Olympic Industries, the country's leading branded biscuit manufacturer, is set to invest Tk26.22 crore to purchase 489.89 decimals of land adjacent to its existing factory for future expansion.
The decision was approved at a board meeting held on Tuesday via Zoom, according to a disclosure published on Wednesday (29 April) through the stock exchanges.
Over the years, the company has invested hundreds of crores to acquire lands adjacent to its factory in preparation for scaling up operations.
At the meeting, the board also approved the company's financial statements for the first nine months ending in March. Its statements showed that revenue in the third quarter (Jan-Mar) rose by 8.61%, while nine-month revenue grew by 5.30%.
However, net profit declined by 33.75% in the third quarter and by 6.97% over the nine-month period, which the company attributed to a higher tax burden.
During the July to March period, revenue stood at Tk2,256 crore, while net profit fell to Tk148.18 crore, according to the report.
Olympic Industries said its board has approved the purchase of 322 decimals of land adjacent to its Lolati factory at a total price of Tk17.71 crore to support future expansion.
At the same mouza in Madanpur of Narayanganj, the company also decided to acquire 84.90 decimals of land for Tk4.67 crore for expansion purposes.
In addition, it approved the purchase of two more plots – 64.99 decimals and 18 decimals – near the Lolati factory at agreed prices of Tk3.25 crore and Tk59.40 lakh, respectively, to facilitate further construction and expansion.
In the disclosure, the company said the purchaser, Olympic Industries, will bear all registration costs, including VAT, tax, and other charges.
National flag carrier Biman Bangladesh Airlines is set to sign a landmark aircraft purchase agreement with Boeing today, in what is expected to be the biggest fleet expansion move in the airline’s history.
The formal agreement signing ceremony will be held at 7:30 pm at a Dhaka hotel, Biman General Manager (Public Relations) Boshra Islam told The Daily Star.
Senior government officials, diplomats and aviation executives are expected to attend the programme.
Biman Managing Director and CEO Kaizer Sohel Ahmed will sign the agreement on behalf of the airline, while a Boeing representative will sign for the manufacturer.
Foreign Minister Khalilur Rahman, Civil Aviation and Tourism Minister Afroza Khanam Rita, State Minister M Rashiduzzaman Millat and US Ambassador Brent T. Christensen, among others, will attend the ceremony, Boshra said.
Under the proposed agreement, Biman will purchase 14 new aircraft, including eight Boeing 787-10 Dreamliners, two Boeing 787-9 Dreamliners, and four Boeing 737-8 MAX jets, with an estimated list value of around $3.7 billion (Tk 37,000 crore).
Officials said the order is designed to modernise Biman’s fleet, expand long-haul capacity and strengthen regional operations at a time when Bangladesh’s passenger demand continues to rise.
The wide-body Dreamliners are expected to reinforce services to Europe, the Middle East and Asia, while the 737 MAX aircraft would support regional and short-haul routes.
The expected signing comes as Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport’s third terminal nears launch, a development widely seen as central to Bangladesh’s ambition of becoming a stronger regional aviation hub.
The deal is also expected to conclude more than three years of intense competition between Boeing and its European rival Airbus for Biman’s next major fleet order.
Under the previous Awami League government, a policy decision was announced to buy 10 Airbus aircraft. After the fall of Sheikh Hasina’s government in the 2024 mass uprising and amid pressure related to US reciprocal tariffs, the interim government shifted in favour of Boeing.
Airbus officials earlier told The Daily Star that introducing Airbus aircraft would diversify Biman’s all-Boeing fleet and deepen economic ties with the European Union.
Boeing, however, mounted an intensive push to retain its long-standing dominance, offering Dreamliners, freighter options and narrow-body aircraft while maintaining sustained engagement with policymakers in Dhaka.
“The aircraft buying proposal that we are making may be valued between Tk 30,000 crore and Tk 35,000 crore. We will have to pay this amount over 10 years. In fact, it may take even longer than that, because the payment schedule is long-term. It may take as long as 20 years to complete the payment. So, if you consider this, we may have to pay around Tk 1,500 crore to Tk 2,000 crore per year,” a top Biman official said.
State Minister Rashiduzzaman Millat said last week that the government was working to sign a deal with Boeing by April 30 to purchase 14 aircraft and lease several others as part of efforts to turn Biman Bangladesh Airlines into a profitable entity.
The national flag carrier is currently operating international routes with around 19 aircraft -- well below the estimated requirement of 30 to 35 aircraft needed to meet growing passenger demand and support planned network expansion, according to sources.
Biman’s fleet is currently dominated by Boeing aircraft, and the airline plans to expand its fleet to 47 by 2041.
The first aircraft from Boeing is scheduled for delivery in October 2031, according to Biman sources, while the remaining aircraft are expected to be delivered by November 2035.
The government will provide a sovereign guarantee to Biman Bangladesh Airlines to buy 14 aircraft from Boeing.
A sovereign guarantee is a commitment by the state to cover the debt or financial obligations of another entity if it defaults, reducing risk for lenders and improving access to financing for large or strategic investments.
The interim government earlier pledged to buy 25 aircraft from Boeing as part of efforts to reduce the trade deficit with the United States. Following further evaluation, Biman finalised its decision.
Oil prices rose Wednesday as talks to end the Iran war appeared to be at a standstill and the crucial Strait of Hormuz no nearer being reopened.
While the White House has said Donald Trump and his team were considering Tehran’s latest proposal to restore traffic through the waterway, CNN and the Wall Street Journal said the president was sceptical.
The Islamic republic this week submitted a plan that would reportedly see it ease the chokehold and Washington lift its retaliatory blockade on the country’s ports as talks continued, including over its nuclear programme.
While US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Iran’s proposal was “better than what we thought they were going to submit”, he insisted any eventual deal had to be “one that definitively prevents them from sprinting towards a nuclear weapon”.
Iranian defence ministry spokesman Reza Talaei-Nik said Washington “must abandon its illegal and irrational demands”, adding the United States was “no longer in a position to dictate its policy to independent nations”.
Qatar warned of the possibility of a “frozen conflict” if a definitive resolution is not found.
Concerns about the stalled peace push have pushed crude prices higher for more than a week, with Trump’s decision to cancel his envoys’ trip for peace talks in Pakistan last weekend adding to the downbeat mood.
Brent is above the level it hit before the two sides announced a ceasefire at the start of April, while West Texas Intermediate broke $100 Tuesday for the first time in two weeks.
Both contracts continued to rise Wednesday, with Brent holding above $113 and WTI above $101.
“Iran wants the blockade lifted and access to its flows restored,” wrote Stephen Innes at SPI Asset Management.
“Washington holds that lever and is in no hurry to give it away without extracting value.
“Meanwhile, the longer this drags on, the more second-order effects start to bite. Storage pressure builds, production risks emerge, and the system begins to strain in ways that futures prices cannot ignore.”
There was little major reaction to news that key producer United Arab Emirates had decided to withdraw from the OPEC and OPEC+ oil cartels on Friday, calling it a strategic decision.
Still, CNN also cited sources familiar with the mediation as saying the two sides were not as far apart as they seemed.
It added that intense diplomacy continued and talks were focused on a staged process with the first part of a potential deal aimed at returning to the pre-war status and reopening the Strait.
Iran’s nuclear programme would be dealt with down the line, it said.
Despite the uncertainty, Asian equity markets mostly rose with Hong Kong up more than one percent, while Shanghai, Seoul, Wellington, Manila, Bangkok, Mumbai and Jakarta also advanced.
Sydney, Singapore and Taipei fell along with London, Paris and Frankfurt.
Tokyo was closed for a holiday.
Traders were given a weak lead from Wall Street, where the Nasdaq led losses owing to a tech selloff that came on the back of a report in the Wall Street Journal that ChatGPT-maker OpenAI had missed targets on the number of users and revenue.
The news came as markets gear up for the release of earnings from Wall Street titans Amazon, Google, Meta and Microsoft this week.
The Federal Reserve will also conclude a two-day meeting later in the day, with investors keeping tabs on its outlook for inflation and interest rates as energy costs soar.
The country's insured population has fallen sharply despite a costly reform initiative, with the number of policyholders dropping by around 40% during the implementation of a Tk925-crore development project.
When the Bangladesh Insurance Sector Development Project was launched in 2018, the total number of insured individuals – both life and non-life – stood at about 1.36 crore. The project aimed to raise this to 2 crore within four years. Instead, the number declined to 82.2 lakh by the end of 2024, according to data from the Insurance Development and Regulatory Authority.
Of the country's 79 insurers, only two are state-owned – one each in the life and non-life sectors. But the World Bank-aided project focused only on the two state insurers and the regulatory body, the Insurance Development and Regulatory Authority (Idra).
The project aimed at raising insurance coverage, improving services, introducing automation and restoring public trust in the insurance sector by strengthening the two state insurers and the regulator.
Inclusion of only two state-owned insurers – Jiban BimaCorporation and Sadharan Bima Corporation – raised questions about the limited scope of the intervention.
Project Director Md Abdur Rab told The Business Standard, "The time to increase penetration has not yet arrived. The project is currently nearing completion; I hope its operations will play a significant role in increasing penetration in the future."
Abu Abed Muhammad Shoaib, deputy general manager of the ICT Division at Jiban Bima Corporation, said, "There has been some progress as a result of this project. Certain tasks that were previously handled manually are now being digitised. However, the use of all modules and sub-modules of the project's software has not yet commenced."
Automation goals fall short
A key objective of the project was to automate operations at Idra, Jiban Bima Corporation, Sadharan Bima Corporation, and the Bangladesh Insurance Academy. However, officials say progress has been limited.
Mohammad Jainul Bari, who served as chairman of Idra from June 2022 to September 2024 and later as chairman of SadharanBima Corporation, noted that automation efforts fell short, particularly due to poor performance by software vendors.
"Critical goals such as real-time monitoring and improved supervision could not be achieved," he said.
Md Abdur Rab said a software system comprising 121 modules has been developed through this project. He noted that while some of these modules are already in use, others are currently in the process of being implemented. These modules are intended to establish a new system within the insurance sector, ensuring the protection of policyholders' interests.
He further added that other insurance companies will be brought under the umbrella of this software shortly.
Brigadier General (retd) Shafique Shamim, general secretary of the Bangladesh Insurance Forum and managing director of SenaInsurance, said the project had contributed to partial improvements across the sector, particularly in automation efforts involving the regulator and state-owned entities. However, he noted that not all insurers have been able to adopt the systems fully, citing higher management costs and regulatory constraints as key barriers.
Economy expands, insurance lags
The fall in coverage coincided with a decline in insurance penetration, measured as a share of gross domestic product, from 0.55% in 2018 to 0.36% in 2024. Life insurance led the downturn. The performance remains significantly below regional peers such as Sri Lanka at 1.15%, India at 3.46% and Malaysia at 4.51%.
This decline has occurred despite rapid economic growth. Bangladesh's GDP expanded from around Tk22.5 lakh crore in 2018 to Tk50.48 lakh crore in 2024. However, insurance premium income failed to keep pace with the broader economy.
Premium growth collapses
The sector has also seen a sharp slowdown in premium income growth.
Life insurance premium growth, which stood at 9.64% in 2018, turned negative by 2024. Overall premium growth – combining life and non-life insurance – fell from 10.76% to just 0.49% over the same period.
Costs rise, deadlines extended
The five-year project initially had a budget of Tk632 crore but was revised three times to Tk925 crore due to slow implementation. Its tenure was extended five times and is now set to conclude in mid-2026, after an additional six-month extension beyond the latest December 2025 deadline.
In its final phase, the project is seeing a surge in spending. Around Tk175 crore is being disbursed in a single fiscal year, largely to clear accumulated bills. As of June 2025, about 81% of the total allocation had been utilised, with only Tk3.82 crore remaining.
Md Abdur Rab noted that expenditure in the final year will be higher than in previous years, as outstanding bills for various completed works are now being settled. "Consequently, a significant amount of funding will be required at once."
He remarked that managing this level of expenditure remains a challenging task.
Capacity gaps and leadership issues
Sector insiders point to a lack of technical expertise as a major constraint.
Several project directors were career bureaucrats with limited experience in the insurance sector, leading to gaps in implementation and continuity.
"The majority of those involved in implementing the project were from outside the insurance sector," former Idra member Sultan-ul-Abedin Molla said.
He added, "The project directors were all joint secretaries, who lacked specific experience in insurance. Furthermore, several project directors were reluctant to carry out their duties. Consequently, the project suffered from a lack of skilled personnel during its implementation."
Erosion of public trust
Idra's annual report attributes the sector's stagnation largely to declining public confidence, particularly due to delays in claim settlements. This has slowed both new customer acquisition and premium growth.
Sultan-ul-Abedin Molla said the sector's underperformance reflects deeper structural issues.
"While other sectors of the economy have grown, insurance has lagged. Lack of transparency and trust has driven down penetration relative to GDP," he said.
Brigadier General (retd) Shafique Shamim said that although regulatory reforms under the 2010 law have brought some discipline, delays in claim settlements and low public awareness remain major challenges, even as economic growth, a rising middle class and expanding digital services offer strong potential for the sector.
Project goals largely achieved: WB
The World Bank, however, said it is satisfied with the project outcomes, which were largely fraught with delays, highlighting broader issues of political inertia and the complexities of governance that can impede regulatory progress.
In its project implementation status report in April 2025, the global lender said the project has enabled Idra to increase its technical capacity to develop new insurance products, such as the introduction of new regulations for bancassurance in 2023, a focus on microinsurance and Islamic insurance takaful, draft of a new National Insurance Policy for 2024-2029, draft amendments to the Idra Act and Insurance Act.
Jamuna Bank has reported that its consolidated net profit jumped by 100% in 2025 compared to the previous year.
According to the bank's price-sensitive statement, its consolidated net profit of Tk558 crore and earnings per share stood at Tk5.92, which was Tk279 crore and Tk2.97 respectively a year ago.
The bank said earnings per share increased due to an increase in income from government securities and a decrease in provisions as compared to the previous year.
The board of the bank also recommended a 29% cash dividend to its shareholders for the year of 2025 ended 31 December.
To approve the dividend and audited financial statement, the bank has scheduled the annual general meeting date for 27 July, and the record date is set for 3 June.
Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said on Wednesday that the decision by the United Arab Emirates to leave Opec will mean the oil-producing countries will boost production, bringing down global prices in the future.
Russia is a member of the Opec+ group of countries and has been coordinating its policies with Opec members. Russia is seen as the main beneficiary of the spike in global oil prices due to the war in the Middle East.
“Today we hear that one of the countries, the United Arab Emirates, is leaving Opec. What does this mean? It means that the country can produce as much oil as its production capacities allow and release it onto the market,” Siluanov said.
Siluanov’s comments marked Russia’s first reaction to the surprise UAE exit. Russia has strong ties with both the UAE and Opec leader Saudi Arabia.
“If Opec countries conduct their policies in an uncoordinated manner (after UAE exit) and produce as much oil as their production capacities allow and as much as they want, prices will go down accordingly,” he added.
He stressed that for now the oil prices were supported by the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, and that his predictions of oversupply referred to the situation when the passage would open at some point in the future.
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.
Olympic Industries, the country's leading branded biscuit manufacturer, reported a significant 34% decline in net profit for the January–March quarter of the 2025-26 fiscal year, mainly due to higher taxes and increased raw material costs fueled by geopolitical tensions.
According to the company's unaudited financial statements, net profit for the third quarter (Q3) fell to Tk28.47 crore, down from the same period a year earlier. Although revenue grew 9% to Tk708.81 crore, the cost of goods sold rose at a faster pace—up 13% to Tk555 crore—eroding margins. As a result, gross profit declined 4% to Tk153.80 crore.
The company attributed the erosion of its bottom line to two key factors: a heavier tax burden and rising costs of imported raw materials. Import expenses surged amid supply chain disruptions and heightened market volatility triggered by the Iran–US–Israel conflict, which has disrupted energy flows and driven up global input costs. Consequently, Olympic's income tax payment skyrocketed by 104% during the quarter, reaching Tk26.22 crore.
The nine-month performance (July–March FY26) also reflected a similar trend of rising costs. Although total revenue grew by 5% to Tk2,256 crore, the cumulative net profit for the period fell by 7% to Tk148.18 crore.
At the end of the first three quarters, the company's earnings per share (EPS) stood at Tk7.41, while its net asset value (NAV) per share was recorded at Tk60.26.
Investor sentiment on the bourse remained cautious after the disclosure, with Olympic Industries' shares closing at Tk143.30 on Tuesday at the Dhaka Stock Exchange.
The manufacturer had earlier delivered strong results in FY2024–25, reporting a net profit of Tk201 crore and rewarding shareholders with a 30% cash dividend.
Bata Shoe Company (Bangladesh) Limited reported a dramatic fall in profit for the year ended 31 December 2025, with earnings declining by 96% year-on-year amid sustained business challenges.
According to its price sensitive disclosure, the company's earnings per share dropped sharply to Tk0.85 in 2025, down from Tk21.62 in the previous year. The steep decline reflects a difficult operating environment, with the company slipping into losses for much of the year.
Financial data show that Bata began incurring losses from the second quarter of 2025. During the April-December period, the company posted a cumulative loss of Tk35.67 crore. However, strong performance in the first quarter, when it recorded a profit of Tk36.82 crore, helped it narrowly return to profitability, ending the year with a net profit of Tk1.15 crore.
Despite the sharp drop in earnings, the company declared a substantial dividend for shareholders. Bata recommended a 105% final cash dividend, in addition to a 143% interim cash dividend already paid earlier in the year, taking the total payout to 248% for 2025.
The company has scheduled its annual general meeting for 30 June, with the record date set for 19 May to approve the audited financial statements and dividend.
On the stock market, Bata's shares closed 2% lower at Tk818.70 today (28 April) at the Dhaka Stock Exchange.
Bata has been operating in Bangladesh since 1962 and runs two manufacturing facilities in Tongi and Dhamrai, with a combined daily production capacity of around 160,000 pairs of shoes. The company sells approximately three crore pairs annually.
The Bangladesh operation is a subsidiary of Bafin (Nederland) BV, which holds a 70% stake and is part of the global Bata Shoe Organisation, overseeing the brand's international business.
In a press release, the company said it achieved a total turnover of Tk916 crore, demonstrating resilience despite a backdrop of macroeconomic volatility, political uncertainty, and global geopolitical pressures.
"As consumers became increasingly cautious with discretionary spending, the company pivoted toward a consumer-centric strategy, prioritising high-growth categories. Significant progress was made in the casual, sneaker, and premium segments, which aligned effectively with evolving market trends," it said.
"This strategic evolution was bolstered by the expansion of an omnichannel network, providing a seamless experience across digital and physical platforms. By maintaining a lean organisational framework and focusing on operational efficiency, Bata Bangladesh is balancing necessary structural adjustments with continued investment in innovation. This proactive stance ensures the brand is well-positioned to capitalise on emerging opportunities as the economic environment stabilises," reads the press release.
National Credit and Commerce (NCC) Bank shares jumped in the opening session as it recommended record cash dividend to its shareholders for the year of 2025.
During the opening session till 10:50 am, its share price jumped by 12.59% to Tk16.10.
According to its price sensitive statement filed on the Dhaka bourse, the bank recommended a 17% cash and 4% stock dividend for 2025.
According to the company, the declared cash dividend is become highest so far in its listing history.
To approve the dividend and audited financial statements, the bank has scheduled the annual general meeting date for 24 June and the record date for 21 May.
In the last year, its consolidated earnings per share of Tk4.29, which was Tk3.94 a year ago.
Investment Corporation of Bangladesh (ICB), a state-owned non bank financial institution, has incurred Tk588 crore consolidated loss in the first nine months of the current fiscal year.
The ICB approved the nine months financials at its board of directors meeting held today (28 April).
The losses almost doubled over the same time of the previous fiscal year as it had incurred loss of Tk277 crore, its data showed.
Regarding the loss, ICB attributed lower capital gains from buying and selling shares and increasing interest rate for deposits.
Its quarterly data showed, during the July to march period, its loss per share stood at Tk6.79.
Beacon Pharmaceuticals PLC posted a remarkable rise in its profitability in the third quarter of fiscal year 2025-26, mainly driven by strong operational performance and higher growth in earnings.
According to the company's price-sensitive information (PSI) disclosed on Sunday (26 April), the pharmaceutical manufacturer witnessed over a 335% year-on-year increase in the net profit for the January-March quarter of FY2025-26 compared to the same period of the previous fiscal year.
The share price of the company increased by 3.79% to Tk104 on the Dhaka stock exchange on Tuesday.
In the third quarter, the company earned revenue worth Tk380 crore, which is 25.83% higher from Tk302 crore compared to the same period of the previous year.
The company's earnings per share (EPS) stood at Tk1.22 for the third quarter, significantly higher than Tk0.28 recorded in the corresponding quarter a year earlier.
For the first nine months of the fiscal year, from July to March, Beacon Pharmaceuticals reported an EPS of Tk5.95, marking a 59% increase compared to the same period of the previous fiscal year.
In this period, its revenue stood at Tk1202 crore, which was Tk900 crore a year ago. Besides, its net profit after tax stood at Tk138 crore, which was Tk87 crore a one year ago.
The company also reported a significant improvement in its net operating cash flow per share (NOCFPS) during the reporting period.
Explaining the reasons behind the strong financial performance, the company stated that revenue growth in the corresponding period of the previous year was affected by socio-political instability, which also negatively impacted operating cash flows.
However, business operations recovered in the third quarter of the current fiscal year, leading to strong revenue growth. Consequently, improved cash collections significantly increased Net Operating Cash Flow Per Share, reflecting stronger operational performance and better liquidity compared to the same period a year ago.
According to market analysts, the substantial growth in quarterly earnings reflects improved business performance, higher sales revenue, and operational efficiency amid rising demand for pharmaceutical products in both local and export markets.
The strong earnings growth attracted attention from investors in the capital market, as the pharmaceutical sector continues to remain one of the more resilient industries despite broader economic challenges, including inflationary pressure, foreign exchange volatility, and rising production costs.
Beacon Pharmaceuticals is one of the listed pharmaceutical companies on the Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE). The company manufactures a wide range of generic medicines, including oncology, antiviral, and specialised healthcare products.
The United Arab Emirates said on Tuesday it was quitting OPEC and OPEC+, dealing a heavy blow to the oil exporting groups and their de facto leader, Saudi Arabia, at a time when the Iran war has caused a historic energy shock and unsettled the global economy.
The loss of the UAE, a longstanding OPEC member, could create disarray and weaken the group, which has usually sought to show a united front despite internal disagreements over a range of issues from geopolitics to production quotas.
UAE Energy Minister Suhail Mohamed al-Mazrouei told Reuters the decision was taken after a careful look at the regional power's energy strategies.
Asked whether the UAE consulted with Saudi Arabia, he said the UAE did not raise the issue with any other country.
"This is a policy decision, it has been done after a careful look at current and future policies related to level of production," said the energy minister.
OPEC Gulf producers have already been struggling to ship exports through the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint between Iran and Oman through which a fifth of the world's crude oil and liquefied natural gas normally passes, because of Iranian threats and attacks against vessels.
Mazrouei said the move would not have a huge impact on the market because of the situation in the strait.
But the UAE exit from OPEC represents a win for US President Donald Trump, who has accused the organisation of "ripping off the rest of the world" by inflating oil prices.
Trump has also linked U.S. military support for the Gulf with oil prices, saying that while the US defends OPEC members they "exploit this by imposing high oil prices".
The move came after the UAE, a regional business hub and one of Washington's most important allies, criticised fellow Arab states for not doing enough to protect it from numerous Iranian attacks during the war.
Anwar Gargash, the diplomatic adviser for the UAE president, criticised the Arab and Gulf response to the Iranian attacks in a session at the Gulf Influencers Forum on Monday.
"The Gulf Cooperation Council countries supported each other logistically, but politically and militarily, I think their position has been the weakest historically," Gargash said.
"I expect this weak stance from the Arab League and I am not surprised by it, but I haven't expected it from the (Gulf) Cooperation Council and I am surprised by it," he said.
Bangladesh's inflation rose to an average 8.8% year-on-year in the January-March quarter of FY26, up from 8.3% in the previous quarter, driven mainly by higher food and energy prices, according to Bangladesh Bank's latest quarterly report released today (28 April).
The central bank attributed the rise to Eid-related food demand and persistent energy costs.
Food inflation was the main contributor, increasing by 1.2 percentage points to 8.6%.
Within this segment, vegetable prices saw a sharp reversal, contributing 22.7% to the overall rise after previously contracting 13.4%. Protein prices accounted for 44.6% of the food inflation increase, while cereal prices eased during the period.
At the retail level, prices of rice, lentils, soy oil and chicken rose, while onion prices declined sharply.
Core inflation edged down to 8%, supported by declines in clothing, healthcare and furniture costs. However, transport and communication costs surged significantly to 19.4%, offsetting some of the moderation.
Energy inflation also increased to 14.9% in Q3 FY26, compared to 14.4% in the previous quarter. Solid fuels such as firewood, agricultural by-products, cow dung and jute sticks remained key drivers, alongside higher gas prices.
The report noted that price pressures broadened during the quarter, with 230 of 382 tracked CPI items recording price increases in March. Despite this, kernel density analysis suggests inflation in FY26 has been less volatile compared to FY25.
The wage-price gap narrowed only slightly, with wages rising 8.1% compared to inflation at 8.7%, continuing to squeeze real incomes amid weak economic growth.
The Asian Development Bank has projected full-year FY26 inflation at 9%, warning that global oil price volatility remains a key risk.
Bangladesh Bank also stressed the need for continued vigilance to anchor inflation expectations and protect household purchasing power.
When India and New Zealand signed a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) in New Delhi yesterday (27 April), media attention focused mainly on tariffs and market access, as often happens on such occasions.
But what is often overlooked is the bigger picture of geopolitics and geoeconomics beneath bilateral trade, tariffs and non-tariff issues under FTAs.
The agreement with New Zealand is the seventh bilateral FTA India has signed in the last three and a half years.
With planned deals with the European Union and the United States, the total would rise to nine FTAs with 38 advanced economies, covering nearly 65–70% of global GDP.
For India, the common thread in these seven FTAs is support for exports, agricultural productivity, student mobility, skills, investment and services.
Under the FTA, New Zealand has committed $20 billion in investment in India. New Zealand invests nearly 8% of its GDP overseas annually, with total overseas investment valued at $422.6 billion as of March 2025.
There are two main elements to India's new approach.
First, it signals New Delhi's strategy of pursuing trade partnerships with developed economies that provide real market access for labour-intensive sectors at a time when the multilateral trading order is weakening and the world faces tariff wars and growing protectionism.
Second, bilateral trade routes have taken precedence over regional trade groupings.
Indian Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal summed up the new approach by saying India is forging partnerships with developed economies that deliver real market access for labour-intensive sectors and will create jobs while empowering youth, women and MSMEs.
New Zealand is the third member of the five Anglophone countries with which India has entered into an FTA. The other two are Britain (2025) and Australia (2022), while talks are continuing with Canada and the United States. These five countries are part of the "Five Eyes", an intelligence-sharing security grouping.
India is not a member of the Five Eyes and has not entered into any formal alliance with them.
Yet economically, New Delhi has steadily accelerated trade agreements with developed democracies closely aligned on security, technology, investment rules and supply chains.
This shows how India is increasingly engaging with some of the world's most advanced economies, which account for nearly 65-70% of global GDP.
At $49,380, New Zealand is among the higher-income economies in the Oceania region. India's total trade in goods and services with New Zealand reached $2.4 billion in 2024.
Two points stand out. First, India appears focused on gaining access to high-income consumers in developed countries. Second, the current volume of bilateral trade is of secondary importance.
India has far larger bilateral trade volumes with many other countries, including Bangladesh. But when it comes to FTAs, the priority appears to be the more lucrative markets of advanced economies. In 2024, New Zealand's imports stood at $47 billion, while exports were $42 billion.
IPDC Finance PLC, the country's first private sector financial institution, recorded a robust 25% year-on-year growth in net profit for the year 2025, navigating persistent macroeconomic challenges through strategic diversification and disciplined cost management.
According to its audited financial statements approved on Tuesday, the company's net profit after tax rose to Tk45.5 crore in 2025. Following this strong performance, the board of directors has recommended a 10% dividend for the shareholders, comprising 5% cash and 5% stock.
The growth was largely driven by a massive surge in investment income, which skyrocketed by 93% to reach Tk132.4 crore. This jump was fuelled by higher treasury yields and effective portfolio management within the capital market.
Additionally, gross interest income grew by 9% to Tk956 crore, supported by a prudent expansion of the company's lending portfolios.
Despite a broader economic slowdown, IPDC's operating income increased by 7% to Tk348.4 crore. The company maintained a strict grip on its operational costs, with expenses rising by a moderate 10%, resulting in an operating profit of Tk185.3 crore.
On the balance sheet side, IPDC continued to gain depositor trust. Total deposits grew by 15% to Tk6,224.9 crore, securing a 12% market share in the industry. Meanwhile, loans, leases, and advances stood at Tk7,462.2 crore, marking a 7% increase from the previous year.
Key financial indicators also showed significant improvement. Earnings per share (EPS) rose to Tk1.11, and the Net asset value (NAV) per share climbed to Tk17.85. The company's net operating cash flow per share (NOCFPS) stood at a healthy Tk9.94, indicating strong cash generation from its core business operations. The return on equity (ROE) improved to 6.74%.
Managing Director of IPDC Finance Rizwan Dawood Shams attributed the success to "disciplined execution and strategic resilience."
"Despite a challenging environment, we strengthened our earnings base through diversified income streams and prudent cost management. Our focus on portfolio quality and strong risk governance enabled us to deliver sustainable profitability while reinforcing our balance sheet," he said.
He further added that the company remains committed to creating long-term value for stakeholders through financial stability and responsible growth.
Apex Footwear PLC, the country's leading footwear manufacturer and exporter, reported a staggering turnover of Tk616 crore during the January-March quarter of the 2025-26 fiscal year, yet managed to retain only Tk1.06 crore as net profit.
This disparity reflects a razor-thin profit margin of just 0.17%, a figure that trails significantly behind industry peers such as Bata Shoe.
The company's latest unaudited financial statement reveals that despite a 14% growth in revenue compared to the same period last year, the bottom line was heavily weighed down by a combination of surging finance costs, higher tax burdens, and rising operational expenses.
During the third quarter, spanning January to March 2026, Apex Footwear's revenue climbed to Tk615.96 crore from Tk540 crore in the corresponding period of the previous year. While the net profit saw a modest 9% year-on-year increase, it reached only Tk1.06 crore, yielding an earnings per share of Tk0.54.
The financial data indicates that the cost of doing business has escalated sharply, with the cost of goods sold rising by 10% to Tk488 crore.
Furthermore, marketing, selling, and distribution expenses grew to Tk93.37 crore, while finance costs – primarily driven by rising interest rates on loans – jumped by 16% to reach Tk16.99 crore.
On a broader scale, the company's performance for the first nine months of the current fiscal year (July-March) showed a similar trend of high volume but constrained profitability. Cumulative revenue for the nine-month period reached Tk1,559 crore, up from Tk1,369 crore in the previous year.
Cumulative net profit for the period stood at Tk8.91 crore, compared with Tk6.99 crore in the same period of the previous financial year, indicating improved earnings but continued pressure on margins.
Despite the thin margins, the company maintained a strong financial position, with a net asset value per share of Tk351.89 and net operating cash flow per share of Tk122.92 as of March 2026.
The significant squeeze on profit margins has been attributed largely to the current taxation framework governing export proceeds.
A senior official of the company said the sharp decline in margins has been worsened by the nature of tax deduction at source (TDS).
He noted that in the export business, banks deduct tax at the source immediately upon the receipt of export proceeds. "Because these deductions are not strictly tied to the export revenue of a specific accounting period, the tax cost often appears disproportionately high relative to the quarterly profit."
Industry insiders further elaborated that footwear exporters are required to pay 1% of their total export value as TDS. Although this amount can be adjusted against final income tax at the end of the year, it is not refundable.
This creates a systemic hurdle for companies operating on low margins; if the final calculated tax on income is lower than the amount already deducted as TDS, the company cannot claim a refund, effectively turning the deduction into a final tax that erodes the actual profit.
Following the disclosure of these financial results, investor sentiment on the Dhaka Stock Exchange remained cautious. Shares of Apex Footwear closed 0.83% lower at Tk202.60 today.
Based on the latest quarterly data, the company's price-to-earnings ratio stands at 33.47, while its dividend yield is 1.23%.
Private investors aiming to launch Bangladesh's first privately funded submarine cable face mounting delays from inter-ministerial red tape, despite sinking $53 million (equivalent to Tk650 crore) into preparatory work.
The Bangladesh Private Cable System consortium – Summit Communications, CdNet Communications, and Metacore Subcom Ltd – awaits critical no-objection clearances from the foreign affairs and home affairs ministries, and the National Security Intelligence.
This bottleneck halts cable-laying vessels from entering Bangladesh's territorial waters.
The project links to the UMO Cable System's 2,227-km main route from Singapore to Myanmar, plus a 1,300-km branch to Cox's Bazar.
Without April approvals, investors risk missing the 31 August 2026 rollout deadline, pushing implementation back a full year due to the Bay of Bengal's narrow November-to-mid-May laying window.
In a letter sent on 31 March to the foreign affairs ministry, the consortium sought no-objection clearance for Panama- and Indonesia-flagged vessels to enter Bangladesh's territorial waters to lay the cable.
However, officials say procedural gaps between ministries have stalled progress.
A foreign ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told The Business Standard that the consortium had been asked to obtain authorisation from the posts, telecommunications and information technology ministry, adding that no such communication had yet been received.
"According to protocol, one ministry cannot act on a letter issued by an agency under another ministry," the official said.
Posts, Telecommunications and Information Technology Secretary Bilquis Jahan Rimi said the ministry has not received any letter on this matter. "A decision will be announced once the letter is received."
However, official documents show that the consortium had written to the ministry in September last year seeking inter-ministerial support.
Project status
The consortium has already reached all critical technical milestones.
These include a comprehensive feasibility study, a detailed subsea route survey, the demarcation of the route from Myanmar's Exclusive Economic Zone to Cox's Bazar, and the activation of the Singapore-Myanmar segment.
The project is currently in the "shovel-ready" phase, with construction of the landing station and beach manhole progressing at full pace.
Furthermore, specialised cable-laying vessels and a team of international experts have been contracted and are awaiting final approval to proceed.
Looming deadlines
The project faces a critical "roll-out obligation" to be completed by 31 August 2026. However, technical experts note that seabed installations in the Bay of Bengal are only feasible between November and mid-May.
If the April window is missed due to the upcoming monsoon and lack of approvals, the project is feared to be delayed by at least another year, leading to massive financial demurrages.
"We have already invested nearly 50% of the total project cost," said Md Arif Al Islam, managing director of Summit Communications.
"We are stuck in a complex situation. If the government did not want private submarine cables, why were we encouraged to spend millions on infrastructure and licences?"
The consortium has already spent $53 million on licensing, VAT and other expenses. Of the amount, it has paid $43.76 million to the cable owner, Compana Pvt Ltd, for the UMO trunk cable, which includes $36 million in IRU fees and $7.96 million in maintenance charges.
Market monopoly vs competition
Currently, the state-owned Bangladesh Submarine Cables PLC controls the majority of the market through two cables, SE-ME-WE-4 and SE-ME-WE-5, with a combined capacity of 7,220 Gbps. A third state-owned cable, SE-ME-WE-6, is expected to launch next year with a massive capacity of over 40,000 Gbps at a cost of Tk1,000 crore.
Bangladesh Submarine Cables has expressed concerns that private entry will create "extreme instability" and reduce the revenue of the state-owned listed company. In a recent internal report, the company suggested that the government should set a minimum threshold to ensure state-owned cable usage does not fall below 50%.
An official from Bangladesh Submarine Cables noted that as a listed company, the government must consider the interests of its shareholders when making strategic decisions.
Entrepreneurs in the IT sector have pointed out that the provision of internet services via submarine cables is currently a monopoly held by the state-owned company. In this context, the approval of private submarine cables was a significant milestone towards increasing private sector participation, they say.
Industry stakeholders maintain a consensus that increasing private sector participation will foster a more competitive market, ultimately driving down internet costs for the public.
They argue that making connectivity more affordable will enable the inclusion of a larger segment of the population, thereby significantly boosting the country's per-capita internet consumption.
Internet penetration scenario
According to a report by the Asian Development Bank published in December last year, Bangladesh's current internet penetration stands at 53%, remaining behind regional countries like Bhutan at 88% and 85% in the Maldives; both countries show high access.
The report said Bangladesh's digital infrastructure is expanding but faces connectivity, capacity, and rural access gaps. International connectivity relies on two undersea cables, both following similar routes, creating risks, it pointed out.
The government has approved five proposals for $1.9 billion in loans from development partners of which $1.6 billion is non-concessional.
Of the amount, $1.3 billion will be set aside as budget support to help tackle urgent financial pressures, according to finance ministry officials.
The approval for loans under relatively tough terms were granted yesterday (28 April) at a meeting of the Standing Committee on Non-concessional Loan chaired by Finance and Planning Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury at the Planning Ministry in Sher-e-Bangla Nagar.
Sources present at the meeting said the budget support package includes $450 million from the Asian Development Bank (ADB), $500 million from Japan International Cooperation Agency (Jica), $250 million from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), and $100 million from the OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID).
Officials said these loans come with higher interest rates, shorter grace periods and faster repayment schedules than concessional financing.
Under the programme titled Strengthening Economic Management and Governance, Subprogram 2, ADB will provide a total of $750 million, consisting of $300 million in concessional financing and $450 million through its regular Ordinary Capital Resources (OCR) window.
The concessional portion carries a 2% interest rate, a repayment period of 25 years, and a five-year grace period.
The $450 million OCR loan is classified as non-concessional and carries an interest rate of SOFR plus 0.50%, which based on the 20 April 2026 SOFR rate of 3.63%, brings the effective rate to 4.13%.
It also includes a 0.15% commitment charge on undrawn balances.
This ADB OCR loan has a 15-year tenure, including a three-year grace period. According to ERD analysis, the loan's grant element is 6.61%, making it highly non-concessional.
Negotiations with ADB were completed on 15 April 2026, and the package is now awaiting board approval.
The government is also seeking $500 million from JICA to help manage immediate fiscal challenges. The proposed loan carries an indicative interest rate of 3.05%, a 30-year repayment period, and a 10-year grace period.
Officials said the Japanese financing would be used in line with IMF recommendations, including expanding social protection spending, strengthening revenue administration, and improving macroeconomic stability.
AIIB is set to provide $250 million as co-financing alongside ADB. The proposed loan carries an interest rate of SOFR plus 1.45%, which based on the same benchmark rate would bring the effective cost to around 5.08%.
It has a 35-year maturity, a five-year grace period, and a 0.25% front-end fee. ERD analysis found the grant element to be negative 0.68%, meaning it is considered extremely hard borrowing.
The government is also pursuing $100 million equivalent from OPEC Fund for International Development, denominated at approximately €85.3 million. Indicative terms include an interest rate of six-month EURIBOR plus 1.20%, giving an effective rate of about 3.616%.
The loan has an 18-year maturity, a three-year grace period, and a 0.25% commitment fee. Its grant element is estimated at 11.38%, also placing it in the non-concessional category.
Beyond budget support, the committee also approved a separate $300 million ADB loan for the SASEC Dhaka-Sylhet Corridor Road Investment (Tranche-2) project.
The project will upgrade around 210 kilometres of highway from Dhaka (Kanchpur) to Sylhet into a four-lane corridor, with separate service lanes for slow-moving vehicles.
The goal is to better connect the Dhaka-Sylhet route with regional transport networks including the Asian Highway, SASEC (South Asia Subregional Economic Cooperation) and BIMSTEC corridors.
The total project cost is estimated at Tk16918.58 crore, of which the government will provide Tk3,674 crore, while ADB will finance Tk13,244.68 crore.
The road loan will come from ADB's OCR window at an effective rate of around 4.23%, with a 25-year repayment period and a five-year grace period.
Officials said the Standing Committee on Non-concessional Loan also adopted several policy measures to improve management of costly foreign borrowing.
Non-concessional loans will be approved only where concessional financing is unavailable or impractical. Borrowers receiving government or central bank guarantees must demonstrate repayment capacity from their own income.
Loans with excessive conditions or mandatory down payments will be discouraged.
The committee also decided that annual debt servicing on non-concessional external loans must remain below the lower of 10% of export earnings or 15% of government revenue, while total non-concessional external debt stock must remain below 10% of GDP.
ERD officials said these measures are expected to improve transparency, reduce risks and strengthen long-term sustainability in Bangladesh's external debt management.
Bangladesh’s exports are order-based and free of overcapacity, Commerce Minister Khandakar Abdul Muktadir said yesterday amid an ongoing US investigation into forced labour and surplus production across 60 countries, including Bangladesh.
Speaking at a luncheon meeting on US-Bangladesh partnership hosted by the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) at the Sheraton in Dhaka, he also said Bangladesh has made substantial progress regarding labour rights.
The minister said Bangladesh’s exports are driven by demand. Particularly, the garment industry produces strictly against international orders. “This is indicative of global demand, rather than excess capacity.”
He pointed out that many factories are currently running below capacity due to energy and infrastructure constraints.
On forced labour, the minister mentioned that Bangladesh has enacted reforms in workplace safety and labour rights in partnership with the International Labour Organization (ILO) and other partners, establishing one of the most rigorously regulated and secure garment sectors in the world.
Stating that Bangladesh is committed to maintaining international labour standards, he said the government believes that the most constructive course of action to that end is continuing engagement and collaboration.
On partnership with the US, the minister said the government is confident that the bilateral relationship will continue to grow through trade, increased investment, technology collaboration, and continued dialogue.
He said the government is diversifying its export base by incorporating sectors such as pharmaceuticals, leather, agro-products, and light engineering, in addition to a booming ICT sector.
The minister stated that improving market access is imperative as the country is set to graduate from the least developed country status. “We look forward to continued US assistance to guarantee a seamless transition and maintain our global competitiveness.”
He noted that although Bangladesh has established robust manufacturing capabilities and exports pharmaceuticals to more than 150 countries, the entry into the US market is still restricted by the intricate, expensive, and time-consuming regulatory processes.
“We are of the opinion that there is potential to improve the coordination between pertinent authorities, expedite the approval process, and simplify procedures,” he said.
Also speaking at the event, AmCham President Syed Ershad Ahmed said in today’s shifting global economic environment, the Bangladesh–US partnership remains vital for both growth and resilience.
The partnership plays a strategic role in sustaining export competitiveness, ensuring essential imports, and strengthening broader economic and industrial development, he added.
Bangladesh exported roughly $9.5 billion in goods to the US in 2025, with the garment sector alone accounting for $8.2 billion, capturing over 10 percent of the US apparel market, he said.
During the same period, the country imported about $2.3 billion from the US, primarily cotton and agricultural products.
Muktadir, meanwhile, stated that US foreign direct investment in Bangladesh rose from $193 million in fiscal year 2019-20 (FY20) to $426 million in FY22, before falling sharply to $89 million in FY24 and partially recovering to $132 million in FY25.
On a separate matter, he informed that the government may recruit foreign companies for loading and unloading at the Chattogram port to increase efficiency.
The minister also said for easing the business, the government will launch provisional permission for launching a business. Currently, it takes many months and more than 25 signatures to obtain the permission for the business entrepreneurs to start a business in Bangladesh.
Once an entrepreneur starts with the provisional permission, he can manage the original permission gradually in one to two months, he added.