National Bank's New Additional MD
National Bank Ltd promoted Md Badiul Alam as the bank's additional managing director recently. Prior to his promotion, he was the deputy managing director of the bank, said a statement. Alam has 33 years of commercial banking experience and started his career as professor of commerce after completing masters from Chittagong University. He joined Naitonal Bank in 1983.
News Source: The Daily Star/03 Jan 2011
Citi backs central bank's monetary stance
A leading global financial services company has lauded Bangladesh Bank for its monetary intervention activities last year, terming the central bank's policy proactive. In conformity with the declared policy stance, BB's monetary policy operations during the early part of the year remained light fingered rather than heavy handed, said Citi in its annual monetary update.
The BB move did not impede pick-up in output, exports and new investment activities, it said. Purchases of foreign exchange inflows from the market to retain the taka on a slight undervaluation bias for export competitiveness were only partly sterilised by liquidity management operations. "Besides direct liquidity management operations, the permitted open exchange positions of banks were widened. Sectoral credit flows were promoted or discouraged eclectically, while credit flows to under-served productive sectors like agriculture and SMEs were promoted."
The BB policy also discouraged expansion in credit for unproductive ostentation, conspicuous consumption and speculative purposes, according to Citi. However, with the increase in inflationary pressure, the central bank was seen to gradually tighten policy measures. In August 2010, it raised the repo rate from 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent and the reverse repo rate from 2.5 percent to 3.5 percent. Earlier in May, it raised the cash reserve requirement (CRR) by 50 basis points (bps) to 5.5 percent, for the first time since September 2005, to mop up Tk 20 billion of excess liquidity.
In December, the CRR was further raised by 50 bps to 6 percent for the commercial banks to curb inflationary pressure on the economy, the Citi update said. The central bank moves also kept the taka under under depreciation pressure. The BB has regularly intervened in the dollar/taka market to maintain the competitiveness of the exchange rate, curbing tendencies for excessive volatility. The nominal exchange rate remained below 69.60 level until late August, with the BDT depreciating only 0.48 percent against the dollar from the opening level of 69.27.
However, increased demand of the greenback to meet import payments took the dollar/taka rate to break 70 level during late September. The taka depreciated 1.34 percent in September alone. With buoyant demand, and the central bank's stance to keep the taka undervalued, dollar/taka rates rose to 70.8450, the highest level during the year, by the end of October. After a moderation in November, the nominal exchange rate started to rise again in December, and hovered near 70.69 levels in direct trading during the middle of the month, registering a depreciation of 2.05 percent over the year.
Call money rates remained stable during most part of the year due mainly to the excess liquidity in the market, which stood slightly lower at Tk 345.0 billion at the end of June 2010, down from Tk 347.6 billion at the end of June 2009. However, the CRR hike in May, and increased seasonal demand ahead of Eid festivals during September and November led call money rates to rise to double-digit levels, the update said. "Although those increases were corrected within a short span of time, the second CRR hike of the year in December led the overnight rates to soar significantly."
On December 15, the first day of new cash reserve maintenance, call rates skyrocketed when some private commercial banks sought large funds to meet the reserve requirements. Call money rate rose as high as 180 percent, breaking the earlier record of 150 percent hit on March 30, 2006. However, the rates subsided over the following weeks to settle below 20 percent level. The downward shift in the yield curve during 2009 was reversed last year due to excess liquidity in the banking system, Citi said.
The yields for government securities of all tenors increased from their December 2009 levels. The yields of short-end bills with 91 days, 182 days and 364 days tenor rose by 225 bps, 120 bps and 89 bps respectively. On the other hand, rates of mid- and long-end government bonds with 5 years, 10 years, 15 years and 20 years tenor increased by 20 bps, 75 bps, 43 bps and 35 bps respectively. The increase in yield was highest in the 91 days bill, which added 225 bps. Citi in its update also put focus on international markets and major interest rates.
Central banks of the major economies had slashed rates to historic low levels by the middle of 2009 to push out liquidity to try igniting economic growth, it said. The Bank of England, European Central Bank (ECB), Bank of Canada, Swiss National Bank, Reserve Bank of Australia, Reserve Bank of India, all cut their benchmark rates by 25 to 175 basis points in 2009. The Federal Reserve (Fed) and Bank of Japan (BOJ) had already been at their record low levels of benchmark rates at 0 to 0.25 percent and 0.1 percent respectively after their December, 2008 rate cuts. While the central banks of Australia and Norway started hiking rates from late last year, 2010 witnessed the RBI, the Peoples' Bank of China and the Bank of Canada joining the group.
For most of 2010, the fundamental story behind Euro (EUR), when investors were actually looking at it, was all about sovereign credit risk, Citi said.
News: The Daily Star/03 Jan 2011
Banks log hefty profit
Private banks logged as high as 90 percent growth in their operating profit last year, riding on a boom in stockmarket and an upward trend in external business.
Most banks marked a rise in profit, ranging from 50 percent to 90 percent, and a few posted more than Tk 1,000 crore profit.
On the last day of 2010, Friday, they sat to count the last one year's profit. Primary data of all these 30 private banks shows that their combined profit soared by 57 percent to Tk 13,203 crore last year, against Tk 8,000 crore in 2009.
Islami Bank Bangladesh, this year also, made the highest profit at Tk 1,143 crore. Besides, National Bank and AB Bank logged more than Tk 1,000 crore each.
Managing Director of Shahjalal Islami Bank Abdur Rahman Sarker told The Daily Star that the banks are involved in the stockmarket business in different ways -- they have opened their own brokerage houses and are also doing portfolio investment. As a result, a big amount of income is accruing to them from the share market.
Sarker said the banks' income from external business also went up as the world economy shook much off the recession jitters.
Senior Executive Vice President of Mutual Trust Bank AKM Shamim said the banks' income on account of fees and commission has increased. The strict monitoring by the central bank also pulled down the banks' classified loans, increasing their income.
From January 3 to December 30, the benchmark index of Dhaka Stock Exchange went up by 3,754 points, or 82 percent, to 8,290.
Bangladesh Bank (BB) data shows that the banks' total holdings in the share market were Tk 25,000 crore as of October 31 last year.
Many banks earned a big portion of their profit from the stockmarket, bankers said. A bank involved in Islamic banking made a profit of about Tk 400 crore last year. Of the amount, Tk 100 crore came from its brokerage business.
The external trade of the banks also started going up last year, with the world economy recovering from the recession.
According to BB data, import increased by about 34 percent in July-October of the current fiscal year, against a fall of about 15 percent in the same period last year.
On the other hand, export went up by 36 percent during the July-November period of the current fiscal year, whereas the country witnessed a fall by about 7 percent in such external trade in the same period a year ago.
The banks' non-interest income increased in line with the rise in import and export.
In the first six months of the last fiscal year, the non-interest income shot up by 39 percent.
Source: The Daily Star
One Bank Ltd opens branch at Moghbazar
ONE Bank Limited has opened its 50th branch at Moghbazar in the city on Wednesday.
Farzana Chowdhury, vice chairperson of the bank formally inaugurated the branch, said a press release.
Asoke Das Gupta, Kazi Rukunuddin Ahmed, directors of the bank, Farman R Chowdhury, managing director, senior executives of the bank and several elites and business persons attended the inaugural function.
Source: Daily Sun/ Bangladesh/ 01-Jan-2011
HSBC organises workshop in Bandarban
HSBC Bangladesh recently organised a time management workshop for the inter-bank dealers in Bandarban.
A total of 40 dealers from 12 commercial banks and the central bank attended the programme Titled “‘Time Management in Treasury World: Work-Life Balance’, said a press release.
HSBC Bangladesh Global Markets team has been organising similar workshops in Bangladesh aiming at developing the local markets, building a strong inter-organisation network and enhancing HSBC’s image among industry stakeholders.
Bashar M Tareq, head of global markets of HSBC Bangladesh conducted the workshop which was focused on the importance of effective time management in the fast-paced and often-stressful markets environment.
The participants engaged in lively discussions of real life experience from both home and abroad during the presentation sessions. Recommendations were devised, with collective acquiescence, on practical solutions to maintaining a healthy work-life balance.
Source: Daily Sun/ Bangladesh/ 01-Jan-2011




Rejaul Karim Byron