chattogram highway and port operations, which are increasing costs and reducing competitiveness.
M Masrur Reaz of Policy Exchange Bangladesh said Bangladesh’s past growth has been driven largely by private sector investment, which helped manufacturing rise from 8 per cent of GDP decades ago to 25 per cent today.
However, he said this momentum is now slowing, with private investment declining and foreign direct investment remaining below 1 per cent of GDP, far behind regional peers.
He said this slowdown comes at a critical time, as the country aims to become a $1 trillion economy and create millions of jobs. These goals depend heavily on higher investment.
He added that the upcoming budget will be an important policy signal.
Reaz also highlighted practical challenges, including weak logistics, low productivity, energy shortages, and limited export diversification, which are worsened by fragmented reforms and poor coordination across sectors.
Farooq Ahmed, secretary general of MCCI, Sumitra Kumar Mutsuddi, head of corporate at BSRM, and Sumaiya T Ahmed, head of sustainability at Pran-RFL Group, also spoke at the event.
Business leaders' hopes for a lighter tax burden in the upcoming national budget were effectively dashed yesterday (29 April) as the government rejected pleas for tax cuts for now. Instead, it assured removal of the systemic obstacles that have long stifled the ease of doing business.
The message from the government came during a pre-budget consultation jointly organised by the National Board of Revenue (NBR) and the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FBCCI).
With the national budget set to be unveiled in June, business leaders raised a range of demands at a high-level meeting with government representatives, calling for tax reductions and the removal of various barriers to doing business to support trade and commerce under current conditions, while urging the government to take concrete steps to address these challenges.
Responding to the demands, Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury said, "We would like to provide relief in tax and VAT in these hard times, but we may not be able to do so in this budget. However, we will remove barriers to business."
He urged businesses to identify specific problems, adding, "Inform us about corruption at ports and all the obstacles to doing business. We will remove these within the next three months."
Highlighting the broader economic strain, the minister called on businesses to support the government in navigating the current crisis. "We are going through a difficult time, and everyone must understand that," he said, asking for cooperation at least for this budget cycle.
At the event, NBR Chairman Abdur Rahman Khan also cautioned that tax and VAT decisions may not meet business expectations, though he echoed assurances that efforts would be made to simplify doing business.
Businesses press for tax reforms
Leading business figures from various sectors outlined a range of challenges in their remarks at the meeting, highlighting the obstacles they face across industries.
The FBCCI called for "special priority" to create a business-friendly tax system by eliminating harassment and complexities in tax collection.
The apex business body demanded an increase in the tax-free income threshold for individuals, a reduction in corporate tax rates, and the abolition of the mandatory minimum tax on company turnover – which firms must pay even when incurring losses.
It also proposed a gradual withdrawal of advance income tax (AIT) and advance tax (AT) at the import stage, while suggesting measures to expand the overall tax base. In total, the FBCCI submitted 165 written proposals to the government ahead of the budget, which is expected to be announced in June by the BNP-led administration.
In his written statement, FBCCI Administrator Abdur Rahim Khan said reducing the cost of doing business, attracting and protecting investment, improving port capacity, ensuring balanced currency and tariff policies, lowering logistics costs, and strengthening governance and transparency in infrastructure – including power and energy – were essential.
Small industries under pressure
Business leaders also warned that small industries are under severe strain. Obaidur Rahman, president of the Bangladesh Aluminium Manufacturers Association, urged the government to step in.
"Our industries are shutting down. Please save these industries," he said.
Calling for a shift in tax policy, he added, "Increase direct taxes. Send officers to district and upazila levels – significant income tax can be collected from there. But we are pleading to save small industries."
Anwar-Ul Alam Chowdhury Parvez, president of the Bangladesh Chamber of Industries, presented data showing slowed growth across sectors due to global conflicts, energy shortages and other pressures. He argued that instead of raising taxes, the focus should be on widening the tax net.
"Businesses are questioning what benefits they receive in return for paying taxes," he said, adding that many also report harassment during tax collection.
Allegations of harassment
Imran Hossain, secretary general of the Bangladesh Restaurant Owners' Association, alleged that bureaucratic complexities are turning businesses into "systematic thieves".
"Enforcement actions disproportionately target those who pay VAT and taxes, while non-compliant businesses often go unchecked," he said.
He proposed lowering VAT rates and introducing a unified tax system, adding that enforcement drives against VAT-compliant restaurants had intensified immediately after discussions with the NBR.
"Administrative pressure and field-level harassment have made it increasingly difficult to run businesses. On one hand, there is pressure of increased VAT, and on the other, irregular enforcement drives. If this continues, we will have no option but to shut down our businesses," he warned.
Expressing frustration over the lack of a level playing field, he said, "Yes, I admit it – we are forced into dishonesty because the system does not treat everyone equally. How do we get out of this? This bureaucratic structure will never allow it."
He also criticised both bureaucrats and politicians, alleging that officials fail to establish effective systems while in office, only to acknowledge problems after retirement.
Other business leaders echoed concerns, calling for lower VAT and tax rates, reduced harassment by field officials, and stronger governance in the banking and financial sectors. They warned that without reform, it would be difficult to build a stable economic foundation.
The FBCCI also proposed strengthening the central bank as an independent regulator to ensure discipline in the banking sector, and reducing government borrowing from banks to avoid crowding out private sector credit.
However, the finance minister at the event said, "The shortfall in the banking sector is not something this government can resolve easily."
Highlighting the impact on businesses, he acknowledged that "due to problems in the banking sector, businesses are unable to repay their liabilities."
He added that he had informed the International Monetary Fund that businesses are facing a serious capital shortfall. Explaining the reasons, he said, "Because of currency depreciation and inflation, there has been a 50% erosion of capital."
Equal incentives for emerging export sectors
The minister also pledged to extend incentives similar to those enjoyed by the ready-made garment (RMG) sector to other promising export industries.
Currently, the RMG sector benefits from duty-free import of raw materials and back-to-back letters of credit against export orders – measures widely credited with driving its growth. The sector accounts for around 85% of Bangladesh's total exports.
Addressing concerns about misuse, he said, "If 10 out of 100 people misuse facilities, does that mean the remaining 90 should be deprived? We will open up facilities for promising sectors."
He acknowledged allegations that businesses operating under bonded warehouse facilities face harassment from customs officials, adding that cooperation from the private sector would be needed to address the issue.
War costs and budget pressures
The minister said the current government has inherited significant liabilities, including outstanding payments of Tk40,000 crore in the power sector.
He added that the government had spent nearly $4 billion (around Tk48,000 crore) due to the Middle East conflict.
In light of these pressures, Bangladesh has requested a two-year cushion from the IMF to stabilise the economy. "We have told the IMF that we need a two-year cushion. From the third year, the economy will take off," he said.
Case for a larger budget
Responding to criticism from economists over the government's plan to maintain a large budget, the finance minister argued that increased spending is necessary to stimulate growth.
"To generate growth in a low-level economy, improve citizen services, create demand and reduce poverty, we must invest in the economy," he said, adding that development spending would need to increase.
He acknowledged concerns over misuse of funds, noting that large budgets become problematic if money is siphoned abroad. "But if spending is of quality and yields returns, then such investment is justified," he said.
Commerce Minister Khandakar Abdul Muktadir stressed the need to balance business interests with state revenue. "We must look at both business and the national exchequer," he said. "How will the economy progress if the tax-to-GDP ratio does not increase?"
Bangladesh's investment climate is being vitiated by a mix of bureaucratic delays, policy uncertainty and rising business costs, making it harder for both local and foreign investors to expand operations and create jobs.
Experts say unless these longstanding barriers are addressed quickly, the country risks losing competitiveness and missing major investment opportunities.
Policy Exchange Bangladesh has identified eight major obstacles, with bureaucratic complexity and a restrictive regulatory framework topping the list.
Energy shortages, infrastructure bottlenecks, high tax pressure, weak institutional coordination and the absence of a clear investment strategy were also cited as major concerns at a policy dialogue in the capital on Wednesday.
The Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MCCI) and Policy Exchange Bangladesh jointly organised the meeting.
Policy Exchange Bangladesh Chairman and CEO Dr M Masrur Reaz presented the keynote paper titled "Improving the Investment Climate: Why It's Critical for New Government Priorities and the Upcoming National Budget."
In his presentation, Masrur Reaz said the country also faces the absence of a coordinated domestic and foreign investment strategy, which continues to weaken investor confidence. Newspapersubscriptions
He identified additional barriers including the lack of structured investment promotion, a gap between political commitments and implementation, and weak coordination between the public and private sectors.
He also pointed to limited coordination between the Prime Minister's Office and various ministries, the absence of diversified competitive sectors, leaving the economy heavily dependent on only five key sectors, and inadequate post-investment support or aftercare services.
Against this backdrop, Policy Exchange proposed a set of immediate reforms to strengthen investor confidence.
Masrur Reaz said the government can pursue seven priority reforms. Countrypolitics overview
These include formulating a comprehensive national investment policy, simplifying business registration procedures, addressing infrastructure and energy constraints, ensuring efficient use of economic zones, developing skilled human resources, promoting green investment, and establishing a modern legal framework for contract enforcement and dispute resolution.
BGMEA President Md Mahmud Hasan Khan attended the event as special guest, while EuroCham Chairperson Nuria López, corporate lawyer Barrister Margub Kabir, and Zinnia Huq, Chief Financial Officer (CFO) of Unilever Bangladesh, participated as panel speakers.
EuroCham Chairperson Nuria López said the absence of a free trade agreement (FTA) with the European Union, Bangladesh's largest export destination, is already affecting investor confidence.
"Do we have a free trade agreement with our major customer at this moment-the European Union? No," she said, noting that countries such as Vietnam and India have already secured similar agreements.
She warned that without preferential access to the EU market, Bangladesh risks losing competitiveness to regional peers offering more predictable trade frameworks.
"We need to have, we must have, we must start right now an FTA," López said. "If we don't have free trade access to our largest market, we don't have a horizon to invest." Economicanalysis reports
She also said uncertainty over future market access is influencing investment decisions.
"I have recently started a new business in the agro-processing sector, but I am uncertain about the future. I do not know whether I will be able to export to Europe on equal terms with competitors from countries that already enjoy free market access," she said.
López stressed that predictability is essential for attracting long-term investment, adding that Bangladesh currently lacks it.
"We don't have predictability. We don't know what's going to happen in the future," she said, questioning whether there is a clear and investor-friendly policy direction.
She linked the urgency of an EU FTA to Bangladesh's broader challenge in attracting foreign direct investment (FDI), saying policy uncertainty continues to undermine investor trust.
Addressing the event as special guest, BGMEA President Md Mahmud Hasan Khan said Bangladesh should expand export markets through bilateral agreements with countries such as South Africa, Brazil and Turkey.
He noted that around US$8 billion in new opportunities have emerged in the ready-made garment sector, with further potential for expansion. Bangladeshmarket analysis
However, he stressed that high tariffs in these markets make such agreements necessary.
"We are discussing this matter with the government," he said.
He also identified energy shortages as the most critical challenge for businesses.
"For entrepreneurs, energy is a greater concern than financial constraints," he said, adding that without resolving energy and infrastructure bottlenecks, financial support would have limited impact.
Unilever Bangladesh CFO Zinnia Huq said business registration and documentation processes in Bangladesh are extremely slow and time-consuming.
She pointed to weak coordination among government agencies, which reduces efficiency and delays business operations.
Despite a double taxation avoidance treaty, she said prior approval from the National Board of Revenue (NBR) is still required for dividend remittance, making the process unnecessarily complex. She also highlighted a lack of transparency in audit procedures.
Barrister Margub Kabir said dispute resolution is central to investor confidence, but Bangladesh continues to struggle with a slow judicial system.
He cited the example of a Japanese company operating in Bangladesh for 25 years, while a contractual dispute dating back to 2018 remains unresolved.
"There is no lack of laws in Bangladesh; the issue is making them simpler and the process faster," he said.
Kabir added that foreign investors generally prefer arbitration to avoid lengthy court proceedings. However, even after arbitration awards, enforcement through courts faces similar delays.
He called for specialised commercial courts, faster enforcement mechanisms, and judges with commercial expertise to ensure timely resolution of disputes.
MCCI Secretary General Farooq Ahmed delivered the welcome address.
When the IMF’s Asia-Pacific director signalled to Bangladesh’s delegation in Washington last week that the expected $1.3 billion tranche would not be released in June, the key message was not financial but what Bangladesh can credibly offer in return, and what it cannot.
The Spring Meetings’ macro position was the strongest in three years. Gross reserves are roughly $35 billion, the BPM6 measure is above $30 billion for the first time since mid-2023, and March remittances reached a record $3.75 billion. At this level, the IMF pause signals reform credibility rather than liquidity.
The four unmet conditions remain unchanged: revenue mobilisation, banking governance, removal of electricity and gas subsidies, and a market-determined exchange rate. All were agreed under the $4.7 billion programme approved in January 2023 and expanded to $5.5 billion in June 2025. All have been monitored. None has moved materially in eighteen months. The interim administration stabilised the currency and rebuilt reserves, but did not deliver structural reform.
Pakistan in 2014 is a relevant comparison. It entered a three-year IMF programme in September 2013 with reserves near $6 billion, an 8 percent fiscal deficit, and similar reform conditions. By mid-2014, reviews had stalled on comparable structural issues.
The difference was what Pakistan could offer. I worked on the privatisation of state oil and gas firms during that programme. The value was not only revenue but a pipeline of sellable state assets. When the Oil and Gas Development Company’s follow-on was delayed in November 2014 due to falling oil prices, the IMF accepted it because the broader privatisation programme remained intact. A credible monetisation pipeline strengthens negotiating position.
That lever is absent in Bangladesh. It has never issued a Eurobond. Commercial borrowing is around 11 percent of external debt, with the rest largely concessional. This worked when multilateral flows were predictable, but becomes a vulnerability as LDC graduation on November 24, 2026 (or delayed) shifts financing terms, and IMF support is uncertain.
There is also no asset pipeline. The BSEC has identified fifteen profitable state-owned enterprises and multinational subsidiaries for listing over three years, but none have progressed. Banks are under restructuring, with the ADB’s $500 million banking-sector support focused on stabilisation, not privatisation. The Sammilito Islami Bank merger, formalised in December, remains far from saleable.
The core constraint is fiscal, not external. Tax-to-GDP fell to 6.56 percent in FY25, below the programme assumption of 7.9 percent for FY24, with projections reaching 10.5 percent only by FY35. The Centre for Policy Dialogue has repeatedly highlighted this, and Fahmida Khatun has stressed rising debt-service pressure as LDC graduation approaches. Without revenue mobilisation, remittance-led stabilisation will fade, and monetary policy will carry an unsustainable burden.
A programme lapse would not cause immediate stress, given strong reserves, but the structural cost would be significant. ADB and World Bank operations are cross-conditioned on IMF continuity and would be reoriented if it fails. The policy anchor would weaken just as graduation removes concessional financing advantages.
Between now and the October Annual Meetings, a credible alternative is needed. A B2/negative Eurobond would be costly. More viable options include a remittance-backed Sukuk, a diaspora instrument, or partial listing of a profitable state entity. The Finance Ministry could task the central bank and Privatisation Commission with a monetisation pipeline before the June ECOSOC meetings.
Stabilisation without reform is a rolling arrangement. The challenge is what can credibly be placed on the table in return.
The government will provide all promising export sectors with the same facilities currently available to the readymade garment (RMG) industry, Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury said yesterday at a meeting with business leaders.
“If any promising export sector comes to us with a proposal, we will extend to that sector the same facilities that are available to the garment industry,” he said at the pre-budget meeting organised by the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FBCCI) and the revenue board at the Pan Pacific Sonargaon.
Bonded warehouse facilities, back-to-back arrangements, and all other relevant support will be provided, he added, citing the gold and diamond sectors as examples of industries held back by the absence of such support.
Goldsmiths, he noted, were leaving the country for a lack of opportunities.
Bonded warehouse facilities allow export-oriented industries to import raw materials duty-free, on the condition that finished goods are not sold domestically. Currently, only the RMG sector enjoys the facility in full; the leather goods sector receives it partially.
The National Board of Revenue (NBR) had long resisted broader extension, citing fears of duty-free materials being diverted to the local market, despite calls from economists to extend the facilities across the board.
The minister acknowledged those concerns but said they could not justify inaction. “It cannot be the case that we do nothing out of fear of theft,” he said, adding that preventing misuse is a separate issue, and solutions will be addressed accordingly.
On taxation, he said the government could not offer broad incentives at present but would work to lower the cost of doing business.
“Wherever you are facing obstacles, let us know, and we will remove them. Tell us where your costs are increasing, and we will directly address those issues within the next three months,” he told businessmen at the meeting.
This is already part of the ruling BNP’s manifesto, but businesses’ input will make it more effective, he noted, adding that while removing all obstacles might not be possible, the government will eliminate most of them. “Give us some time. If we fail, we will take responsibility.”
Stating that many have spoken about expanding the tax net, the minister requested business associations to assist in bringing those who are still outside the tax net into the system.
Painting a difficult economic picture, Khosru said the new government has inherited a damaged banking sector, weakened stock market and over Tk 40,000 crore in unpaid energy bills.
In addition, due to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, the government is facing an additional energy cost of around $4 billion, he added.
“We are navigating through these challenges across all sectors, but the government does not have unlimited resources… It will take some time for the situation to improve,” the minister said, adding that the government and businesses need to work together to overcome this.
Noting that businesses are also experiencing a serious capital shortage, he said due to currency depreciation, many have seen about 40 percent of their capital wiped out. On top of this, a 13–14 percent inflation rate has further eroded value. “Altogether, nearly 50 percent of capital has been eroded.”
Describing the economy currently in a “low-level equilibrium”, Khosru said generating growth is necessary to move it upward and attract investment. “If poverty, which has risen significantly, is not reduced through higher expenditure, demand will not be generated.”
On the high borrowing costs, he said in the past, monetary supply was tightened to control inflation, but its effectiveness is uncertain.
With interest rates at 15 percent, he said the government would increase the development budget to stimulate growth, but cautioned that investment quality, not volume, was the priority. “If funds are misused or siphoned abroad in the name of mega projects, then a large budget serves no purpose.”
He projected a two-year adjustment period before the economy stabilises. “By the third year, the economy will turn around.”
Khandakar Abdul Muktadir, minister of commerce, industries, textiles and jute, said energy shortages and high borrowing costs had left many industrial sectors fragile, and that resolving those two issues was a prerequisite to new investment.
On reducing the cost of doing business, he said alongside providing targeted relief to the private sector, proposals will be made considering how to strengthen the national exchequer.
He also called for the jewellery sector to be brought fully into the formal economy, arguing that Bangladesh had a skilled workforce but lacked laboratories, design infrastructure, and supportive policy.
“If neighbouring countries can export several billion dollars’ worth of gold annually, why can’t we? We have the technical knowledge and skills. What we need are better laboratories, design facilities, and a supportive government policy,” he added.
Kamran T Rahman, president of the Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said the effective tax rate for many businesses reached 40-50 percent when advance and source taxes were factored in.
He called for unconditional corporate tax reductions, relaxed cash transaction rules, an integrated taxpayer profile system, and online appeal hearings for income tax, VAT, and customs disputes.
The Investment Corporation of Bangladesh (ICB), which is mandated to invest in the capital market, is struggling itself to stay afloat amid an unprecedented financial crisis.
According to its audited financial statements for FY25, the state-owned non-bank financial institution incurred a record loss of Tk588 crore in the first nine months of the current fiscal year. This marks a 111% year-on-year surge in losses, driven largely by prolonged volatility in the capital market.
The report also shows that ICB's bank borrowing costs rose by more than 31%, with interest payments increasing significantly during the period, disclosed in the audited financial statements for FY25.
Investment Corporation of Bangladesh (ICB), the country's largest stock market investor, primarily earns through trading shares—generating capital gains from buying and selling equities, as well as dividend income from listed companies.
In addition, the corporation generates revenue through fees, commissions, and service charges by offering various financial services via its subsidiaries.
As of June 2025, ICB's consolidated investment in stocks stood at Tk13,508 crore at cost value. However, the market value of this portfolio declined to Tk8,256 crore, resulting in a deficit of Tk5,252 crore. This represents a loss of approximately 38.88% relative to the cost price, according to its data.
Officials attribute the decline in earnings to the prolonged volatility in the capital market over the past years. This instability was driven by political uncertainties surrounding the general election, adverse macroeconomic conditions, and continued bearish sentiment influenced by global factors, including tensions related to the US-Iran war situation.
ICB Chairman Professor Abu Ahmed told The Business Standard that the company's core operations are closely tied to the performance of the capital market, further noting that during the reporting period, the market did not perform well due to various factors, which hit the institution badly.
Capital gains—once generated from buying and selling shares—fell sharply as the institution was unable to offload stocks amid a bearish market trend. At the same time, ICB faced increased financial pressure due to higher interest payments on deposits and borrowings from banks and other institutions, which drove up overall borrowing costs, he said.
Previously, the interest rate on funds borrowed for market investments was around 7 percent, but it has now risen to 10 percent or more, significantly increasing expenses. As a result, the institution incurred substantial losses.
When asked about the way forward, the ICB chairman said a major portfolio overhaul is essential, as considerable value has already been eroded. Many shares were acquired at high prices, while their current market value has dropped sharply. In addition, high-cost borrowings must be repaid, potentially with government support.
"We are considering raising capital through the issuance of rights shares to repay borrowings. Once implemented, this plan will reduce liabilities and lower interest expenses, providing ICB with much-needed breathing space," he said.
"We are considering raising capital through a rights issue to repay borrowings. Once implemented, this plan will reduce liabilities and lower interest payments, providing ICB with some financial breathing room," he said.
Capital gains fell by 67%:
According to its quarterly financial statements, during the July–March period, ICB's capital gains fell by 67% as it was unable to sell shares due to a volatile capital market. Its capital gains stood at Tk67 crore at the end of March, significantly down from Tk201 crore.
Its dividend income, generated from payouts by listed companies, declined by 19% to Tk236 crore, compared to Tk294.84 crore during the same period of the previous fiscal year.
Income from fees, commissions, and service charges also declined significantly over the same period.
As its core income decreased while interest payments on deposits and borrowings increased, the company incurred an operational loss of Tk406.12 crore.
Interest payments surge by 31%:
Financial statements of the Investment Corporation of Bangladesh (ICB) show that it incurred Tk914.86 crore in interest expenses on deposits and borrowings during the first nine months of the current fiscal year.
In the same period of the previous fiscal year, the amount stood at Tk699 crore—marking a sharp increase of over 31%.
According to its financial disclosures, ICB's total deposits and borrowings reached Tk7,195 crore as of June 2025. Of this, Tk4,058 crore came from banks, Tk3,125 crore from other institutions, and the remainder from deposits collected from the general public.
Including deposits, borrowings, government loans, bonds, and other liabilities, ICB's total liabilities stood at Tk18,063 crore at the end of March.
Once a highly profitable state-owned investment bank, ICB reported a historic loss exceeding Tk1,000 crore for the first time in its history in FY25. The loss of Tk1,213.86 crore in fiscal year 2024–25 was driven by higher provisioning linked to poor investment decisions in several weak non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs), erosion of its investment portfolio amid a volatile capital market, and reliance on high-cost bank borrowings to finance market activities.
Although ICB had previously faced quarterly losses due to market volatility, such a significant annual loss is unprecedented, according to internal sources.
As a result of the substantial losses, the company did not declare any dividend for shareholders for FY2025.
Soybean oil prices have been raised by Tk4 per litre, setting the new rate at Tk199 per litre.
Following the adjustment, a 5-litre bottle will cost Tk975, up from the previous price of Tk955.
Commerce Minister Khandaker Abdul Muktadir announced the revised prices today (29 April) after a meeting to review edible oil rates, saying the adjustment was made in line with market conditions.
Meanwhile, loose soybean oil has been priced at Tk180 per litre, up from Tk176. The price of palm oil remained unchanged at Tk166 per litre.
Justifying the upward revision, the minister said traders had been purchasing oil at elevated prices since Ramadan and selling at a loss, prompting persistent appeals from importers and refiners for a price correction, reports UNB.
"The prices of import-dependent commodities have risen due to adverse global conditions, placing significant strain on businesses," Muktadir said. "Traders had sought a steeper increase, but the government has kept prices within consumers' reach."
The minister assured consumers that prices would be reviewed and readjusted once the international soybean oil market stabilises.
Traders pledged to sell at the newly fixed rates and committed to making no further revision requests ahead of Eid-ul-Adha, he added.
The price adjustment comes amid a prolonged supply crunch lasting over a month, particularly for five-litre bottled soybean oil.
Market surveys indicate the product has already been changing hands at Tk980 to over Tk1,020, well above the official ceiling of Tk955, underscoring the gap between regulated and street-level prices that the revised rates now seek to narrow.
Earlier on 7 December last year, the price of bottled soybean oil was set at Tk195 per litre, and loose soybean was priced at Tk176 per litre. Palm oil prices saw a sharper rise, with the rate increasing by Tk16 per litre to Tk166, from the earlier price of Tk150.
Two listed companies of Alif Group—Alif Industries Limited and Alif Manufacturing Limited—have taken a preliminary decision to transfer their business management operations to US-based JIT International Inc.
According to disclosures made on the Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) on Tuesday (28 April), the decisions were made at board meetings held at the companies' registered offices.
The move remains subject to compliance with applicable laws, regulations, and approvals from relevant authorities.
Following the announcement, trading of both companies' shares was halted on the Dhaka Stock Exchange today (29 April).
The companies stated that JIT International Inc., located at 45 Lockatong Road, Stockton, Stockton, New Jersey, USA, has expressed its interest in acquiring strategic control and management of the two Alif Group firms.
To facilitate the process, the boards have authorised Managing Director Md Azimul Islam to initiate and complete the necessary formalities for the proposed transaction.
At the same meetings, both companies appointed Mir Hasan Ali and Ziaul Abedin as independent directors. Mir Hasan Ali was elected chairman of the board while Ziaul Abedin was appointed vice chairman.
Md Tuhin Reza has also been appointed chief executive officer (CEO) of both companies with immediate effect. Additionally, Md Kamal Hossain has been appointed Company Secretary of Alif Industries Limited.
Alif Manufacturing Limited also approved similar decisions regarding the transfer of strategic control to JIT International Inc., with Md Azimul Islam assigned to lead and coordinate the process and complete all required formalities.
The Board further directed that the CEO coordinate with all relevant stakeholders—including regulatory authorities, banks, financial institutions, and others—to implement the proposed transaction.
The company has not yet disclosed details regarding management fees or whether JIT International Inc will subsequently acquire shares or ownership in the companies. The timeline for completing the process has also not been specified.
Managing Director Md Azimul could not be reached for comment despite multiple attempts via phone. He also did not respond to text messages.
A company official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the decision is still at a preliminary stage and that further details will be disclosed in due course.
The official added that the move comes as the current management has faced challenges in efficiently operating the businesses.
Limited information is available about JIT International Inc. However, unofficial sources suggest that it is a US-based company associated with buying-house operations, which may potentially source garments from Alif Group.
Commerce Minister Khandakar Abdul Muktadir yesterday (29 April) called for bringing the gold trade under the formal economy, asserting that the jewellery sector holds untapped export potential worth billions of dollars for Bangladesh.
"People think the gold business is part of a black economy. I will not get into the black-and-white debate; what we want is the entire sector to become part of the visible economy," he said while speaking at a consultative committee meeting of the National Board of Revenue (NBR) held at a city hotel.
Pointing to India's $52 billion annual earnings from gold jewellery exports, Muktadir said Bangladesh possesses craftsmen of comparable skills, yet the country has little to show for it. "Bangladesh should be earning at least $12-14 billion from this sector, but that is simply not happening."
To unlock the sector's potential and generate export revenue, he stressed the need to upgrade laboratory facilities, modernise jewellery designs, and overhaul government policies to align with contemporary market demands.
The minister also identified the energy crisis and high interest rates on bank loans as major impediments to doing business, cautioning that failure to improve the tax-to-GDP ratio will significantly constrain the country's economic momentum.
He called on the business community to shift their mindset towards tax compliance and contribute meaningfully to national development.
Earlier in the meeting, the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry proposed raising the tax-free income ceiling to Tk5 lakh for general taxpayers and Tk5.5 lakh for women in the upcoming budget, while also recommending capping the highest tax rate at 25 percent.
The apex trade body further demanded an increase in the Export Development Fund beyond its current $7 billion limit and sought budgetary support for the implementation of the 'One District, One Product (ODOP)' programme.
Bangladesh and the European Union (EU) have expressed a renewed commitment to deepening their long-standing partnership.
The fifth round of Bangladesh-EU Diplomatic Consultations was held today (29 April) after a gap of nearly five years, according to a press statement.
The consultations were co-chaired by Foreign Secretary Asad Alam Siam and Erik Kurzweil, managing director for Asia Pacific at the European External Action Service.
The meeting reviewed Bangladesh-EU relations and explored cooperation in priority sectors, with Dhaka emphasising a forward-looking partnership in line with evolving strategic and economic realities, according to the statement.
The discussions followed the recent initialling of the Partnership and Cooperation Agreement (PCA), which both sides expect will provide a structured framework for future cooperation once internal processes are finalised.
The EU acknowledged Bangladesh's February 2026 parliamentary elections, referring to the final report of its Election Observation Mission. The two sides also exchanged views on democratic governance, human rights and the rule of law.
According to the statement, the new government, formed with a public mandate, seeks to bring fresh momentum to bilateral ties and realise untapped potential.
Bangladesh highlighted the importance of preferential market access to sustain trade ties and outlined interest in future arrangements, including a possible Free Trade Agreement and an Investment Protection Agreement.
Discussions also covered cooperation in research and innovation, with Bangladesh expressing interest in broader participation in Horizon Europe and joint initiatives on knowledge exchange, technology transfer and capacity building.
Photo: Courtesy
Photo: Courtesy
On migration, Bangladesh highlighted progress in labour sector reforms and stressed the importance of expanding safe and regular migration pathways. Both sides also emphasised cooperation to combat human trafficking and irregular migration.
On climate change, Bangladesh reiterated its vulnerabilities and stressed the need for enhanced access to climate finance, technology transfer and support for adaptation and resilience, including under initiatives such as the EU's Global Gateway.
The two sides also exchanged views on regional and global developments, including the Middle East crisis, and reaffirmed their commitment to multilateralism and a rules-based international order. Bangladesh reiterated the need for sustained international support to resolve the Rohingya crisis.
Both sides underscored the importance of holding regular consultations to fully harness the potential of Bangladesh-EU relations, the statement added.
Indian consumer goods maker AWL Agri Business is grappling with a roughly 20% surge in some crude-linked input costs as the Middle East conflict drives up prices for fuel, chemicals and packaging materials, its CEO said.
The pressures reflect a broader industry trend, with peers such as bottled water maker Bisleri and Dove soapmaker Hindustan Unilever raising prices to counter higher conflict-linked input costs.
"Costs have gone up for us in terms of chemicals, packing material and coal, so that is something which remains a cause of concern even today," Shrikant Kanhere, AWL's managing director and CEO, told Reuters in an interview.
AWL, home of brands including Fortune cooking oil and Kohinoor rice, is adjusting prices in line with market movements, absorbing part of the increase while passing the rest on to consumers, Kanhere said, without giving details.
Input costs for some crude-linked materials have risen by about 20% since the conflict began, translating into a cost impact of roughly 25 to 50 basis points, he added.
Global oil prices have surged amid fears of supply disruptions. Brent crude has climbed from the low $70s a barrel before the Middle East conflict to above $110, market data show.
The company, which is cutting packaging and fuel use at its plants to limit the hit to profits, expects per-tonne margins to be broadly stable in fiscal 2027.
AWL is also expanding distribution and investing heavily in online channels and large-format grocers, which together posted nearly 50% growth last year, in a push to scale up volumes.
Kanhere forecast sales volume growth of 8% to 9% in fiscal 2027, nearly double last year's pace, with edible oils growing at a mid-single-digit rate and foods posting double-digit growth.
Lending growth to euro zone businesses picked up in March, European Central Bank data showed on Wednesday, even as the Iran war depressed economic sentiment and pushed up energy costs.
Bank credit to businesses rose by 3.2% last month, a slight acceleration from the 3.0% in February, while loan growth to households was steady at 3.0%.
The M3 measure of money circulating in the euro zone, often an indicator of future activity, accelerated to 3.2% from 3.0%, above expectations for 3.1% growth in a Reuters poll of analysts.
On 6 April, India's indigenously developed 500 MWe nuclear Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) at a power plant in Kalpakkam in Tamil Nadu successfully attained first criticality.
What it means in simple terms is that the nuclear reaction in the reactor has become safely self-sustaining and is on its way to generating electricity.
There are two key takeaways from the feat: one, it puts India in the second stage of its three-stage nuclear power programme conceived in the 1950s by Homi Jehangir Bhabha, the father of the country's nuclear programme.
Second, once fully operational, India will become only the second country after Russia to operate a commercial fast breeder reactor.
The Kalpakkam power project was formally approved in 2003 and it took 23 years to reach the second stage.
While several countries have developed or operated experimental fast reactors, specifically the USA, the UK, France, Japan, Germany and China, most of these programmes are currently shut down.
Fast breeder technology forms the vital link between India's current fleet of pressurised heavy water reactors, heavily dependent on imported enriched uranium, and the future deployment of thorium-based reactors, leveraging the country's abundant thorium resources for long-term clean energy generation. Nuclear power contributes about % of India's electricity from 8.78 gigawatts of installed capacity.
It will take some months before the PFBR at Kalpakkam produces electricity and reaches full capacity for commercial use. A number of experiments need to be conducted at low power, which have to be evaluated by the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) for its go-ahead for commercial power operation.
India's three-stage atomic power programme envisages becoming independent of imports and achieving energy security through the use of thorium, of which the country has vast reserves. This is where the PFBR technology plays the role of a bridge between the current fleet of pressurised heavy water reactors using enriched uranium and the future deployment of thorium-based reactors for long-term clean energy generation targets.
India has a fleet of 18–20 pressurised heavy water reactors that use natural uranium as fuel and produce plutonium-239 (Pu-239) as a by-product in spent fuel, which has civilian as well as defence applications.
India's present installed nuclear power capacity is 8780 MW and the nuclear electricity generated during 2024–25 is 56681 million units, according to data from the Atomic Energy Department. In 2024–25, the share of nuclear power was about 3.1% in India's total electricity generation.
Visa shares jumped 5% in premarket trading on Wednesday after the payments-processing company beat estimates for second-quarter profit and lifted expectations for full-year earnings, as consumer spending remained strong.
Payments volume showed continued growth as consumers remained resilient in the quarter, even as escalations in the Middle East worsened economic uncertainty.
CEO Ryan McInerney said in a post-earnings call that Visa was closely monitoring the situation in the region. The company said several factors would offset weakness in cross-border travel, such as stronger US-bound demand linked to the FIFA World Cup and higher commercial travel volumes.
Cross-border payments, viewed as a real-time gauge of global trade and travel because of Visa's scale, are closely monitored by analysts and economists. The company's cross-border volume in the second quarter rose 12% on a constant-dollar basis, compared with 13% a year earlier.
"There's a lot to be impressed by in Visa's print, particularly in the context of investor concerns going in that cross-border growth would dramatically slow in April," J.P. Morgan analysts said in a note.
Shares of the company have lost about 12% so far in 2026, lagging behind the broader S&P 500 index, but still outperforming American Express.
"Visa posted its strongest growth profile in years supported by multiple self-reinforcing levers while doing well to articulate upside potential from agentic commerce and stablecoins," TD Cowen analysts said in a note.
The company's board also authorised a new $20 billion multi-year share repurchase programme.
Visa is investing in organic growth and acquisitions, and the share repurchase shows the company's "ability to have a balanced capital allocation strategy where we return excess free cash flow to clients," finance chief Chris Suh said in an interview with Reuters.