Banking

President of National Bank of Pakistan due today

Posted by BankInfo on Wed, Sep 24 2014 12:54 pm

Syed Ahmed Iqbal Ashraf, president of National Bank of Pakistan (NBP), state owned commercial bank in Pakistan, will be visiting Bangladesh on a four-day official tour starting from Wednesday, says a press release.
During his visit he will have a courtesy call to the governor of Bangladesh Bank and heads of other banks of Bangladesh. Ashraf has experience of over 34 years in domestic and international banking. Before the president of NBP, he was managing director and CEO of PAIR Investment Company Limited.

News:The Independent/24-Sep-2014

Govt to seek $1.5b from WB, IMF

Posted by BankInfo on Wed, Sep 24 2014 12:37 pm

The government will seek another $1.5 billion from the World Bank and IMF next fiscal year, officials said yesterday.
The government will have to carry out a new round of reforms in various sectors, including macro-economy and financial institution governance, to get the loan.
Of the amount, $500 million may come from the WB as budget support, while the International Monetary Fund will give the rest.
Finance Minister AMA Muhith disclosed the plan to reporters after a meeting with a visiting IMF mission at his secretariat yesterday.
Discussions on another loan proposal will begin after the government gets the last instalment of a $1 billion IMF loan under its extended credit facility (ECF) next year, he said.
Though the minister did not give an exact figure about the new credit programme of the IMF, finance ministry officials said it is likely to be around $1 billion.
The IMF mission proposed to extend the ongoing ECF programme by another year, but Muhith told them that the government wants it to end in time and start a new one.
The IMF mission agreed to offer a new loan, the minister said, adding: “They are interested. In fact, they wanted to start talks on it now.”
However, Muhith said discussions on the new loan may start in May next year as the government now awaits a pay commission report, which will give an estimate of expenditure on salary and benefits of public servants.
The new pay commission will submit the report in December and its implementation is related largely to the national budget.
For the new IMF programme, the government will have to focus on VAT reforms, including the implementation of the new VAT law, and budgetary reforms, Muhith said.
The government has a number of plans for budgetary reforms, he said, adding that the IMF mission has no concern other than VAT reforms for releasing the next instalment of the ECF loan.

 but the minister informed the mission that it cannot be implemented before 2016, and the IMF team has agreed to the plan. The IMF mission, however, asked the government to prepare a "work plan" to implement the VAT law, Muhith said.
The IMF also gave the government a fresh deadline to install software for VAT collection by June next year. The finance minister said they would discuss the issue of $500 million budget support from the WB on the sidelines of the WB-IMF annual meeting in Washington next month.
Muhith expects the agreement to be signed this fiscal year and the amount may be released next fiscal year.
Bangladesh got budget support worth $200 million from the WB last in 2008. During the Awami League government's last tenure, they wanted budget support from the WB, but did not get it, as the global lender had various reservations about governance-related issues.

News:The Daily-28-sep-2014

Call money rate surges to 8.25pc

Posted by BankInfo on Wed, Sep 24 2014 12:26 pm

The inter-bank call money rate, at which banks lend and borrow between each other, rose to 8.25 percent yesterday, as some private banks rushed to borrow to meet their overnight demand.
Total transactions in the market also increased in the past one week. A total of Tk 8,452 crore was transacted in the call money market yesterday, up by Tk 129 crore from the previous day, ahead of Eid-ul-Azha and Durga Puja.
“Credit offtake is gradually rising. Also, the seasonal demand for money is increasing,” said Anis A Khan, managing director of Mutual Trust Bank.
State banks—Agrani, Janata, Rupali and Sonali—were the major lenders with Tk 3,924 crore in the yesterday's call money market. Five foreign banks also lent Tk 668 crore.
Inter-bank call money market remained sluggish in the past several months, and the borrowing costs in this market was around 7 percent.
Bankers attributed this slowdown on their surplus funds. The call money rate generally increases significantly during festivals like Eid, but it was stable, within 10 percent, in the last two years.
“The rate has increased due to demands from tannery and leather businessmen. A huge amount of money will flow out of the banks to meet payments for wages and festival bonuses,” said a senior treasury official of Jamuna Bank.

The highest call money rate was 7 percent on September 15. The rate jumped to 8 percent on the following day and 8.25 percent yesterday. The lowest rate, which was 5.5 percent on September 15, rose to 6.4 percent yesterday.
Some bankers expected that the rate to rise further in the next week, the last few working days before the Eid.
Brac Bank borrowed Tk 801 crore, the highest, from the call money market yesterday, followed by Trust Bank Tk 627 crore, City Bank Tk 602 crore, AB Bank Tk 595 crore and NCC Bank Tk 450 crore, according to data from Bangladesh Bank.
Of the non-bank financial institutions, state-owned Investment Corporation of Bangladesh borrowed the highest, Tk 655 crore, followed by Lanka Bangla Tk 245 crore and IDLC Tk 230 crore.
Rupali and Sonali topped the list of lenders with Tk 1,150 crore and Tk 1,210 crore.
Of the private banks, Dutch-Bangla Bank lent the largest amount -- Tk 707 crore, followed by Mutual Trust Bank with Tk 367 crore.

News:The Daily Star/24-Sep-2014

 

 

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

 

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