News

UAE exits Arab oil exporter group OAPEC
04 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

The United Arab Emirates has left the Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries (OAPEC), an alliance that does not set production policies for its members, a statement from the intergovernmental organisation showed on Sunday.

The statement follows UAE's surprise announcement on 28 April of its departure from the OPEC and OPEC+ producer groups, to prioritise boosting its own output.

OAPEC was formed in 1968 with the aim of boosting cooperation among Arab oil exporters.

ADB launches $70b plan for energy, digital infrastructure in Asia-Pacific
04 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) will back $70 billion in new energy and digital infrastructure initiatives by 2035, aiming to connect power grids, expand cross-border electricity trade, and improve broadband access across Asia and the Pacific.

The Pan-Asia Power Grid Initiative will connect national and subregional power systems so renewable energy can flow across borders, while the Asia-Pacific Digital Highway will help close the digital infrastructure gap and enable the region to benefit from AI-driven growth, reads a press release.

Under the Pan-Asia Power Grid Initiative, ADB will work with governments, utilities, the private sector, and development partners to mobilise $50 billion by 2035 for cross-border power infrastructure that can unlock renewable energy at scale.


The initiative will focus on transmission and grid integration, including cross-border lines, substations, storage, and grid digitalisation.

It will also support power generation linked to electricity trade, including renewable energy export projects, regional renewable hubs, and hybrid generation-storage facilities.

By 2035, ADB aims to integrate about 20 gigawatts of renewable energy across borders, connect 22,000 circuit-kilometers of transmission lines, improve energy access for 200 million people, create 840,000 jobs, and cut regional power sector emissions by 15%.

ADB expects to finance about half of the $50 billion initiative from its own resources and raise the rest through cofinancing, including from the private sector.

Up to $10 million in technical assistance will support efforts to align regulations, adopt common technical standards, prepare feasibility studies and advance other work needed for major projects.

The Pan-Asia Power Grid Initiative marks a shift from country-to-country energy links to a regional approach to power trade.

It builds on existing subregional cooperation initiatives, including the South Asia Subregional Economic Cooperation program, the Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation grid interconnection planning, the ASEAN Power Grid, and the Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation Energy Strategy 2030.

The Asia-Pacific Digital Highway will mobilise $20 billion by 2035 to finance digital corridors, data infrastructure, and AI-ready economies.

Investments will focus on connected infrastructure, including terrestrial and subsea fiber networks, satellite links and regional data centres.

ADB will also provide policy and regulatory support, including on cybersecurity risk management, and invest in skills programs to strengthen digital and AI readiness.

By 2035, the initiative aims to provide first-time broadband access to 200 million people and faster, more reliable digital connectivity for another 450 million people across the region.

It is expected to cut connectivity costs in remote and landlocked areas by about 40% and help create 4 million jobs.

ADB expects to finance $15 billion of the $20 billion initiative from its own resources and raise $5 billion through cofinancing, including from the private sector.

The Centre for AI Innovation and Development will be established in Seoul to support the initiative. Backed by a $20 million contribution from the Government of the Republic of Korea, the centre will promote responsible and inclusive AI adoption and help train about 3 million people in digital and AI-related skills by 2035.

ADB President Masato Kanda said that Energy and digital access will define the region's future.

"These two initiatives build the systems Asia and the Pacific need to grow, compete, and connect. By linking power grids and digital networks across borders, we can lower costs, expand opportunity, and bring reliable power and digital access to hundreds of millions of people."

Teletalk gets 10 MHz in 700 MHz band despite huge dues
04 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

The telecom regulator has decided to allocate 10 MHz from the highly valuable 700 MHz band to state-owned Teletalk, despite the operator owing around Tk 5,500 crore in spectrum fees and already holding significant unused or underused spectrum.

The decision was taken at a recent Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC) meeting, according to documents.

The 700 MHz band is considered globally valuable for wide coverage, strong indoor signal, low rollout cost, and suitability for rural-urban networks, including 5G. In Bangladesh, 45 MHz of the band is allocated for mobile use, while 20 MHz remains unused due to a legal dispute.

TIMELINE OF GOVT, REGULATORY ACTIONS

On February 8, just before the national election, the interim government, through the telecom ministry, sent a letter to BTRC instructing it to allocate 10 MHz of spectrum to Teletalk.

A day later, Teletalk applied for the spectrum.

On February 16, the ministry informed the regulator that Teletalk had proposed converting its unpaid dues -- including licence and spectrum fees -- into government equity, now under finance division review.

On April 9, BTRC sought guidance from the ministry on how Teletalk would pay for the allocation. On April 24, the ministry directed the regulator to proceed with the allocation, citing the need to reduce customer inconvenience in line with the government’s election manifesto.

The price was set at Tk 237 crore per MHz, matching the rate paid by Grameenphone for 10 MHz in January as the sole bidder in the auction.

The move means the government may forgo at least Tk 2,000 crore in revenue in the near term.

Only 5 MHz of available spectrum in this band will remain for Banglalink and Robi, both of which have large customer bases. The two operators did not join the latest auction, saying prices were too high.

Spectrum is a limited and valuable resource that countries manage carefully, as it is important for improving telecom services and generating government revenue. In Bangladesh, there have been concerns about spectrum management, particularly regarding Teletalk.

LARGE DUES AND UNUTILISED SPECTRUM

Teletalk holds 55.2 MHz across the 900, 1800, 2100, and 2300 MHz bands and serves around 68 lakh subscribers, giving it about 0.81 MHz per lakh users.

By comparison, Grameenphone has 137.4 MHz for 8.44 crore subscribers (0.16 MHz per lakh), Robi has 124 MHz for 5.74 crore users (0.22 MHz per lakh), and Banglalink has 80 MHz for 3.74 crore users (0.21 MHz per lakh).

Despite higher spectrum per subscriber, Teletalk’s voice and data service quality has been weaker than peers in BTRC quality tests over the years, and it has added only about 1 lakh subscribers in five years.

The operator has also not used 30 MHz in the 2300 MHz band acquired in the 2022 auction, despite rollout obligations, which is considered a breach of spectrum utilisation rules.

Teletalk’s total liabilities include Tk 120 crore in licence fees, Tk 102 crore in revenue sharing, Tk 5,506 crore in spectrum fees, and around Tk 62 crore in other charges.

EXPERT CRITICISM

“Private operators are required to follow strict rules, but public companies often do not face the same obligations, which creates a market imbalance,” said Khondaker Golam Moazzem, research director at the Centre for Policy Dialogue.

He added that large unpaid dues raise doubts about such firms’ ability to survive in a competitive market, noting they often rely on government support rather than efficiency.

TIM Nurul Kabir, a telecom expert, said, “Spectrum is a valuable resource and allocating it to an operator that cannot ensure good service or generate revenue is a poor regulatory decision.”

“The government needs a different approach to revive Teletalk rather than using up valuable resources. Such decisions are also anti-competitive,” he added.

Md Emdad ul Bari, chairman of BTRC, said the allocation was approved on the condition that spectrum charges would be converted into government equity.

He said this would not cause revenue loss, as funds would shift between state entities as equity investments.

11 banks hold Tk 52,034cr NPL in CMSME
04 May 2026;
Source: New Age

Top 11 banks held Tk 52,034 crore of non-performing loans (NPLs), accounting for about 71.67 per cent of total default loans in the CMSME sector, highlighting a high concentration of credit risk in a handful of lenders.

According to Bangladesh Bank data as of December 31, 2025, total loan disbursement by 60 scheduled banks in the cottage, micro, small and medium enterprise (CMSME) sector stood at Tk 3,01,397 crore, representing 16.58 per cent of overall outstanding loans of Tk 18,17,736 crore. Countryspecific content

However, recovery from the sector is better compared with the other industries. Banks’ total NPL ratio stood at 30 per cent in December, 2025.

Default loans in the segment were Tk 72,600 crore, or 24 per cent of total CMSME lending.

CMSME refers to small-scale business activities ranging from cottage industries and micro enterprises to small and medium-sized firms.

The CMSME sector is widely regarded as the backbone of Bangladesh’s economy, contributing around 25 per cent to GDP and supporting millions of entrepreneurs, traders and small manufacturers.

These businesses typically operate with limited capital but play a central role in job creation, rural industrialisation and income distribution.

Despite its importance, the sector remains vulnerable due to limited access to finance, weak financial literacy and dependence on informal networks.

Banks are expected to fill this gap.

Due to poor lending by several state-run banks and weak shariah-based banks, NPL in the sector surged.

Among the major defaulters, Islami Bank Bangladesh PLC alone had Tk 9,761 crore in bad loans against Tk 29,759 crore disbursed, with an NPL ratio of 33 per cent in the CMSME sector.

BASIC Bank showed one of the worst asset qualities, with Tk 6,168 crore in defaults out of Tk 8,839 crore disbursements, translating into a 70 per cent NPL ratio.

State-owned Janata Bank and Sonali Bank reported Tk 5,947 crore and Tk 4,948 crore in default loans respectively, while Agrani Bank had Tk 4,474 crore in NPLs.

Among private banks, First Security Islami Bank recorded an alarming 96 per cent NPL ratio with Tk 4,884 crore in defaults against Tk 5,107 crore in loans in CMSME, while Padma Bank showed a similar trend with a 95 per cent NPL ratio in the CMSME sector.

Other banks with significant exposure include Al-Arafah Islami Bank (Tk 3,891 crore NPL), Social Islami Bank (Tk 3,241 crore), EXIM Bank (Tk 3,058 crore) and United Commercial Bank with Tk 2,449 crore.

In contrast, several banks maintained relatively strong asset quality.

BRAC Bank, the largest CMSME lender with Tk 30,570 crore in disbursement, reported only Tk 670 crore in defaults.

Pubali Bank and City Bank also kept NPLs low at Tk 484 crore and Tk 322 crore respectively.

As a result high NPL, credit flow to small businesses slows down, affecting expansion, employment and production.

Persistent defaults also raise borrowing costs. Banks tend to charge higher interest rates to offset risks, making financing less affordable for genuine entrepreneurs.

In a sector already constrained by limited resources, this can discourage new investments and weaken overall economic momentum.

Fuel costs and rain send vegetable prices soaring
04 May 2026;
Source: Prothom Alo

At Tejturi Bazar in the capital’s Tejgaon area, ridge gourd was selling at Tk 70–80 per kg and tomatoes at Tk 50–60 per kg yesterday, Thursday. Just a week earlier, both vegetables were Tk 10–15 cheaper per kg. The rise in prices has been driven by rainfall and higher transport costs.

Over the past week, prices have also increased for onions, cucumbers, aubergines, chillies and green papaya. Broiler chicken and eggs have also become more expensive. Among grocery items, the prices of sugar, coarse lentils and polao rice have gone up. Although the price of bottled soybean oil has been raised, supply in the market has yet to return to normal.

Traders said rainfall over the past few days has disrupted the regular supply of vegetables. Higher fuel prices have also pushed up transport costs. Together, these factors have driven up vegetable prices. These details emerged from visits yesterday to Mohammadpur Krishi Market, Town Hall Market and Tejturi Bazar, as well as conversations with buyers and sellers.

A market survey found that the prices of at least nine vegetables have increased over the past week. Cucumber recorded the sharpest rise. Hybrid cucumber prices jumped by Tk 30 per kg and were selling yesterday at Tk 80–100 per kg. Locally grown cucumber was priced slightly higher. Prices of aubergine, sponge gourd, snake gourd, ridge gourd and tomatoes also rose by Tk 10–15 per kg. Green papaya and chillies increased by Tk 20, reaching Tk 80–100 per kg.

According to the Department of Agricultural Marketing, compared with last month, cucumber prices have risen by 111 per cent, green papaya by 87 per cent, local tomatoes by 25 per cent and aubergines by 7 per cent.

Onion prices have also gone up by Tk 5 per kg over the past week, with local onions now selling at Tk 40–45 per kg. However, onions had remained unusually cheap for a long period this year, limiting farmers’ profits. The recent price rise may improve their returns.
Also Read

What is driving the price hike

Heavy rainfall hit the country last Sunday. After a two-day pause rain resumed on Tuesday night. Although the capital remained dry throughout yesterday, the meteorological office has forecast intermittent rainfall across the country for the next three days.

Aminul Haque, a vegetable trader at Karwan Bazar, told Prothom Alo that fewer vegetable trucks had arrived at the market over the past two days. In many areas, heavy rain has caused waterlogging in vegetable fields, preventing farmers from harvesting produce. This has pushed up prices for some vegetables. He added that buyer numbers were also lower as it was the month-end.

Meanwhile, the government has increased retail prices of all types of fuel in response to rising global oil prices. Diesel prices have risen by Tk 15 per litre, kerosene by Tk 18, octane by Tk 20 and petrol by Tk 19. This has also affected commodity prices.

Imran Master, president of the Bangladesh Kachamal Arot Malik Samity, told Prothom Alo that truck fares for transporting vegetables from Dhaka, Chattogram and Sylhet have risen by Tk 5,000–7,000 since fuel prices increased. Combined with lower supply caused by rain over the past three days, this has pushed vegetable prices higher.

Traders said rainfall over the past few days has disrupted the regular supply of vegetables. Higher fuel prices have also pushed up transport costs. Together, these factors have driven up vegetable prices.

Broiler chicken and eggs remain expensive

Farm eggs were selling yesterday at Tk 120–130 per dozen. Prices have remained at this level for more than two weeks. Earlier, eggs sold for Tk 100–110 per dozen. Higher transport costs have also contributed to the rise in egg prices. There is also some supply shortage, according to Mohammad Amanat Ullah, former president of the Tejgaon Egg Traders’ Association.

Broiler chicken prices also remain elevated. Broiler chicken is selling at Tk 190–200 per kg, compared with Tk 150–160 around six weeks ago.

Sonali chicken prices, however, have eased slightly. Yesterday, Sonali chicken was sold at Tk 350–360 per kg in three markets of the capital. Colourbird, or hybrid Sonali chicken, sold at Tk 320–330 per kg. Two weeks ago, Sonali chicken was Tk 30 higher per kg, while prices exceeded Tk 400 after Eid-ul-Fitr.

The price of packaged polao rice has increased by another Tk 15 per kg, taking the new retail price to Tk 190 per kg. Traders, however, are selling it at Tk 180–185, while older stock remains available at Tk 165–170. Loose polao rice is priced at Tk 150–160 per kg.

Two weeks ago, loose sugar prices rose by Tk 5 per kg to Tk 105–110, which remained stable there yesterday. Coarse lentils have also increased by Tk 5, now selling at Tk 90–95 per kg.

Soybean oil supply still disrupted

On Wednesday, the government increased prices of bottled and loose soybean oil by Tk 4 per litre. The price of one litre of bottled soybean oil was raised from Tk 195 to Tk 199, while loose soybean oil rose from Tk 176 to Tk 180. As a result, the maximum retail price of a five-litre bottle now stands at Tk 975.

The market has been facing a shortage of bottled soybean oil for nearly three months. During this period, companies had been demanding a price increase, citing rising global edible oil prices, while supply of bottled soybean oil remained low. Although the government had resisted the move for some time, the Ministry of Commerce approved the price hike on Wednesday.

However, a market visit one day after the increase showed that the supply shortage remains unchanged. Humayun Kabir, a grocer at Mohammadpur Krishi Market, said the supply of bottled soybean oil could improve within the next two to three days following the price increase. Dealers of three edible oil companies had informed them of this, he added.

Bashundhara Paper incurs Tk422cr loss in 9 months
04 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Bashundhara Paper Mills, a concern of Bashundhara Group, has incurred a loss of Tk422 crore in the first nine months of the current fiscal year, mainly due to a shortage of raw materials and a rise in utility costs.

During the July-March period of FY26, the company's loss widened significantly from Tk184 crore in the same period a year earlier, according to its financial statement ended in March.

Its year-on-year revenue also plunged by 56% to Tk223.22 crore, down from Tk507.67 crore in the corresponding period of the previous fiscal year.

Despite the sharp decline in revenue, the cost of sales stood at Tk420.59 crore at the end of March 2026, compared to Tk482.11 crore in the same period a year ago.

The company reported an operating loss of Tk523.43 crore, up from Tk230 crore in the July-March period of the previous fiscal year.

Explaining the losses, company officials said operating profitability declined due to the unavailability of raw materials, increased utility costs, a sharp rise in input prices, and higher borrowing costs following interest rate hikes.

As a result, the company's earnings per share (EPS) deteriorated significantly, with per-share loss rising to Tk24.27 from Tk10.60 in the previous period.

However, net operating cash flow per share rose slightly to Tk8.95 during the July-March period of FY26, compared to Tk8.75 in the same period a year earlier. The net asset value per share declined to Tk33.60 as of 31 March.

The company said the improvement in cash flow was mainly due to reduced payments to suppliers and other operating creditors, which strengthened its overall operating cash position.

In FY25, Bashundhara Paper Mills incurred a loss of Tk329.91 crore, with a per-share loss of Tk18.98. Due to continued losses, the company did not declare any dividend for its shareholders for FY24.

The company's shares closed on Sunday at Tk26.30 on the Dhaka Stock Exchange, down 1.87% from the previous trading session.

OPEC+ agrees third oil output quota hike since Hormuz closure
04 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

OPEC+ agreed on ‌Sunday a modest oil output hike for June, an increase that will remain largely on paper as long as the Iran war continues to disrupt Gulf oil supplies through the Strait of Hormuz.

Seven OPEC+ countries will raise oil output targets by 188,000 barrels per day in June, the third consecutive ​monthly increase, OPEC+ said in a statement after an online meeting. The increase is the same as that agreed ​for May minus the share of the United Arab Emirates, which on May 1.

The ⁠move is designed to show the group is ready to raise supplies once the war stops and signals that OPEC+ is ​pressing on with a business-as-usual approach despite the departure of the UAE from OPEC+, OPEC+ sources and analysts said.

"OPEC+ is sending a ​two-layer message to the market: continuity despite the UAE's exit, and control despite limited physical impact," said Jorge Leon, an analyst at Rystad and former OPEC official.

"While output is increasing on paper, the real impact on physical supply remains very limited given the Strait of Hormuz constraints. This is ​less about adding barrels and more about signaling that OPEC+ still calls the shots."

Top OPEC+ producer Saudi Arabia's quota will rise ​to 10.291 million bpd in June under the agreement, far above actual production. The kingdom reported actual production of 7.76 million bpd to ‌OPEC in ⁠March.

The seven members who met on Sunday were Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, Algeria, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Oman. With the UAE leaving, OPEC+ includes 21 members including Iran. But in recent years only the seven nations plus the UAE have been involved in monthly production decisions.

 

HIKE REMAINS LARGELY SYMBOLIC UNTIL HORMUZ RE-OPENS

The Iran war, which began on February 28, and the resulting closure of the ​Hormuz strait have throttled exports from ​OPEC+ members Saudi Arabia, ⁠Iraq and Kuwait, as well as from the UAE. Before the conflict, these producers were the only countries in the group able to raise production.

Even when shipping through the Strait of Hormuz ​reopens, it will take several weeks if not months for flows to normalise, oil executives from ​the Gulf and ⁠global oil traders have said.

The supply disruption has propelled oil prices to a four-year high above $125 per barrel as analysts begin to predict widespread jet fuel shortages in one to two months and a spike in global inflation.

Crude oil output from all OPEC+ members ⁠averaged 35.06 ​million bpd in March, down 7.70 million bpd from February, OPEC said in ​a report last month, with Iraq and Saudi Arabia making the biggest cuts due to constrained exports.

The seven OPEC+ members will meet again on June 7, ​the statement said.

Remittance inflow hits $3.12b in April, up 13.5% YoY
04 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Bangladesh received $3.12 billion in remittances in April, a 13.5% increase from the same month a year earlier, according to data released by Bangladesh Bank today (3 May).

In April last year, expatriates sent $2.75 billion in remittances.

However, inflows retreated from March's record high of $3.75 billion, with bankers attributing the surge largely to a seasonal spike in transfers ahead of Ramadan and Eid-ul-Fitr.

Despite the monthly decline, remittances have remained above the $3 billion mark for five consecutive months. Bankers see this as a positive sign for the economy, pointing to greater use of formal channels and stronger earnings by migrant workers.

In the current fiscal year 2025-26, remittances have maintained robust growth, helping to bolster foreign exchange reserves. Between July and April, total inflows reached $29.33 billion, up 19.5% from $24.54 billion in the same period a year earlier.

Economists say the rising inflows could help ease pressure on the external sector, support exchange rate stability and strengthen overall macroeconomic conditions if the trend holds in the coming months.

They expect remittances to increase further in May, driven by the upcoming Eid-ul-Adha at the end of the month.

Bankers noted that a narrowing gap between exchange rates in the informal market and official banking channels has encouraged expatriates to send money through formal means.

Bangladesh Bank has been purchasing US dollars from commercial banks through auctions, buying more than $4 billion so far in the 2025-26 fiscal year as of early February, in a bid to stabilise the foreign exchange market and build reserves.

The exchange rate has recently hovered between Tk122.75 and Tk122.90, as authorities seek to prevent excessive appreciation of the taka while supporting remittances and export earnings.

Earlier, despite a decline in exports, rising imports and the onset of war, the exchange rate remained stable at Tk122.75 per US dollar.

Foreign exchange reserves currently stand at $35.10 billion, or $30.47 billion under the IMF's BPM6 method.

Following a payment of $1.37 billion to the Asian Clearing Union (ACU) on 9 March, reserves had fallen to $34.10 billion, with the BPM6 measure at $29.38 billion.

Bangladesh's reserves had reached a historic high of more than $48 billion in August 2021.

They later dropped to $20.48 billion under the BPM6 method and $25.92 billion in gross terms by the time of the fall of the Awami League government. During the 18-month tenure of the interim government, reserves have increased by $10 billion.

BRAC Bank, Pubali Bank appointed primary dealers for govt securities
03 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

The government has authorised BRAC Bank PLC and Pubali Bank PLC to act as primary dealers (PD) for government securities for a three-year term, which will officially commence from the first working day of May this year.

The appointment was formalised by the Bangladesh Bank today (30 April) following a directive from the Finance Division of the Ministry of Finance.

With this appointment, both banks will now share the bidding obligations currently performed by 24 existing primary dealer banks in the auctions for government treasury bills and bonds.

As primary dealers, these banks are mandated to participate in auctions to help finance the government's budget deficit, ensuring a steady flow of funds through the sovereign debt market.

According to the letter from the finance ministry, the authorisation was granted under the provisions of the 'Guidelines for Enlistment and Operations of Primary Dealers in Government Securities, 2025 (Amended)'.

Islami, SBAC, Standard Bank downgraded to Z category for no dividend
03 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Islami Bank Bangladesh PLC, SBAC Bank and Standard Bank have been downgraded to the Z category for failing to declare dividends for the last two consecutive years.

According to the Dhaka Stock Exchange, brokerage firms and merchant banks have been instructed not to provide margin loans against the shares of these banks.

Following the downgrade, the share prices of the three banks fell sharply in the opening session today (30 April).

Informal sector workers remain marginal: experts
03 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

The vast majority of Bangladesh’s workforce remains in marginal conditions, outside the reach of formal labour protections, experts warned yesterday, calling for a shift in policy focus beyond the garment sector.

Around 85 percent of workers are engaged in the informal sector with little regulation or protection, Syed Sultan Uddin Ahmmed, former chairman of the Labour Reform Commission, said at a May Day discussion in Dhaka.

The programme, held at the Economics Reporters Forum office, was organised by the Network for People’s Action (NPA), a newly formed political party.

At the event, Ahmmed also noted that the dominance of ready-made garments (RMG) in national and international labour discourse obscures a far wider problem.

“As an export-oriented industry, the RMG sector remains at the centre of national and international discussion. While this sector is important, it should not overshadow the broader reality,” he said.

A stronger industrial base and labour movement in large sectors could eventually benefit workers in other areas, he said, calling for a more inclusive labour perspective.

“Sanitation workers, day labourers and informal workers continue to live in precarious conditions,” said the labour policy expert.

He added, “We celebrate long holidays, but for day labourers, even a few days without work can mean going without food… Yet there is no universal social security system to protect them.”

Ahmmed also criticised existing social protection measures as charity-driven rather than rights-based. “The fact that a single rainy day can leave a labourer’s family without food rarely enters policy thinking.”

Echoing the same, Prof Selim Raihan, executive director of the South Asian Network on Economic Modeling (Sanem), said the garment sector’s export growth had not translated into proportional gains for workers.

“Productivity has increased over the decades, yet real wages have lagged. That disconnect tells us something fundamental about the structure of our growth,” he said.

Raihan also pointed to a persistent narrative that stronger labour rights would hurt competitiveness. “This (narrative) has often been used to discourage workers from organising or demanding more.”

He added that labour discussions in Bangladesh too often stop at minimum standards.

“We rarely move beyond ensuring the bare minimum to discussing living wages or broader social protections,” he said.

Among others, Taslima Akhter, president of the Bangladesh Garment Sramik Samhati, also spoke at the event.

Islami Bank posts Tk136cr profit despite Tk84,615cr provision shortfall
03 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Islami Bank Bangladesh PLC has posted a consolidated profit of Tk136 crore for the year ended December 2025, but the earnings were overshadowed by a staggering Tk84,615 crore provision shortfall against its classified investments, highlighting continued strain in its balance sheet.

Despite the profit, the bank's financial health remains under pressure, according to a price-sensitive disclosure filed with the Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE).

The lender's result was largely supported by a regulatory deferral facility from Bangladesh Bank, which allowed the provision gap to be spread over 20 years under a recovery plan submitted last October.

However, key indicators point to weakening fundamentals. Net operating cash flow dropped by Tk5,107 crore in 2025, while investment recovery slowed. Deposits from banks and financial institutions also declined by Tk9,662 crore, reflecting liquidity pressure.

The bank's earnings trajectory has also remained weak, falling from Tk635 crore in 2023 to Tk108 crore in 2024 before edging up to Tk136 crore in 2025.

At the end of 2025, consolidated earnings per share stood at Tk0.85, while net asset value per share rose slightly to Tk44.52 from Tk44.36 a year earlier.

A major concern, according to banking sources, remains the bank's exposure to S Alam Group, which along with its affiliates reportedly borrowed over Tk73,000 crore almost half of the bank's total investment portfolio.

Although assets worth around Tk20,000 crore linked to the group have been attached, recovery has been slow due to weak auction response.

The bank has also skipped dividend payments for the second consecutive year and has been downgraded to the 'Z' category on the stock exchange for the first time, reflecting heightened financial stress.

Following the disclosure, the bank's share price fell over 4% to Tk33.30.

The AGM has been scheduled for 25 June, with the record date set for 21 May.

Meanwhile, management reshuffles are underway, with Managing Director Md Omar Faruk Khan sent on extended leave and Md Altaf Hossain appointed as acting MD amid ongoing regulatory oversight and restructuring efforts.

Age limits lifted for BSEC, Idra chiefs to attract experienced talent
03 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

The parliament yesterday (30 April) passed two separate bills removing the maximum age limits for the post of chairmen and commissioners of the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC), as well as the chairman and members of the Insurance Development and Regulatory Authority (IDRA).

Previously, the age limits stood at 65 years for the BSEC and 67 years for the IDRA. With the passage of these amendments, the government will now be able to appoint individuals of any age to lead these two key financial regulatory bodies.

Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury, who moved the bills, argued that the amendments were intended to make the laws more time-appropriate by allowing the recruitment of highly qualified, experienced, and skilled professionals.

He said that when the securities law was originally enacted in 1993, the average life expectancy in Bangladesh was around 57 years, whereas it now stands at 72 years. He stated that retaining the earlier age limits would prevent capable individuals from contributing effectively to the financial sector.

However, the bills faced strong resistance from opposition and independent lawmakers.

Independent lawmaker Rumeen Farhana called for the bills to be opened to public scrutiny, highlighting that retail investors suffered massive losses during the 1996 and 2010 market crashes, while over Tk1 lakh crore was allegedly siphoned off over the past 15 years.

Opposition lawmaker Akhter Hossen questioned whether the amendment was genuinely intended to find capable leaders or merely to facilitate the appointment of favoured individuals. Leader of the Opposition Shafiqur Rahman alleged that lawmakers were not given adequate time to review the documents.

Despite the opposing calls to send the bills to a standing committee for further review, the bills were ultimately passed by voice vote.

India, Bangladesh move towards full resumption of visa services
03 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

India and Bangladesh are taking steps to normalise bilateral relations by moving towards the full resumption of visa services, following a period of strained ties and restricted travel.

Bangladesh has already resumed issuing visas to Indian citizens across all categories, including tourism, business and medical travel, while India is aiming for a gradual restart of its visa operations over the coming weeks, says the Indian Express.

Indian visa services for Bangladeshi nationals are currently operating at 15–20% of their pre-December 2025 capacity, with priority given to medical cases and family emergencies. In contrast, Bangladesh has issued more than 13,000 visas to Indians since restoring operations around 20 February 2026.

The move follows a period of political upheaval after the August 2024 ouster of former prime minister Sheikh Hasina. Relations are being recalibrated under the new government of Prime Minister Tarique Rahman, whose swearing-in in February 2026 was attended by an Indian delegation.

Travel between the two countries had declined sharply amid tensions and visa curbs. The number of Bangladeshi visitors to India fell from 2.12 million in 2023 to 470,000 in 2025.

Officials in both countries have indicated that efforts to restore visa services are part of broader attempts to rebuild cooperation, including through high-level political engagement and closer economic and energy ties.

India recently transported diesel to Bangladesh to help ease energy shortages linked to the war in West Asia.

The expected arrival of India's new High Commissioner to Bangladesh, Dinesh Trivedi, is seen as a step that could facilitate the return to full-scale visa operations.

BB waives provisioning for funds in merging banks
03 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

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.

Japan, Vietnam seek deeper partnership with energy and minerals push
03 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi vowed on Saturday to strengthen bilateral ties with Vietnam, with energy cooperation and critical minerals at the forefront, during a meeting with Vietnamese Prime Minister Le Minh Hung.

The pledge came as new Japanese investment in Vietnam fell about 75% year-on-year to $233 million in the first quarter, even as bilateral trade rose 12.3% to $13.7 billion over the same period, according to Vietnamese government and customs data.

The two leaders discussed ways to deepen the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership established in 2023, focusing on energy, critical minerals, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and space.

"The two sides identified economic security as a new priority area for bilateral cooperation," Takaichi told reporters after the meeting.

"With regard to critical minerals... both sides agreed to strengthen close coordination to ensure stable supplies and reinforce supply chains," she added.

In a joint move, Vietnam and Japan signed six agreements encompassing infrastructure, climate action, agriculture, technology, digitalisation and space cooperation.

Japan remains one of Vietnam's largest foreign investors, with many Japanese multinationals operating large manufacturing facilities in the country.

Vietnam has been seeking support from Japan and other countries for oil supplies as conflict in the Middle East drives prices higher and disrupts supply chains.

Under the $10 billion Power Asia Initiative to support Asian countries' energy self-reliance, Japan will assist in arranging crude oil supplies for Vietnam's Nghi Son Refinery and Petrochemical Complex, Hung said.

Takaichi was also set to meet Vietnam's Party Secretary and President To Lam on Saturday afternoon and deliver a keynote speech at Vietnam National University, marking a decade since former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe introduced Japan's "Free and Open Indo-Pacific" strategy.

Her address is expected to emphasise autonomy and resilience for regional nations.

Vietnam supports Japan's regional initiatives, including the Free and Open Indo-Pacific Vision, aligned with the ASEAN Outlook on the Indo-Pacific, in accordance with international law and "contributing positively to peace, stability, cooperation and development in the region and beyond," Hung said.

Russia says OPEC+ will continue after UAE exit, no price war expected
03 May 2026;
Source: The Business Standard

Russia's Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said on Thursday that the OPEC+ group of leading oil producers would continue working together despite the departure of the United Arab Emirates, Russian news agencies reported.

According to the reports, Novak said he did not expect an oil price war to emerge following the UAE's exit given a global oil deficit.

The UAE said on Tuesday it was quitting OPEC, dealing a blow to the oil producers' group as an unprecedented energy crisis triggered by the Iran war exposes discord among Gulf nations.

The UAE was the fourth-largest producer in OPEC+, which comprises OPEC and its allies, while Russia is second, behind Saudi Arabia.

"In the current situation, it is hard to talk about a price war when there is a shortage in the market. What we are seeing instead is the deepest crisis in the industry," Novak was quoted as saying by Interfax news agency.

"Large volumes of oil are not reaching the market today, while demand significantly exceeds supply. This has created an imbalance due to serious logistical disruptions, including the situation in the Middle East," Novak said according to Interfax.

Novak also reiterated that Russia will remain in OPEC+, which was formed in 2016.

Bangladesh presents its case for LDC graduation deferment
03 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

Bangladesh cited gaps in readiness, incomplete core reforms, and economic fallout from the Iran war as reasons for seeking an extension of the transition period for graduation from the least developed country (LDC) category by three more years at the public hearing of the UNCDP on April 29.

Commerce Minister Khandakar Abdul Muktadir attended the virtual hearing with Chair of the United Nations Committee for Development Policy (UNCDP) José Antonio Ocampo, Additional Commerce Secretary Md Abdur Rahim Khan told The Daily Star.

Khan also said the UNCDP wanted to know the reasons why Bangladesh is seeking an extension of the transition period for LDC graduation.

Bangladesh mainly cited the country’s gap in preparedness, lower implementation of core reforms, and the fallout of the US-Israel war on Iran as the main reasons for the requested extension, the additional secretary said.

Apart from these three main reasons, Bangladesh also mentioned vulnerabilities in the financial sector, weaknesses in the banking system, an export slowdown due to volatile global supply chains, high interest rates, and an uncertain business and investment climate in support of the extension, he said.

Bangladesh is scheduled to graduate from LDC status on November 24 this year, but it has sought to delay the transition until 2029, citing domestic and external economic pressures.

The UNCDP will prepare a report on Bangladesh’s hearing and submit its recommendations to the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) in June.

The ECOSOC will then forward its assessment to the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), scheduled to meet in September, where a vote will finalise the decision on the deferment.

Earlier, on February 19, the newly elected government sent a letter to the chair of the UNCDP, requesting that the preparatory period be extended until November 24, 2029, mentioning that more time is needed to ensure readiness.

Following Bangladesh’s request, the UNCDP discussed the issue at its annual meeting in February and agreed on a process to assess the proposal.

The business community of the country has also been requesting both the incumbent government and the immediate past interim government to delay the LDC graduation, as they need more time to prepare adequately. They said higher bank interest rates and political transition in the country, following massive unrest and political upheaval, have also affected the economy significantly.

A UN assessment report in March stated that Bangladesh still faces serious gaps in its readiness for graduation, as its economy continues to be affected by both domestic and international shocks, including the US-Israel war on Iran.

The report highlighted a series of disruptions between 2017 and 2026, including climate vulnerability, the Rohingya crisis, a prolonged macroeconomic slowdown that predated the regime change, the Covid-19 pandemic, the Russia-Ukraine war, inflation, and pressure on the balance of payments.

It also noted that while Bangladesh meets all three criteria for graduation, significant risks persist, including the loss of trade preferences, fiscal and financial vulnerabilities, and weak institutional coordination.

Rising import costs for fossil fuels have created operational constraints, with gas shortages worsening due to the Middle East conflict, the report said.

Economic growth slowed from 7.1 percent in FY22 to 3.5 percent in FY25, weakening momentum ahead of graduation.

Inflation has outpaced wages, pushing millions into hardship and vulnerability.

A recent UN Trade and Development assessment estimated that Bangladesh could lose more than $17.5 billion in annual exports after graduation.

Global rice supply at risk from Iran war, El Nino
03 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

Rice supply is expected to fall this year as farmers cut planting acreage across Asia because of fertiliser shortages and soaring fuel costs ​from the Iran war, with an emerging El Nino also set to squeeze output of the world’s most consumed staple.

Rice is central to global food security, ‌and even modest supply disruptions can ripple through countries, lifting prices and straining household budgets, particularly among price-sensitive consumers in Asia and Africa. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization in April forecast rice output would expand by 2 percent to a record high in 2025/26.

The effects of the Iran war are impacting farmers in top exporters Thailand and Vietnam as well as the import-reliant Philippines and Indonesia, growers and traders said. The war has cut fuel and fertiliser ​flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a key chokepoint that connects the Gulf to global markets.

Rice is central to global food security, ‌and even modest supply disruptions can ripple through countries, lifting prices and straining household budgets, particularly among price-sensitive consumers in Asia and Africa
Southeast Asia’s mainly smallholder farmers also face mounting stress as the El Nino ​weather phenomenon is set to usher in hotter, drier conditions for the region in the second half of the year.

“Farmers have already started planting rice in some countries and are using fewer inputs because prices have gone up,” said Maximo Torero, chief economist at the UN FAO. “We are going to see a tighter global supply situation ​in the second half of the year and early next year.”

In 2008, export curbs by key suppliers more than doubled prices to about $1,000 a metric ton , triggering unrest in several countries. More recently, ​supply tightness in 2022 to 2023, exacerbated by India’s export restrictions, lifted prices and prompted panic buying.

SUPPLY-CHAIN DISRUPTION

Rice shipments are already facing supply-chain bottlenecks.

“Logistics have become a nightmare, especially in Asia as there is shortage of polypropylene bags, limited truck availability to move rice to ports and shipping itself has been disrupted,” said a Singapore-based trader at a top global rice merchant, who asked to remain unidentified as they are not authorized to speak ​to media.

While fertiliser shortages and dryness are already curbing yields of smaller crops being harvested in Southeast Asia, the next crop will likely face a bigger reduction.

India, Thailand and the Philippines plant ​their main crops in June and July, while Vietnam and Indonesia are now sowing their second-season crops.

Most Asian producers grow two or three rice crops a year.

FARMERS CUT PLANTING

Sripai Kaew-Eam, a 60-year-old farmer in Thailand’s ‌Chai Nat province about 151 km (94 miles) north of Bangkok, said high fertiliser and fuel prices have pushed production costs to about 6,000 baht ($183.99) per rai (0.4 acre), from around 4,500 to 5,000 baht for the previous crop, while the price she receives for the unhusked rice she harvests is about 6,200 baht per metric ton.

Fertiliser prices have risen to 1,000 to 1,200 baht per bag, from 850 baht, forcing her to cut her use by half.

“Fertiliser prices are high, fuel prices are high,” she said.

The Philippines, the world’s biggest rice importer, faces a similar situation.

“Some farmers are now saying they may ​not plant or will reduce fertiliser use, which ​would inevitably cut production,” said Arze Glipo, executive director of the Integrated Rural Development Foundation.

The country’s output could fall by as much as 6 million tons from its typical 19 million to 20 million.

“That would leave the Philippines in a precarious position, as imports are also uncertain due to export restrictions, making it extremely difficult to ​cover any production shortfall,” Glipo said. In Indonesia, fertiliser supply is not a constraint but the El Nino is expected to curb output.

Indonesia’s statistics ​bureau estimates the rice harvest area in the March to May period will shrink by 10.6 percent to 3.85 million hectares (9.5 million acres), while unhusked rice production will drop 11.12 percent to 20.68 million tons.

Despite the supply worries, the world has ample rice inventories following years of bumper output, with India, the world’s biggest exporter, holding a record 42 million tons or about one-fifth of global stockpiles, according to US Department of Agriculture data, cushioning any drop in ​global production.

Most rice grade prices are currently steady but will likely rise even if the Hormuz situation were resolved ​immediately, the FAO’s Torero said.

Opening the strait soon would avoid a major supply issue but “if we don’t reopen this in the next two to three weeks, the situation is going to get pretty serious,” he said.

More than half of local banks ineligible for dividend payouts
03 May 2026;
Source: The Daily Star

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.