BB receives highest complaints against Sonali, IBBL, StanChart

Posted by BankInfo on Tue, Sep 23 2014 12:27 pm

Bangladesh Bank (BB) last year received the highest number of complaints from customers against Sonali Bank, Islami Bank Bangladesh Limited (IBBL) and Standard Chartered Bank (SCB), according to a latest report of the central bank. The Financial Integrity and Customer Services Department (FICSD) of BB yesterday published the annual report for 2013-14 on the activities of its Customers’ Interests Protection Centre (CIPC), reports BSS.
According to the report, the CIPC received the highest number of complaints against the state-owned bank (SoB), Sonali among all the scheduled banks of the country. Two other SoBs - Janata and Agrani - were on the second and the third position on the same row.
Among the private banks, customers lodged the highest number of complaints against IBBL. On the same scale, SCB was at the top of the foreign banks operating in Bangladesh.
The CIPC received a total of 4,476 complaints during 2013-14, of which 4,291 were solved. The rate of dispute resolution was 98.31 per cent since introduction of the FICSD, the report said.
FICSD, established in March, 2011, received a total of 10,990 complaints against different banks in the past three years, of which 10,805 were sorted out.
Most of the complaints were related to trade bill, general banking, loan and advances, remittances, mobile banking and debit, credit and ATM cards.
“The statistics justified the implication and importance of setting up a centre to listen to people and solve their problem,” said Governor Atiur Rahman after launching the report at the central bank headquarters in the capital city yesterday.
He said the central bank is committed to ensure and establish transparency and accountability in the banking sector, and the measures to protect customers’ interest were a strong step forward to this end.
Consumers’ Association of Bangladesh (president Golam Rahman, Deputy Governor SK Sur Chowdhury, Association of Bankers, Bangladesh  president Ali Reza Iftekhar and BB Executive Director S M Moniruzzaman attended the programme, chaired by general manager of FICSD M Saiful Islam.

News:The Independent/23-Sep-2014

Banks propel stocks index up

Posted by BankInfo on Tue, Sep 23 2014 11:48 am

Despite the nation-wide strike for the consecutive three working days, equity market continued to advance amid heightened turnover

Stocks ended flat yesterday, as late profit booking cut early gains.

Strong rally in heavyweight banks and telecommunications offset profit taking losses in other sectors, including cement and power.

The Dhaka Stock Exchange benchmark index, DSEX, closed at 4924 with a slight rise of 11 points or 0.3%, extending its gaining streak for the fifth straight session.

But the Shariah Index, DSES, was marginally down 4 points or 0.4% to 1,149. The comprising blue chips DS30 fell 11 points or 0.7% to 1,889.

Chittagong Stock Exchange (CSE) Selective Categories Index, CSCX, ended at 9,299 with a rise of 81 points.

 Buoyant trading continued at the DSE as the turnover stood at Tk992 crore with over 1% higher than the previous session.

Investors continued favoring pharmaceuticals which captured the highest trading value, followed by the engineering and energy sectors. 

Among the major sectors, the banks posted the highest return of more than 2.4% while the most profit booking took place in the cement sector shedding 3.4%. 

The telecommunications rose 2%, followed by power, pharmaceuticals and non-banking financial institutions, which edged higher.

LankaBangla Securities said the trading can be seen as a day of consolidation as stocks fluctuated throughout the day before eventually ending the session mixed. 

It said investors presented mixed trading behavior taking profit on stocks, those rallied earlier in the previous sessions while taking position on financial and manufacturing stocks. 

IDLC Investments said despite the nation-wide strike for the consecutive three working days, equity market continued to advance amid heightened turnover. 

Investors remained active, as the turnover remained robust, it said. 

The debutant RSRM Steel jumped over 93% to Tk77 a share on its offer value, making it the highest traded stocks.

Out of 303 issues traded at the DSE, 54 posted more than 3% gain and 26 lost more than 3% over the previous day.

Zenith Investments said the market reversed its course of direction in early trade hour, but recovered quickly with huge turnover volume. 

It said much of the credit goes to the banks and financial institutions that fuelled the growth of the main index and made the market more lucrative to the investors. 

News:DhakaTribune/23-Sep-2014

 

Most clients complain against state-owned banks

Posted by BankInfo on Tue, Sep 23 2014 11:18 am

Complaints from Chittagong zone were highest 36%, out of the total 669 complaints

Bangladesh Bank has received most of the customer complaints against the state-owned banks as their customer services are very poor.

This observation was disclosed in an annual report (2013-14) of Financial Integrity and Customer Services Department (FICSD) of the central bank. 

Bangladesh Bank Governor Atiur Rahman yesterday unveiled the report at the central bank headquarters in the city in presence of former chairman of Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) Golam Rahman, Bangladesh Bank Deputy Governor SK Sur Chowdhury and other high officials.

A total of 26% customers lodged complaints against the state-owned banks, which was the highest number compared to the other group of banks, says the report.

However, the number of complaints were 55.52% against the private commercial banks as the number of the banks is higher than the state-owned banks, said FICSD Deputy General Manager Swapan Kumar Roy, who moderated the report unveiling ceremoney. 

“We did not even get proper response from the state-owned banks to resolve the clients’ complains,’’ he added. 

According to the report, the lowest 4% complaints were received against foreign banks followed by 6.89% against specialised banks and 7.53% against non bank financial institutions.

Among the highest complaint receipt banks, first three are state-owned Sonali, Janata and Rupali bank. The number of complaints were 291 against Sonali, 186 against Janata and 185 against Rupali Bank during the fiscal year 2013-14. 

Among the private commercial banks, the highest complaints were received against Islami bank followed by Prime Bank, BRAC Bank, Mercantile Bank, Bangladesh Krishi Bank, Premier Bank and Shahjalal Islami Bank. 

As the complaints against the state-owned banks were more, they have to improve the customer service to compete in the market, said Atiur Rahman. 

He urged to the government to take necessary steps to further improve the standard of these state-owned banks. 

He also called upon the government to appoint honest, efficient and professional directors in the state-owned banks and remove the existing dishonest, inefficient directors from the board.  

Governor also expressed his williness for appointing an ombudsman in the central bank to resolve its official’s complaints.

 The complaints from Chittagong zone were highest 36% of the total number of complaints 669, according to the report.

Of the various types of complaints, 50% were about general banking, 10.71% were about loans and advances, 5.80% were about trade bills related, 5.54% about cards, 1.70% about remittances, 0.72% about mobile banking while rest 25.71% is miscellaneous. 

The number of complaints Bangladesh Bank received were 4,476 in the fiscal year 2013-14, which was 4% higher from the previous fiscal year. 

However, the resolution rate of Bangladesh Bank against the complaints reached to 95.87% in the last fiscal year from 68.46% in the previous year, according to the report. 

News:Dhaka Tribune/23-Sep-2014

 

Remove dishonest people from state banks: BB chief

Posted by BankInfo on Tue, Sep 23 2014 10:53 am

Central bank resolves 96pc of complaints against banks

Star Business Report

The central bank yesterday came down heavily on the boards of state banks for failure in running the institutes.

Bangladesh Bank Governor Atiur Rahman said the efficiency of the boards in running the banks must improve.

"We hope the government will appoint honest people and remove inefficient and dishonest ones," Rahman said at the launch of the annual report on customer complaints.

The governor's comments came just a day after AMA Muhith, finance minister, admitted to the directors' failures in these banks.

Of the state-run banks, Sonali was the first to surface with the big news of a Tk 3,500 crore scam with Hall-Mark and five other companies.

BASIC Bank also made headlines after the central bank detected irregularities worth over Tk 4,500 crore.

Irregularities have pushed these banks' non-performing loans to several times higher than the industry average.

In the report, the central bank resolved about 96 percent of customer complaints lodged against banks and non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) in fiscal 2013-14, which was just 68 percent in the previous year.

The Financial Integrity and Customer Services Department, a newly established division in BB, prepared the report.

“The central bank's monitoring and banks' proactiveness helped us resolve complaints faster,” SK Sur Chowdhury, deputy governor of the banking regulator, told The Daily Star.

Rahman said he is also thinking about appointing an ombudsman to address BB's internal problems, irregularities and corruption.

The report showed that BB received 4,476 complaints in 2013-14 against scheduled banks and non-bank financial institutions; 4,291 were resolved.

BB got 4,296 complaints in the previous year; 2,941 were addressed. In 2011-12, only 2,526 complaints were lodged and 2,370 cases were resolved.

Of the top 10 banks that the central bank received the most complaints, four are state-owned and six privately-owned.

The highest number of complaints – 291 – was lodged against state-owned Sonali Bank, followed by Janata with 186 and Agrani 185.

The highest number of complaints -- 152 -- were lodged against Islami Bank Bangladesh, followed by Prime Bank with 146, Brac Bank 135 and Mercantile Bank with 129, among the private banks.

The report showed that most complaints were on general banking issues, followed by loans in advance, mobile banking, trade bills and remittance.

The governor also asked banks and NBFIs not to harass customers.

The BB has issued a guideline on customer services and complaint management to help banks and NBFIs deal with their customers properly, he said.

The Financial Integrity and Customer Services Department will strictly monitor and supervise banks' services, Rahman added.

The governor said more and more people are coming into the banking channel, and the number of accounts reached nearly 10 crore till date.

About 1.33 crore accounts were opened with just Tk 10 and 1.75 crore accounts were opened with mobile banking services.

News:The Daily Sun/23-Sep-2014

Midland Bank opens ATM booth at Dhanmondi

Posted by BankInfo on Tue, Sep 23 2014 10:43 am

Md Ahsan-uz Zaman, Managing Director of Midland Bank Limited, inaugurates an ATM booth at the bank’s Dhanmondi branch premises in Dhaka on Sunday.

 

 Midland Bank Limited opened another ATM booth at its Dhanmondi branch premises in Dhaka on Sunday.

Md Ahsan-uz Zaman, MD of the bank, inaugurated the booth, said a press release. Khandaker Nayeemul Kabir, DMD, Md Shah Alam, FVP and Head of Dhanmondi branch, attended.

News:Daily Sun/23-Sep-2014
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