Banks lead recovery in stock prices

Posted by BankInfo on Tue, Dec 18 2012 06:32 am

Stocks gained 2.17 percent yesterday -- the highest in three weeks -- thanks to a buying spree in anticipation of a good run.

The banking sector, which accounts for 30 percent of the total market capitalisation, registered substantial gains in the last few days to pull up the DGEN to close at 4,177 points.

“Investors preferred the most-weighted banking sector anticipating a bear run in the market,” said Masrib Zahid, managing director of Cosmopolitan Finance, adding that it was encouraging to see that the DGEN was not dropping beyond the 4,000 points.

“However, it is a matter of concern that the volume is so low, which suggests low investor confidence,” he said.

Turnover rose by 23.94 percent from the previous day to Tk 218 crore.

“Investors were more upbeat on the banking sector, which gained by 3.46 percent,” IDLC Investments said in its daily market commentary.

“In addition, some other large cap stocks -- Grameenphone, Titas Gas and Lafarge Surma Cement -- experienced positive movements which turned it into a large cap rally,” the merchant bank said.

A total of 0.75 lakh trades were executed yesterday, with 6.96 crore shares and mutual fund units changing hands on the Dhaka bourse.

All the major sectors ended in the black. Banks rose by 3.45 percent, followed by non-bank financial institutions at 3.32 percent, power 2.17 percent, telecommunications at 0.80 percent and pharmaceuticals at 0.58 percent.

Of the 260 issues that traded on the DSE, 222 advanced, 33 declined and 5 remained unchanged.

National Bank was the top traded stock of the day with its transaction of 67.22 lakh shares worth Tk 15.21 crore.

Prime Leasing and Finance was the biggest gainer of the day, posting an 8.87 percent rise, while Modern Dyeing and Screen Printing was the worst loser, slumping 6.78 percent.

News: The Daily Star/Bangladesh/18th-Dec-12

Banking division sends director nominees' list to BB

Posted by BankInfo on Tue, Dec 18 2012 06:25 am

The Banking Division yesterday sent the names of 29 persons to the central bank who were primarily selected for appointment as directors of state-owned commercial banks (SOCBs) to check whether any of them was loan defaulter.

Among them, five are government officials and the rest 24 are non-government personalities, including economists, business leaders, educationists, former civil servants and bankers.

The appointment will be made today with the banking regulator's clearance, said a high official of the finance ministry.

The list includes some people with political links, but the number of such nominees is lower than previous appointments, the official said.

About 40 posts of directors in different state banks and financial institutions, including 26 with Sonali, Janata and Agrani, remained vacant since the first week of September, as the government failed to make appointments in the banks' highest policymaking panels.

News: The Daily Star/Bangladesh/18th-Dec-12

Private banks roll out more farm loans to avoid penalty

Posted by BankInfo on Tue, Dec 18 2012 06:11 am

A farmer ploughs a paddy field, while women sow seedlings at Godagari upazila in Rajshahi.

Private and foreign banks increased their farm loan disbursement in the first five months of fiscal 2012-13 to avoid the central bank's punitive measures.

In July-November, private and foreign banks lent Tk 1,820 crore to the agriculture and rural sector, a 28 percent rise from last year, according to Bangladesh Bank data.

The figure is 33 percent of the bank's agricultural credit target for the full year, up from 27 percent a year ago.

SM Moniruzzaman, executive director of the central bank, linked the private and foreign banks' farm credit disbursement growth to a directive issued last year, which stipulated banks lend 2 percent of their loans and advances to the farm sector.

"As we have made lending to the farm sector mandatory, the private and foreign banks have become more cautious than in the previous years in achieving their targets."

Failure to comply with the directive would not only lead to fines for banks but also depositing of that amount to the central bank at 5 percent interest rate for a year.

The directive was to ensure sufficient credit to the agriculture sector, which accounts for nearly one-fifth of the country's gross domestic product and employs the highest number of the nation's workforce directly and indirectly.

In recent years, resilience of the farm sector, mainly crop, vegetables and fisheries, helped accelerate the country's economic growth and contain domestic demand.

Increased production of rice has also cut the country's import dependence largely in the last fiscal year, according to data from the food ministry.

Over the years, the sector got little attention from private banks, currently the main supplier of credit for economic activities.

Private banks, fearing defaults, were shy in lending to the farm sector. The state commercial and specialised banks, such as the Bangladesh Krishi Bank, were the main supplier of credit.

To address the issue, BB had earlier taken punitive measures against some foreign and private banks, Moniruzzaman said.

He said the private and foreign banks would gain more from lending to the farm sector, adding: "If they fail to attain their targets, they will be the losers."

Loan disbursement target for all the 47 banks is Tk 14,130 crore for fiscal 2012-13, up only 2.39 percent from the previous year.

Of the amount, private and foreign banks will have to lend Tk 5,523 crore, with the state and specialised banks disbursing the rest.

"The farm sector is a priority for the economy and private banks should come forward and lend more to it. Otherwise, it will be difficult to meet the sector's credit demand.”

Haikal Hashmi, deputy managing director of Trust Bank Ltd, said private banks are shaking off their reluctance to lend to the agricultural sector.

"Private banks' capacity to monitor loans to the farm sector used to be low and hence the wariness to lend to them. Now, there are many branches that allowed us to monitor better."

"So far, our experience in terms of recovery is very good," said the executive of Trust Bank which started lending to the farm sector in 2010.

News: The Daily Star/Bangladesh/18th-Dec-12

FCBs yet to be active about SME credit operations

Posted by BankInfo on Mon, Dec 17 2012 07:29 am

The foreign commercial banks (FCBs) operating in Bangladesh are yet to make any significant contribution to the growth and promotion of small and medium entrepreneurs (SMEs), official sources said.

"Most FCBs are still unwilling to disburse SME loans because of low level of profits out of operations in the sector," a concerned high executive admitted, preferring anonymity.

There is no presence of FCBs outside a few major cities. "We have only some branches in selective urban areas. As a result, the FCBs are not able to get themselves directly involved in credit operations for the SME sector, unlike the other banks," a bank official said.

"All banks should do more for SMEs, which are the economic lifeblood of the country. The more the SMEs will be operationally active, the better the national economy will perform", a Bangladesh Bank's (BB) official said.

The state-owned commercial banks (SCBs), the specialised Banks (SBs), private commercial banks (PCBs) and non-banking financial institutions (NBFIs) are now mostly involved in providing the available credit supports to the SME enterprises.

According to Bangladesh Bank data, during the January-September, 2012, the FCBs could disburse only Tk 10.328 billion among the 2,828 SME enterprises, while the SCBs, PCBs and the SBs made available Tk 28.42 billion among 15,476 SME enterprises, Tk 419.399 billion among 3,26,158 and Tk 26.34 billion among 8,542 such enterprises as credits respectively.

Besides, SCBs disbursed to the women entrepreneurs in the SME sector Tk 765 million among 1,002 entrepreneurs and the PBCs, Tk 13.94 billion among 9,550, the SBs Tk 1.67 billion, among 387 entrepreneurs, the NBFIS, Tk. 784.1 million among 844 such enterprises in January-September, 2012.

During this period, the disbursement of credits to the women SME entrepreneurs stood at Taka 107.8 million involving 689 clients.

The FCBs credit operations were largely concentrated in trading operations instead of service and manufacturing sectors, the bankers said.

"There is no alternative to further development of the SME sector to help accelerate the pace of economic growth as the sector is still the main driving force of the economy," Sukomal Sinha Choudhury, general manager of the SME and Special Programmes Department at the Bangladesh Bank's (BB) told the FE.

News: The Daily Financial Express/Bangladesh/16th-Dec-12

Tax probe places Deutsche Bank’s ethics in spotlight

Posted by BankInfo on Mon, Dec 17 2012 07:20 am

As Germany’s biggest lender, Deutsche Bank has for many people long symbolised everything that is wrong and immoral about the banking sector and its perceived culture of limitless greed. However, under the new dual leadership of Anshu Jain and Juergen Fitschen, who took over in June, the bank has been making every effort to clean up that image.

It spent years and many millions of euros (dollars) transforming its twin tower headquarters into an environmentally-friendly, zero-emission building. And Jain and Fitschen pledged to nurture a new corporate culture based on responsibility and accountability.

But Deutsche Bank’s squeaky clean new image was looking distinctly tarnished again when dozens of police vans encircled the sparkling new “green” skyscrapers in the early hours of Wednesday and hundreds of investigators stormed the building in search of evidence of widespread tax fraud.

Particularly embarrassing was the announcement that Fitschen himself was under suspicion of being privy to a scheme to avoid paying sales tax in the trading of carbon emissions certificates.

Fitschen, 64, went on the offensive to proclaim his innocence in a number of newspaper interviews on Friday.

“I’m shattered over the accusations against me. I firmly believe they will prove to be groundless,” Fitschen told the mass-circulation daily Bild.

“I feel I am being unjustly treated and will defend myself,” he said. Asked whether he would resign over the allegations, Fitschen said: “I see no reason to.” He made similar remarks in a different interview published in the business daily Handelsblatt.

The allegations date back to early 2010 and both Fitschen—a member of the management board since 2009 -- and finance chief Stefan Krause are under investigation because they signed off the bank’s 2009 valued-added tax (VAT) declaration. Fitschen told newspapers that he felt the prosecutors’ reaction was “totally exaggerated”. “As soon as we realised that we’d been duped by fraudulent clients, we corrected the tax declaration. At no point was any tax money unlawfully paid to Deutsche Bank,” he said.

Prosecutors said a total 25 Deutsche Bank employees are being investigated and four people were arrested on suspicion of money laundering and perverting the course of justice.

Fitschen’s co-CEO, Jain, suffered a dent to his reputation earlier in the year.
Back in July when the Libor interest-rate rigging scandal sent shockwaves through the financial world, he found himself facing uncomfortable questions about his role in the affair.

Prior to his appointment as Deutsche Bank co-head, Jain headed the group’s investment banking operations in London where one of its traders was allegedly involved in the rigging of the Libor interbank rate which underpins rates on a wide range of lending from mortgages to credit cards.

“This can’t go on. Every time there’s a financial scandal, Deutsche Bank is involved. Management has to act urgently,” said Juergen Kurz, spokesman for a lobby group for small shareholders, DSW.

News: The Daily Independent/Bangladesh/17th-Dec-12

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