Banking

Taka 2400 cr loan signed with World Bank

Posted by BankInfo on Wed, Jul 01 2015 09:41 am

Bangladesh government on Monday signed a loan deal of Taka 2400 crore with World Bank at the NEC conference room in city’s Sher-e Bangla Nagar to boost up country’s financial sector.

M Mesbah Uddin, the Senior Secretary of Economic Relations Division and Executive Director Of Bangladesh Bank, Ahsanullah, signed the deal for Bangladesh government while Christine E kaimasa, acting Country Director of World Bank signed on behalf of the creditors.

The loan has to repay within 38 years including six years grace period with yearly .75 per cent service charge. This loan is commitment charge free.

News:Daily Sun/30-Jun-2015

 

WB gives $473m for financial sector, disaster resilience

Posted by BankInfo on Wed, Jul 01 2015 09:30 am

Bangladesh will get $473 million from the World Bank to build a strong financial sector and develop long-term disaster resilience in the urban areas of Dhaka and Sylhet.

The long-term loan will come under two projects -- $300 million for financial sector support project and $173 million for urban resilience project, the lender said in a statement.

The government yesterday signed two financing agreements with the International Development Association, the World Bank's concessional arm that helps the world's poorest countries, at the Economic Relations Division in Dhaka.

The financial sector support project will enable the participating financial institutions to provide long-term financing to manufacturing and export-oriented firms, according to the statement.

The financing institutions will lend at commercially determined rates and also offer Shariah-compliant financial products.

The project will strengthen Bangladesh Bank's supervisory and oversight functions and help build financial infrastructure.

The urban resilience project will address seismic risk and reduce structural vulnerability of future building constructions in Dhaka and Sylhet.

 

The project will strengthen the capacity of government agencies to respond to emergency events by equipping them with response resources, including emergency operations centres, inter-operable communication systems, and search and rescue equipment.

The project will also contribute to improved building construction practices through certified training programmes and development of online permitting systems in Dhaka and Sylhet.

“The two projects will contribute to building a prosperous and resilient Bangladesh. The financial sector support project will help make doing business in Bangladesh easier by providing eligible private sector firms with access to long-term financing. This will help to create more jobs,” said Christine Kimes, acting country head of the World Bank Bangladesh.

The lender is currently investing about $1.2 billion to build resilience to coastal flooding and cyclones, the statement said.

"Promoting urban resilience is a greater challenge, as rapid urbanisation and population density are making Bangladeshi cities more vulnerable to disasters. The urban resilience project will help improve emergency management and building construction practices,” Kimes said.

Mohammad Mejbahuddin, senior secretary of Economic Relations Division, said Bangladesh needs a transparent, inclusive, efficient and effective financial sector to realise its dream of becoming a middle-income country.

“Enhancing resilience to disasters like earthquakes in the major urban centres is necessary not only to save human lives but also to undergird the development gains of the past years,” he said. Credits from the IDA have a 38 year term, including a six-year grace period, and a service charge of 0.75 percent.

News:The Daily Star/1-Jul-2015

AB Bank Limited signed an agreement

Posted by BankInfo on Tue, Jun 30 2015 10:53 am

AB Bank Limited signed an agreement with Scholastica (Pvt.) Limited on collecting fees of students of Scholastica School. Shamim Ahmed Chaudhury, President and Managing Director of AB Bank and Amer Ahmed, Director of Scholastica (Pvt.) Limited signed the agreement. Syed Mizanur Rahman, Head of Consumer Banking of AB Bank and Mushfiqur Rahman, General Manager, Scholastica were present.

News:Daily Star/30-Jun-2015

10th EGM of Bank Asia held

Posted by BankInfo on Tue, Jun 30 2015 10:05 am

A Rouf Chowdhury, Chairman of Bank Asia, presides over the 10th Extra-ordinary General Meeting of the bank at the bank’s corporate office in the capital on Sunday.

The 10th Extra-Ordinary General Meeting (EGM) of Bank Asia was held at its Corporate Office in the capital on Sunday.
A resolution regarding increase of the maximum number of directors to 20 (twenty) with minimum three independent directors from existing 15 was approved.
A Rouf Chowdhury, Chairman of the bank, presided over the meeting, says a press release.
Vice Chairmen Mohd Safwan Choudhury and AM Nurul Islam, Chairman of Board Executive Committee Rumee A Hossain, Chairman of the Board Audit Committee Mohammed Lakiotullah, Directors Md Nazrul Huda, M Shahjahan Bhuiyan, M Irfan Syeed and Mashiur Rahman, President and Managing Director Md Mehmood Husain and Additional Managing Director Aminul Islam were present on the occasion.

News:Daily Sun/30-Jun-2015

Greece banking shutdown sparks global markets slump

Posted by BankInfo on Tue, Jun 30 2015 09:46 am

World markets tumbled Monday as Greece shut its banks and imposed capital controls to halt a panic-driven run on ATMs, a day before Athens risked defaulting and possibly crashing out of the euro.

But in a narrow ray of hope, creditors left the door open for a last-ditch debt deal to try and avert a Greek eurozone exit which would raise serious questions about the future of the EU. Calling for a compromise, German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that "if euro fails, Europe fails".

Global stocks fell, with Frankfurt and Paris losing more than three percent after a slump in Asia, as investors feared a 'Grexit'. The euro steadied after hitting a one-month low under $1.10 on Sunday.

Athens issued a decree to close banks until July 6 -- the day after a referendum on creditors' bailout proposals -- with a 60-euro ($65) limit on cashpoint withdrawals. Foreign tourists, a vital engine of the Greek economy, will be exempt.

However, the drastic measures -- designed to protect the banking system against the threat of mass panic - sent Greeks rushing to withdraw their daily allowance.

Jittery housewives, shoppers and business owners formed long lines at cash machines across Greece on a day dubbed "Black Monday".

"No money, no hope, how did we get in this situation? This is Black Monday," unemployed Chris Bakas, 28, told AFP as he stood sweating in the Athens sun, staring at an ATM screen.

 

On the city's historic Syntagma square, the scene of fierce riots in the past over biting austerity measures imposed by the country's international creditors, tourists snapping photographs of the parliament buildings said they felt the tension in the air. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras had urged restraint on Sunday after announcing the restrictions.

"Any difficulties that may arise must be dealt with calmness. The more calm we are, the sooner we will get over this situation," Tsipras said, adding Athens had again requested a "prolongation of the (bailout) programme".

The Athens stock market has meanwhile been shut until July 7.

The rapid escalation of the Greek debt crisis came after the European Central Bank froze the level of its emergency lifeline for Athens on Sunday, despite a growing bank run.

That capped a weekend of high drama that began with Tsipras's unexpected call for a July 5 referendum on creditors' latest cash-for-reform proposals after bailout talks in Brussels collapsed.

In reaction, eurozone finance ministers angrily rejected a request to extend the bailout beyond its expiry on Tuesday, sparking fears Greece could default on a key IMF loan repayment due the same day -- and potentially crash out of the eurozone eventually.

EU commissioner of economic affairs, Pierre Moscovici of France, declared Monday that "the door is always open to negotiations" for Greece, adding negotiators had been "a few centimetres" from a deal when talks collapsed.

European Commission (EC) head Jean-Claude Juncker was due to hold a press conference at 1045 GMT.

The Commission -- one of the "troika" of creditors along with the ECB and the International Monetary Fund -- said temporary restrictions on the free movement of capital were "justified ... to maintain financial stability".

Investors reacted with shock that Athens had failed thus far to reach agreement with creditors, as Greece hurtled towards default. 

News:The Daily Star/30-Jun-2015
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   
237 | 238 | 239 | 240 | 241 | 242 | 243 | 244 | 245