Banking

Humayun Kabir, Chairman of the Board of Directors of Modhumoti Bank Limited,

Posted by BankInfo on Thu, May 25 2017 08:06 am

Rajesh K Surana, CEO of LafargeHolcim Bangladesh Limited and Abrar A. Anwar, CEO of Standard Chartered Bank Bangladesh, inks a deal for \'Distributor Financing\" to enhance its business capacity recently. Five distributors of LafargeHolcim Bangladesh Limi

LafargeHolcim Bangladesh Limited (LHB) has become the latest partner to sign up with Standard Chartered Bank (SCB) for 'Distributor Financing" program - a financing program offered by SCB for the distributors of LHB to enhance their business capacity. This global program is part of the Bank's 'Banking the ecosystem' initiative, which aims at deepening relationships with corporate clients, and their buyers, says a  media release.
Rajesh K Surana, CEO of LafargeHolcim Bangladesh Limited and Abrar A. Anwar, CEO of Standard Chartered Bank Bangladesh, signed the agreement on behalf of their companies. Five distributors of LafargeHolcim Bangladesh Limited along with other senior officials of the two companies were also present in the program.
With this initiative, the distributors of LHB will be able to avail financing facilities from Standard Chartered Bank.

news:new nation/25-may-2017

Humayun Kabir, Chairman of the Board of Directors of Modhumoti Bank Limited, presiding over its 27th Board of Directors meeting at the bank's head office recently. Barrister Sheikh Fazle Noor Taposh, MP, Chairman, Executive Committee, was present among ot

Posted by BankInfo on Thu, May 25 2017 07:54 am

Humayun Kabir, Chairman of the Board of Directors of Modhumoti Bank Limited, presiding over its 27th Board of Directors meeting at the bank\'s head office recently. Barrister Sheikh Fazle Noor Taposh, MP, Chairman, Executive Committee, was present among o

news:new nation/25-may-2017

Syed Waseque Md. Ali, Managing Director of First Security Islami Bank Ltd, poses with the participants of a training program on 'International Trade Payment and Finance'at the bank's Training Institute. Md. Ataur Rahman, Principal of Training Institute wa

Posted by BankInfo on Thu, May 25 2017 07:43 am

Syed Waseque Md. Ali, Managing Director of First Security Islami Bank Ltd, poses with the participants of a training program on \'International Trade Payment and Finance\'at the bank\'s Training Institute. Md. Ataur Rahman, Principal of Training Institute

news:new nation/25-may-2017

BB postpones agriculture credit recovery in haor areas

Posted by BankInfo on Thu, May 25 2017 07:23 am

Also asked the banks to provide facilities for re-scheduling the credit through relaxation of down payment or easy installment

Bangladesh Bank on Monday postponed its agriculture credit recovery from haor areas across the country due to huge damage in the area by flashflood, reports BSS.

“The credit recovery remains postponed until the situation is improved,” according to a circular issued by the central bank on Monday.

The central bank also asked the banks to provide facilities for re-scheduling the credit through relaxation of down payment or easy installment.

It also instructed the scheduled banks to provide new credits for different crops including planted aman and fisheries considering the real situation in the area.

The central bank asked the commercial banks to provide credit at a concessional interest rate for robi crops and import alternative crops such as pulses, oil seeds, corns and spices.

It ordered the banks to provide necessary credit to the affected farmers for rearing poultry birds, cattle and purchasing fodder.

In another circular, Bangladesh Bank asked the scheduled banks and financial institutions to provide financial assistance and relief the flood-affected people.

news:dhaka tribune/24-may-2017

IDB to revamp, decentralise ops

Posted by BankInfo on Wed, May 24 2017 10:19 am
Reuters, Sarajevo

The Islamic Development Bank (IDB), the largest development organization in the Muslim world, plans to revamp its operations, including a shift away from small-scale capital interventions to more sustainable, grassroots-level support.

The non-profit group has extended $86.1 billion in financing in the last ten years for energy, transportation, water and sanitation projects. Bangladesh, Pakistan and Egypt are among the top beneficiaries.

But its new president, Bandar Hajjar, said the bank needed to decentralise and change the way it operates.

"IDB needs to shift away from providing individual, small-scale intervention to value chain solutions," Hajjar told Reuters on the sidelines of a business conference in the Bosnian capital Sarajevo.

The IDB has traditionally provided capital and technical assistance to individual firms and government organizations, but Hajjar said the bank would engage a wider array of entities and plans to form a network of non-governmental organizations, foundations and universities.

"The shift will help the bank deal with development challenges in a more sustainable and efficient manner. We will create a network and the bank will play a role of a catalyzer."

Hajjar, Saudi Arabia's former haj minister, was elected president of the IDB last year, replacing long-serving Ahmad Mohamed Ali who steered the bank since its establishment in 1975.

"The challenge is huge, immense, complicated and IDB cannot solve these problems by itself and all this requires decentralisation," Hajjar said.

Hajjar said sukuk issuance for 2017 was set at some $1.25 billion for public sukuk and $300 million for private sukuk, but that another issue of $1 billion worth of sukuk is expected before the end of this year.

Saudi Arabia is the largest shareholder of IDB with 23.5 percent of share capital subscription, followed by Libya, Iran, Nigeria and the United Arab Emirates.

news:daily star/24-may-2017
94 | 95 | 96 | 97 | 98 | 99 | 100 | 101 | 102