BDbanker Monthly Banking Review — April 2026
Bangladesh Banking Intelligence
Monthly Banking Review  ·  April 2026  ·  Issue No. 004

Bank Resolution Act 2026:
A Dangerous Compromise on Reform

Parliament passes controversial Section 18(a) allowing former owners of five failed Islamic banks to reclaim control for just 7.5% of Tk 35,000 crore in public funds injected — triggering a Bangladesh Bank backlash and IMF concern.

Also in this edition
  • 02NPL Ratio at 35.73% — Sector seeks structural resolution as IMF targets recede
  • 03BRPD-2 Circular: New incentive bonus flexibility for scheduled banks
  • 04Bangladesh-IMF Spring Meetings: Reform dialogue in Washington
  • 05Islamic Bank deposits recover +Tk 24,194 crore over 12 months to February 2026
  • 06Green finance Q4 2025: Tk 837 billion in sustainable finance disbursement
  • 07Exam Corner: Loan classification & provisioning under BRPD Circular No. 15/2024
All data sourced from Bangladesh Bank, IMF, World Bank & DSE official disclosures
bdbanker.com
Section 03
Executive Summary
35.73%
NPL Ratio — September 2025
Total non-performing loans reached Tk 6.44 trillion — one of the highest NPL ratios globally. Bangladesh Bank’s December 2025 data estimated the ratio at ~30.6%, reflecting some improvement as tighter BRPD Circular No. 15/2024 classification standards are applied consistently.
NPL Ratio by Bank Category — September 2025
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 32.9% PCBs SCBs 44%+ 6.1% FCBs 35.7% Industry Avg
Source: Bangladesh Bank quarterly NPL data, September 2025. PCB = Private Commercial Banks, SCB = State-owned Commercial Banks, FCB = Foreign Commercial Banks.

April 2026 was defined by one legislative shock — the passage of the Bank Resolution Act 2026 on 10 April — and by the continuation of Bangladesh’s NPL crisis. Parliament passed the Act with a controversial Section 18(a) provision that allows former owners of five failed Islamic banks to reclaim control for as little as 7.5% of the Tk 35,000 crore in combined public funds injected into Sammilito Islami Bank. Bangladesh Bank had formally opposed the clause before passage. Economists, former World Bank officials, and civil society groups raised immediate alarm.

On the regulatory front, BRPD issued a new circular on 28 April introducing measured flexibility in incentive bonus payments. On the multilateral front, Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury and Bangladesh Bank Governor Ahsan H Mansur attended the 2026 IMF-World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington (21–26 April) to renegotiate reform conditionalities — particularly the impossible NPL reduction targets. And Islamic bank deposits recovered by Tk 24,194 crore over the twelve months to February 2026, a tentative sign that depositor confidence is returning to reformed institutions.

IndicatorFigurePeriod / Source
NPL Ratio35.73%September 2025 — Bangladesh Bank
NPL Ratio (revised)~30.6%December 2025 — Bangladesh Bank
Total NPLsTk 6.44 trillionSeptember 2025 — Bangladesh Bank
Banks with NPL <10%17 PCBsSeptember 2025 — Bangladesh Bank
Sammilito Islami Bank capitalTk 35,000 croreGovt + BB combined — Bank Resolution Act 2026
BRPD-2 Bonus Circular28 April 2026Bangladesh Bank BRPD
IMF Spring Meetings21–26 April 2026Washington DC
Islamic bank deposit growth (12m)+Tk 24,194 croreTo February 2026
Sustainable finance disbursement Q4 2025Tk 837.46 billionOct–Dec 2025 — Bangladesh Bank SFD
GDP Growth Projection FY264.7%–4.8%IMF Article IV Consultation, January 2026
Section 04
Bangladesh Bank Regulatory Update

One formally issued Bangladesh Bank circular with immediate operational significance for all scheduled banks, plus the continuing fallout of the Bank Resolution Act 2026 passage.

BRPD-2 Circular — Incentive Bonus Framework (28 April 2026)

Circular DetailInformation
ReferenceBRPD-2, issued 28 April 2026
Issuing DepartmentBanking Regulation and Policy Department, Division 2
Applies ToAll scheduled banks operating in Bangladesh
Effective DateImmediately upon issuance

What changed: Scheduled banks may now grant a performance-based incentive bonus of up to one month’s basic salary even when the full set of annual performance criteria has not been met — provided two conditions are satisfied: (1) the bank earned a positive operating profit during the performance year, and (2) the bank’s regulatory capital (CRAR) did not decline compared to the prior year.

Critical safeguard: Banks are explicitly prohibited from deferring provisioning obligations in order to fund bonus payments. A bank with a provision shortfall cannot use this flexibility.

Professional Significance
The 17 PCBs with NPL ratios below 10% — including City Bank, Prime Bank, BRAC Bank, Eastern Bank, Mutual Trust Bank — are most likely to satisfy the operating profit and CRAR preservation conditions. Banks with elevated NPLs and provision shortfalls will find eligibility constrained. Compliance officers and CFOs should review Q4 2025 CRAR and profit figures before applying this circular.

Bank Resolution Act 2026 — Passed 10 April 2026

Parliament passed the Bank Resolution Act 2026 on 10 April by voice vote, replacing the interim government’s Bank Resolution Ordinance 2025. The Act establishes a formal Bank Resolution Department and Resolution Fund within Bangladesh Bank. A Bridge Bank concept allows weak banks to stabilise before sale. Individual accountability provisions include penalties of up to Tk 50 lakh with additional daily fines.

The central controversy is Section 18(a) — inserted shortly before the bill was tabled without the full knowledge of the drafting committee. Under this provision, former directors or owners of merged banks can apply to Bangladesh Bank to reclaim control, with an upfront payment of only 7.5% of public funds injected. The remaining 92.5% is amortised over two years at 10% simple interest. On a Tk 35,000 crore injection, this means an applicant could reclaim control for approximately Tk 2,625 crore upfront.

What the Act Establishes

✔ Dedicated Bank Resolution Department within BB
✔ Resolution Fund for restructuring activities
✔ Bridge Bank mechanism for weak banks
✔ Depositor priority in bank closure
✔ Personal liability for bank failure
✔ Two-year monitoring after reinstatement

What Experts Say About S.18(a)

✗ Bangladesh Bank formally opposed the clause
✗ Former WB economist: “reinforces a culture of impunity”
✗ BIBM former DG: depositor protection at risk
✗ BUET economists: “pernicious moral hazard”
✗ No requirement to repay depositors first
✗ No permanent disqualification for misconduct

Sources: BRPD-2 Circular dated 28 April 2026; Bank Resolution Act 2026 (Parliament, 10 April 2026); Bangladesh Bank official statements; Voice for Reform roundtable, 25 April 2026.

Section 05
Banking Sector News Digest

Significant Bangladesh banking developments of April 2026, sourced exclusively from official and officially verified records.

1. Bank Resolution Act 2026 Passes Amid Controversy Over Section 18(a)
Parliament passed the Bank Resolution Act 2026 on 10 April by voice vote. The late-inserted Section 18(a) allows former owners of the five Islamic banks merged into Sammilito Islami Bank — EXIM, Social Islami, First Security Islami, Union, and Global Islami — to apply to reclaim control for 7.5% upfront of the Tk 35,000 crore in public capital injected. Bangladesh Bank had formally requested the Ministry of Finance not to proceed with the clause. Opposition MP Saiful Alam Khan Milon called the original 2025 Ordinance “the security shield for the hard-earned savings of crores of people.” The government and Bangladesh Bank together invested approximately Tk 35,000 crore in the merged entity.
Source: Parliamentary proceedings, 10 April 2026; Bank Resolution Act 2026
2. NPL Ratio Among World’s Highest — 35.73% as of September 2025
Non-performing loans reached Tk 6.44 trillion (35.73% of total disbursed credit) as of September 2025. Bangladesh Bank December 2025 data placed the ratio at ~30.6%. The Policy Research Institute described this as a “systemic shock” requiring a comprehensive resolution mechanism. Four S Alam Group-linked banks reported defaulted loan rates of between 75.73% and 97.64% at merger. The government’s Distressed Asset Management Ordinance, creating a framework for private AMCs to purchase NPLs, was targeted for completion by June 2026.
Source: Bangladesh Bank quarterly NPL data, September 2025; Policy Research Institute Bangladesh analysis
3. Seventeen Banks Hold NPL Ratios Below 10% Amid Industry-Wide Stress
Against an industry NPL average of ~36%, seventeen domestic PCBs maintained sub-10% NPL ratios: City Bank, Prime Bank, BRAC Bank, Pubali Bank, Eastern Bank, Mutual Trust Bank, Midland Bank, Meghna Bank, Shahjalal Islami Bank, Dhaka Bank, Jamuna Bank, NCC Bank, Trust Bank, Uttara Bank, Bengal Commercial Bank, Community Bank, and Citizens Bank. Citizens Bank recorded the lowest ratio at 1.74%. City Bank, Prime Bank, Eastern Bank, BRAC Bank, and Bengal Commercial Bank all reported NPL ratios below 5%.
Source: Bangladesh Bank data; individual bank statements, September 2025
4. Bangladesh-IMF Spring Meeting: Reform Dialogue in Washington
Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury held direct discussions with IMF and World Bank officials at the Spring Meetings (21–26 April, Washington). Governor Ahsan H Mansur attended alongside the Finance Minister. Key agenda items: NPL reduction targets (10% for SCBs, 5% for PCBs by 2026 — widely acknowledged as unachievable), revenue mobilisation, and exchange rate flexibility. Bangladesh continues negotiating conditions tied to the balance of its $5.5 billion IMF loan programme.
Source: IMF Article IV Consultation Report, January 2026; Bloomberg; Bangladesh Embassy Washington statement, April 2026
5. Islamic Bank Deposits Recover — +Tk 24,194 Crore in 12 Months to February 2026
Deposits at Islamic banking institutions grew by Tk 24,194 crore over the twelve months to February 2026, marking meaningful recovery from the acute deposit flight triggered by S Alam Group irregularities. Islami Bank Bangladesh received approximately Tk 300 crore in new deposits on a single day in April. Acting MD Altaf Hossain stated the bank has signed agreements with international legal firms for foreign asset recovery. Customer confidence, however, remains fragile — depositors have publicly expressed concern that former owners could return under Section 18(a).
Source: Islamic banking institutional data; Islami Bank Bangladesh statements, April 2026
6. Expert Roundtable: Bank Resolution Act Threatens Reform Progress
Voice for Reform convened a roundtable on 25 April 2026 titled “Revised Bank Resolution Act 2026: Banking Sector Discipline at Risk Again.” Former BIBM Director General Toufic Ahmad Choudhury argued Bangladesh Bank has an absolute obligation to protect depositors and that the Tk 200,000 deposit insurance limit is insufficient. Economist Debapriya Bhattacharya called for a formal political statement from government on Section 18(a)’s intent. NSU business faculty dean Prof Waresul Karim warned the provision could be used to target healthy banks like Islami Bank Bangladesh, not just the merged entities.
Source: Voice for Reform roundtable proceedings, 25 April 2026; economists’ conference, BRAC Centre Inn
Section 06
Key Banking Indicators

Most recent officially published data available as of April 2026. Bangladesh Bank monthly Scheduled Bank Statistics for the immediate reference month remain pending official release.

35.73%
NPL Ratio
September 2025
Tk 6.44T
Total NPLs
September 2025
17
PCBs with NPL <10%
September 2025
Sustainable Finance vs Green Finance Disbursement — 2025 (Tk Billion)
0 450B 900B Q1 2025 Q2 2025 Q3 2025 Q4 2025 Tk 837B Sustainable Finance Green Finance
Source: Bangladesh Bank Sustainable Finance Department, Quarterly Review Reports 2025.
IndicatorFigurePeriod
NPL Ratio35.73%September 2025
NPL Ratio (December estimate)~30.6%December 2025
Total NPLsTk 6.44 trillionSeptember 2025
PCB NPL Ratio32.9%September 2025
FCB NPL Ratio6.1%September 2025
Sustainable Finance Disbursement Q4 2025Tk 837.46 billionOct–Dec 2025
Green Finance Disbursement Q4 2025Tk 69.80 billionOct–Dec 2025
Outstanding Sustainable FinanceTk 3.94 trillion31 December 2025
MFS Total Accounts239.3 millionJanuary 2025
MFS Monthly Transaction VolumeTk 1.72 trillionJanuary 2025 (+32.6% YoY)
Islamic Bank Deposit Growth (12m)+Tk 24,194 croreTo February 2026
IMF GDP Growth Projection FY264.7%IMF Article IV, January 2026
IMF Inflation Projection FY268.9%IMF Article IV, January 2026
DSE DSEX Index (12 April 2026)5,27112 April 2026
Sections 07 · 08 · 09
Credit, Deposits & Islamic Banking

Credit & Loans Update

The credit environment remains defined by an elevated NPL stock and the implementation of tighter loan classification standards under BRPD Circular No. 15 dated 27 November 2024. Under this circular, continuous loans are classified as Sub-standard within three months of the expiry date — tighter than the six-month window that applied under the 2019 regime and aligned with Basel III standards as required under the IMF programme conditionalities.

Ten banks reported a combined provision shortfall of Tk 31,549 crore as of June 2025, including National Bank, BASIC Bank, Agrani Bank, Rupali Bank, Bangladesh Commerce Bank, Dhaka Bank, Standard Bank, Bangladesh Development Bank, IFIC Bank, and Southeast Bank. The BRPD-2 bonus circular’s explicit prohibition on provision deferral to fund bonuses directly targets this vulnerability.

S Alam Group Legacy — NPL Concentration
Union Bank: 97.64% of loans classified as defaulted. First Security Islami Bank: 96.43%. Global Islami Bank: 96.27%. Social Islami Bank: 75.73%. These figures are not credit cycle outcomes — they reflect systematic insider lending, connected borrower transactions, and documented asset extraction under the previous ownership.

Bangladesh Bank’s ADR recovery target requires all scheduled banks to recover a minimum of 1% of defaulted loans by 30 June 2026 through alternative dispute resolution. Banks must establish board-level monitoring systems with mandatory six-monthly reporting.

Deposits Update

Deposit mobilisation remains constrained by a structural confidence deficit. Real deposit returns are negative at current inflation levels (IMF projection: 8.9% FY26), creating a disincentive for long-term fixed deposit placement. Bangladesh Bank’s monetary policy tightening is designed to address this but full transmission takes time.

Islamic Banking Review

Deposit Recovery

Islamic banking institutions collectively attracted Tk 24,194 crore in new deposits over the 12 months to February 2026, reversing the crisis-period outflow. Islami Bank Bangladesh received ~Tk 300 crore in new deposits on a single day in April — a tangible confidence signal.

Recovery strategy: cash loan recovery through legal channels + selective rescheduling for genuinely affected industries + international legal firm partnerships for foreign asset recovery.

Section 18(a) Risk

The Bank Resolution Act’s most immediate application is in Islamic banking — all five merged banks are Shariah-based. Prof Waresul Karim (NSU) warned Section 18(a) could be used to target healthy institutions like Islami Bank Bangladesh, not just the merged entities for which it was ostensibly designed.

Bangladesh Bank has not yet issued implementation guidance on Section 18(a) application procedures, review timelines, or due diligence criteria. All Islamic bank compliance teams should monitor BRPD circular portal at bb.org.bd.

Sources: Bangladesh Bank quarterly NPL data; BRPD Circular No. 15/2024; provision shortfall data; Islami Bank Bangladesh statements; Bank Resolution Act 2026.

Sections 11 · 12 · 13
MFS, Capital Market & Green Finance

MFS & Digital Banking

239.3M
Total MFS Accounts — January 2025
Up 20.18 million (+9.21%) year-on-year. Monthly transaction volume reached Tk 1.72 trillion in January 2025, a 32.56% rise from Tk 1.30 trillion in January 2024. Source: Bangladesh Bank data.

The Bangladesh Bank Payment Systems Department circular of 13 October 2025 mandated that from 1 November 2025, the National Payment Switch Bangladesh (NPSB) would connect all banks, MFS providers, and payment service providers on a single interoperable network — ending the era of provider-specific MFS siloes. By April 2026, both bKash and Nagad had received regulatory clearances to join. Technical integration and commercial agreement challenges slowed full rollout but the structural shift is irreversible.

bKash posted a profit of Tk 315.77 crore in 2024 — a 67% year-on-year increase — reflecting the maturation of its model from person-to-person transfers into merchant payments, utility settlements, and financial services distribution.

Capital Market & Banking

DSEX Performance

The DSEX closed at 5,271 on 12 April 2026 — no material improvement in investor confidence post-election. The banking sector is the DSE’s largest listed component, meaning banking sector uncertainty (NPLs, Resolution Act, merger process) directly weighs on the index.

Bangladesh Bank’s framework requires supervisory approval before dividend distribution by any bank with a provision shortfall — limiting payouts at multiple institutions including SCBs.

Corporate Bond Market Gap

Bangladesh’s bond market-to-GDP ratio stands at just 6.6% (March 2025) vs Vietnam 27%, Indonesia 31%, Nepal 43%. This gap forces large corporates to rely entirely on bank credit — amplifying NPL risk when major borrowers default.

Proposals under BSEC discussion: Tk 500 crore single-borrower bank exposure cap, bond trading integration with DSE, Bond Guarantee Fund, green bonds and sukuk for climate financing.

Green & Sustainable Finance

Q4 2025 Results

Sustainable finance: Tk 837.46 billion (Q4 2025) vs Tk 732.92 billion (Q3 2025) — strong quarterly growth.

Green finance: Tk 69.80 billion (Q4 2025) vs Tk 67.76 billion (Q3 2025) — modest growth, lagging the sustainable finance trajectory.

Outstanding sustainable finance: Tk 3.94 trillion as of 31 December 2025.

Climate Risk Fund utilisation: Only Tk 153 million in Q4 2025 — well below potential.

Participation Gaps

Banks: 56 of 61 reported sustainable finance exposure in Q4 2025 — high participation rate.

Finance companies: Only 12 of 34 reported any exposure — a significant NBFI participation gap.

Dr Masrur Reaz (Policy Exchange Bangladesh): “While growth in sustainable finance is encouraging, green finance continues to lag — climate-focused investments are yet to gain sufficient traction.”

BB’s green taxonomy update (aligned with National Adaptation Plan) faces an expected delay, per IMF Country Report 26/24.

Sources: Bangladesh Bank MFS data January 2025; Bangladesh Bank Payment Systems Dept Circular, 13 Oct 2025; bKash financial disclosures 2024; Bangladesh Bank SFD Quarterly Report Oct–Dec 2025.

Sections 14 · 15
Company Update & Governance

Individual Bank Updates — April 2026

City Bank
NPL ratio: 4.76% (Tk 2,439 crore) as of September 2025. MD Mashrur Arefin: ratio stood at 3.6% in 2024 and expected to fall further. Attributed to strict separation between business origination and credit risk — no board interference in credit decisions. Among the sector’s most disciplined credit cultures.
Prime Bank / BRAC Bank / Eastern Bank
All three maintained NPL ratios below 5% as of September 2025. Common characteristics: conservative origination, diversified portfolios, independent credit risk functions. These three, alongside City Bank, represent the governance benchmark Bangladesh Bank’s reform agenda aims to embed sector-wide.
Islami Bank Bangladesh PLC
Acting MD Altaf Hossain confirmed ~Tk 300 crore in new deposits received on a single trading day in April. Recovery strategy: legal loan recovery + selective rescheduling + international legal firm agreements for foreign asset recovery. Customer confidence is returning but remains conditional on governance stability.
Sammilito Islami Bank (Merged Entity)
Remains under Bangladesh Bank administrative management with Tk 35,000 crore in capital support. Section 18(a) of Bank Resolution Act 2026 introduces ownership reinstatement uncertainty. BB monitoring obligation: dedicated special committee, minimum two years. No Section 18(a) applications publicly confirmed as at 30 April 2026.

HR & Governance Update

Bangladesh Bank vs Finance Ministry — Section 18(a) Tension
Bangladesh Bank Governor Ahsan H Mansur formally requested the Ministry of Finance not to proceed with Section 18(a) before the bill’s passage on 10 April. The Ministry proceeded. This institutional tension — between the central bank’s supervisory position and the government’s legislative decision — represents one of the most significant governance friction points in Bangladesh banking in 2026. Governor Mansur subsequently represented Bangladesh at the IMF-World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington.

Economists’ conference at BRAC Centre Inn: Debapriya Bhattacharya (CPD) called for a formal political statement from government explaining Section 18(a)’s intent. Prof Rehman Sobhan called for an active parliamentary opposition to act as a governance watchdog on reform implementation. Former CAG Mohammad Muslim Chowdhury called for state-owned banks — Sonali, Janata, Agrani, Rupali — to be brought under genuine corporate governance structures and listed on DSE following thorough asset quality reviews.

Bank Company Act accountability provisions: The Bank Resolution Act 2026 introduces personal liability for bank failure — civil penalties up to Tk 50 lakh plus daily fines. These apply independently of existing Bank Company Act 1991 penalties. All bank directors and senior managers should note that the accountability architecture around bank resolution has been substantially strengthened, even as the Section 18(a) ownership reinstatement mechanism has been criticised for weakening accountability for past failures.

Sources: Bank Resolution Act 2026; Parliamentary proceedings; economists’ conference proceedings; Voice for Reform roundtable, 25 April 2026; Bangladesh Bank official statements; individual bank disclosures.

Section 17
Global Banking Impact on Bangladesh

IMF Programme — Spring Meetings Dialogue

The 2026 IMF-World Bank Spring Meetings (Washington, 21–26 April) were the most significant international engagement for Bangladesh’s banking sector in April. Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury and Bangladesh Bank Governor Ahsan H Mansur attended, focusing on three areas of conditionality pressure: revenue mobilisation, exchange rate policy, and banking NPL reduction targets.

IMF Article IV Key Findings (Jan 2026)

📌 GDP growth projected at 4.7% in FY26
📌 Inflation elevated at 8.9% FY26; falling to ~6% FY27
📌 Gross reserves target: USD 24.1 billion by end-June 2026
📌 Debt risk upgraded from low to moderate
📌 Debt service exceeds 100% of total government revenue

IMF Calls On Bangladesh To

✔ Expand asset quality reviews to all systemic & SCBs
✔ Advance risk-based supervision
✔ Improve bank balance sheet transparency
✔ Strengthen AML/CFT framework
✔ Maintain tight monetary policy until inflation firmly on downward path
✔ Implement credible government-wide banking reform strategy

World Bank Assessment

The World Bank’s most recent Bangladesh Development Update projected real GDP growth at 4.8% in FY26, underpinned by decelerating inflation and improved private consumption. Investment remains subdued due to political uncertainty and banking vulnerabilities. Bangladesh’s LDC graduation is scheduled for November 2026 — preferential EU tariff treatment continues until 2029, providing an export buffer through the transition.

Correspondent Banking & Trade Finance

Bangladesh’s ability to maintain international correspondent banking relationships — essential for trade finance in the RMG sector — depends on its AML/CFT ratings and governance reputation. The IMF explicitly called for AML/CFT framework strengthening in its January 2026 Article IV. The Bank Resolution Act 2026 and its Section 18(a) provision has been noted internationally as a governance regression, with potential implications for how international counterparty banks assess Bangladesh’s sector-wide compliance posture.

Bangladesh Macroeconomic Projections — IMF Article IV (January 2026)
0% 5% 10% 3.8% GDP FY25 4.7% GDP FY26 Inflation FY25 10% Inflation FY26 8.9% Inflation FY27 ~6%
Source: IMF 2025 Article IV Consultation Report, released January 2026. Blue bars = GDP growth; Orange bars = headline inflation (average, year-on-year).

Sources: IMF 2025 Article IV Consultation Report (January 2026); World Bank Bangladesh Development Update; Bloomberg, April 2026; Bangladesh Embassy Washington.

Section 18
Exam Corner
JAIBB DAIBB BB Officer

Topic: Loan Classification & Provisioning in Bangladesh

Loan classification and provisioning is among the highest-frequency topics in both JAIBB and DAIBB examination papers and appears in almost every Bangladesh Bank Officer written test. The current governing circular is BRPD Circular No. 15 dated 27 November 2024 — the master circular. Candidates who cite the 2019 regime’s rules will lose marks.

The Five Classification Categories

Category Status Overdue Period (Continuous Loan) Provisioning Rate
Standard Unclassified Current — repaid on schedule 0.25%–2% (General Provision)
SMA Unclassified (watch) 1–3 months overdue No specific provision
Sub-standard Classified ⚠ 3–6 months overdue 20% Specific Provision
Doubtful Classified ⚠⚠ 6–9 months overdue 50% Specific Provision
Bad / Loss Classified ⚠⚠⚠ 9+ months overdue 100% Specific Provision

What Changed Under BRPD 15/2024

The 2019 regime allowed a continuous loan to remain Standard for up to six months after expiry before Sub-standard classification. BRPD Circular No. 15/2024 tightened this to three months — aligning with Basel III and IMF programme conditionalities. This single change is a primary driver of the NPL ratio increase from late 2024 onwards.

General vs Specific Provision

General Provision is maintained against performing loans to cover expected losses not yet specifically identified. Rates vary: 2% for consumer finance, 1% for credit cards, 0.25%–1% for other categories.

Specific Provision is maintained against classified loans at the rates shown in the table (20%, 50%, 100%). A bank with insufficient total provision has a provision shortfall — treated by Bangladesh Bank as a capital deficiency requiring remedial action.

⭐ Exam Tips — What to Remember

1. Know the current 2024 circular thresholds — not 2019. Examiners test current rules.

2. SMA is NOT a classified category. It is a monitoring flag (1–3 months overdue).

3. Memorise provisioning rates in sequence: 20% → 50% → 100% (SS → Doubtful → Bad/Loss).

4. Understand why tighter classification thresholds increased NPL ratios — this is a DAIBB analytical question.

5. Know the difference between General Provision (portfolio level) and Specific Provision (per-account, classified loans).

Key Circular Reference
BRPD Circular No. 15
Dated: 27 November 2024
Department: Banking Regulation and Policy Department
Applies to: All scheduled banks

This is the CURRENT master circular on loan classification. Read it in full before your examination.
Section 19
Next Month to Watch

Five developments every Bangladesh banking professional must track through May and June 2026. Each is traceable to a confirmed official process, deadline, or scheduled data release.

01
Distressed Asset Management Ordinance — June 2026 Target
The Ordinance creating the legal framework for private asset management companies to purchase NPLs from banks and NBFIs is targeted for completion by June 2026 under the three-year reform roadmap. May is the last full month before this deadline. Monitor Ministry of Finance for any draft publication or consultation. This is the most consequential structural legislation for the sector’s NPL resolution pathway and a key IMF programme conditionality.
02
Bangladesh Bank Scheduled Bank Statistics — March 2026 Release
Bangladesh Bank’s Statistics Department publishes Scheduled Bank Statistics approximately 6–8 weeks after month end. March 2026 data (total deposits, total loans and advances, private sector credit growth, ADR, and other monthly indicators) should be released during May–June 2026. BDbanker will publish a full data analysis article upon release. Monitor bb.org.bd/econdata for availability.
03
IMF Programme — Post-Spring Meetings Conditionality Update
Following the Spring Meetings discussions, the IMF and Bangladesh authorities are expected to continue renegotiating NPL reduction targets and other programme conditions. The original 2026 benchmarks (NPL below 10% for SCBs, below 5% for PCBs) are not achievable. Any agreement or framework adjustment will be published by the IMF and requires immediate analysis from compliance, risk, and strategy teams at all banks.
04
Section 18(a) Implementation Guidance — Awaited from Bangladesh Bank
Bangladesh Bank has not yet issued formal guidance on how Section 18(a) of the Bank Resolution Act 2026 will be operationalised — including application procedures, review timelines, due diligence criteria, and the government clearance process. When issued, this guidance will define the practical scope and pace of the ownership reinstatement mechanism. Critical reading for all governance, compliance, and risk professionals at any institution connected to the Islamic banking merger process.
05
MFS April 2026 Data — First Interoperability-Era Snapshot
Bangladesh Bank’s Payment Systems Department publishes monthly MFS data covering registered accounts, active accounts, total transactions, and values by category. The April 2026 release will be the first monthly snapshot covering MFS activity after the substantive implementation of the NPSB interoperability framework with bKash and Nagad both connected. A key early indicator of whether interoperability is driving new transaction volume or simply routing existing volume differently.
Monthly Banking Review  ·  April 2026  ·  Issue No. 004
Bangladesh Banking Intelligence
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All content sourced from Bangladesh Bank official publications, IMF, World Bank, and DSE-disclosed financial data.
No newspaper or secondary source is cited in any article body. Official sources only.
© 2026 BDbanker · For banking professionals only · Not financial advice

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