The document summarizes recent economic indicators for Bangladesh for January 2022. It finds that while COVID cases and deaths have increased, vaccination rates have also increased to 36.5% of the population receiving two doses. Economic activity has picked up in FY22, as shown by increases in manufacturing, electricity production and mobility. However, inflation has been rising and international reserves have declined as imports have grown faster than exports and remittances, leading to a current account deficit.
• Historically, financial crisis have generally occurred due to endogenous factors – economic imbalances like high crude prices, high inflation, etc. This time it is different since macros being stable, the current crisis is the result of an external factor i.e. COVID-19
• India’s long term growth story remains intact since it is better placed in terms of fundamentals
• We believe, Emerging Markets have the potential to recover better than Developed Markets & that Value as a theme performs better than Growth during recovery phase. Hence, we recommend investing in ICICI Prudential Value Discovery Fund
• Owing to the temporary economic crisis due to COVID-19, we recommend investing in ICICI Prudential India Opportunities Fund
• Given further uncertainty regarding the spread of COVID-19, volatility is expected to prevail. We recommend investing in ICICI Prudential Balanced Advantage Fund to manage volatility • We remain positive on the Smallcap space as valuations are reasonable & recommend investing in ICICI Prudential Smallcap Fund
• Post any crisis, sectoral leadership has changed in the past. Aim to invest in future potential leaders through ICICI Prudential Focused Equity Fund
After a sluggish recovery in 2021 pressured by the outbreak of the Delta variant, CLMV economies are expected to see a stronger recovery in 2022 supported by higher vaccination rates, resilient exports, and a gradual return of international tourists.
On the domestic front, higher vaccination rates have allowed authorities to relax lockdown measures, supporting a gradual domestic demand recovery. Officially confirmed COVID-19 cases have plummeted in Cambodia and Myanmar, while Laos and Vietnam have seen steady declines. Recent COVID-19 restrictions have been less stringent than in the past as CLMV economies adapt to living with COVID-19 and resort to partial lockdowns instead of nationwide lockdowns. Additional fiscal stimulus is expected to shore up domestic demand in Cambodia and Vietnam due to their adequate fiscal space, whereas Laos and Myanmar’s space for fiscal stimulus are more limited. Nonetheless, scarring effects from the pandemic would remain a drag on economic activity particularly through elevated unemployment rates and weakening household incomes.
On the external front, continued global economic growth and border reopening should underpin external demand recovery, supporting exports and foreign investment. CLMV exports are expected to see continued growth in 2022, albeit at a slower pace than 2021, as global demand for goods remains resilient especially for electronics and work-from-home products related to new lifestyles. With a lower economic uncertainty, FDI inflows should gradually return to the region aided by easing border restrictions and shortened quarantine requirements. Foreign trade and investment into the region would also benefit from RCEP which became effective in January. Despite that, the Omicron outbreak remains uncertain, and a prolonged spread would pose downside risks for external demand through possible supply chain disruptions.
Border reopening would also allow tourists to return gradually, with stronger growth expected in the second half of 2022 as Omicron concerns abate. However, Chinese tourists, which constitute a dominant share of international tourism in the region, are still barred by tight border restrictions. With China’s Zero-Covid policy and high transmissibility of the Omicron variant, EIC believes China’s border reopening for international tourism will be delayed to late-2022 or may be put off until 2023.
Factors to watch for CLMV economies in 2022 include 1) the Omicron variant or other emerging variants and risks of additional outbreaks, 2) vaccination progress and plans to ease border and mobility restrictions, and 3) fiscal and financial stability, particularly in Laos and Myanmar, amid higher public debt burden and monetary tightening in developed economies. Country-specific factors are also important to monitor, including the political situation in Myanmar and the recent opening of the Boten-Vientiane railway in Laos.
An overview of india japan trade relation today and tomorrowmarketxceldata
Economic relations between India and Japan have vast potential for growth, given the obvious complementarities that exist between the two Asian economies. Japan's interest in India is increasing due to a variety of reasons including India's big and growing market and its resources, especially the human resources. The signing of the historic India-Japan Comprehensive Economic PartnershipAgreement (CEPA) and its implementation from August 2011 has accelerated economic and commercial relations between the two countries.
For Inquiry Visit Us: https://www.market-xcel.com/contact.html
• Historically, financial crisis have generally occurred due to endogenous factors – economic imbalances like high crude prices, high inflation, etc. This time it is different since macros being stable, the current crisis is the result of an external factor i.e. COVID-19
• India’s long term growth story remains intact since it is better placed in terms of fundamentals
• We believe, Emerging Markets have the potential to recover better than Developed Markets & that Value as a theme performs better than Growth during recovery phase. Hence, we recommend investing in ICICI Prudential Value Discovery Fund
• Owing to the temporary economic crisis due to COVID-19, we recommend investing in ICICI Prudential India Opportunities Fund
• Given further uncertainty regarding the spread of COVID-19, volatility is expected to prevail. We recommend investing in ICICI Prudential Balanced Advantage Fund to manage volatility • We remain positive on the Smallcap space as valuations are reasonable & recommend investing in ICICI Prudential Smallcap Fund
• Post any crisis, sectoral leadership has changed in the past. Aim to invest in future potential leaders through ICICI Prudential Focused Equity Fund
After a sluggish recovery in 2021 pressured by the outbreak of the Delta variant, CLMV economies are expected to see a stronger recovery in 2022 supported by higher vaccination rates, resilient exports, and a gradual return of international tourists.
On the domestic front, higher vaccination rates have allowed authorities to relax lockdown measures, supporting a gradual domestic demand recovery. Officially confirmed COVID-19 cases have plummeted in Cambodia and Myanmar, while Laos and Vietnam have seen steady declines. Recent COVID-19 restrictions have been less stringent than in the past as CLMV economies adapt to living with COVID-19 and resort to partial lockdowns instead of nationwide lockdowns. Additional fiscal stimulus is expected to shore up domestic demand in Cambodia and Vietnam due to their adequate fiscal space, whereas Laos and Myanmar’s space for fiscal stimulus are more limited. Nonetheless, scarring effects from the pandemic would remain a drag on economic activity particularly through elevated unemployment rates and weakening household incomes.
On the external front, continued global economic growth and border reopening should underpin external demand recovery, supporting exports and foreign investment. CLMV exports are expected to see continued growth in 2022, albeit at a slower pace than 2021, as global demand for goods remains resilient especially for electronics and work-from-home products related to new lifestyles. With a lower economic uncertainty, FDI inflows should gradually return to the region aided by easing border restrictions and shortened quarantine requirements. Foreign trade and investment into the region would also benefit from RCEP which became effective in January. Despite that, the Omicron outbreak remains uncertain, and a prolonged spread would pose downside risks for external demand through possible supply chain disruptions.
Border reopening would also allow tourists to return gradually, with stronger growth expected in the second half of 2022 as Omicron concerns abate. However, Chinese tourists, which constitute a dominant share of international tourism in the region, are still barred by tight border restrictions. With China’s Zero-Covid policy and high transmissibility of the Omicron variant, EIC believes China’s border reopening for international tourism will be delayed to late-2022 or may be put off until 2023.
Factors to watch for CLMV economies in 2022 include 1) the Omicron variant or other emerging variants and risks of additional outbreaks, 2) vaccination progress and plans to ease border and mobility restrictions, and 3) fiscal and financial stability, particularly in Laos and Myanmar, amid higher public debt burden and monetary tightening in developed economies. Country-specific factors are also important to monitor, including the political situation in Myanmar and the recent opening of the Boten-Vientiane railway in Laos.
An overview of india japan trade relation today and tomorrowmarketxceldata
Economic relations between India and Japan have vast potential for growth, given the obvious complementarities that exist between the two Asian economies. Japan's interest in India is increasing due to a variety of reasons including India's big and growing market and its resources, especially the human resources. The signing of the historic India-Japan Comprehensive Economic PartnershipAgreement (CEPA) and its implementation from August 2011 has accelerated economic and commercial relations between the two countries.
For Inquiry Visit Us: https://www.market-xcel.com/contact.html
The impact of covid-19 in Bangladesh a case study on economic sectorShaksly Snail
The impact of covid-19 in Bangladesh a case study on economic sector
Our Team~
Leader
Shakila Ahmed
Members
Mahfuja Alam, Fatema Tuz Zohora, Juma Akter
Supervisor ~
Ashiqun Nabi
Assistant Professor, Department of
Business Administration
Manarat International University
IMF World Economic Outlook - April 2020 (as updated by June 2020 Forecast)DVSResearchFoundatio
Key Takeaways:
- Global Prospects and Policies
- Deep Downturn in 2020 and Uncertain Recovery in 2021
- Policy Tracker on Responses to COVID-19
- Commodity Market Development and Forecasts
- Global Government Debt and Fiscal Deficits
Summary The global economic situation
The pandemic caused by Covid 19 and the subsequent health and economic impact led to a 3 3 fall in global GDP in 2020 with China being the only major economy to register positive growth 2 3 After a year of the pandemic, a high level of uncertainty remains about how the future will pan out in both pidemiological and economic terms With good progress in the vaccination
programs and the stimulus measures, a return of confidence is expected, as well as the disappearance of any mobility and activity restrictions This, in turn, should lead to an upturn in growth which, according to the IMF, will reach 6 provided that any virus variants and doubts on the efficiency and safety of the vaccines do not dampen these expectations Recovery will be uneven among countries and in good measure it will depend on their productive structures Those with economies dependent on tourism and
sectors that require greater social contact will feel the negative effects of the crisis for longer
Equity Outlook: Long-term view on equity remains positive, however the medium-term view has turned cautious due to valuations moving higher.
Fixed Income: In the current phase, a more nimble and active duration management strategy is recommended
Impact of COVID-19 on Indian Economy: 28th November 2020Sam Ghosh
Indian economy entered a technical recession with two consecutive quarters of GDP contraction in Q2 of FY 2020-21. Results released by the National Statistical Office shows that the GDP of India during the H1 of FY 2020-21 contracted by 15.7% at Constant (2011-12) Prices and 13.3% at Current Prices. While quarterly GDP in Q2 FY 2020-21 in rupee terms improved from Q1 FY 2020-21 by 23% at Constant Prices and 24% at Current Prices, it is still 7.5% and 4% lower than Q2 of FY 2019-20 at Constant and Current Prices respectively. The contraction was caused by a drastic drop in private consumption (which contributes around 60% of Indian GDP) and a drop in gross fixed capital formation.
The policy repo rate has been reduced by 115 basis points from the beginning of 2020 to record low levels. Apart from that, RBI is injecting liquidity through various Open Market Operations and Long Term Repo Operations. Currency with the public increased by ~20% from the end of 2019 to the end of October 2020. We can safely say that the Indian economy is flushed with liquidity.
Consumer inflation remains above the policy range of 4%+2%, and with a GDP contraction, the Indian economy is dealing with stagflation.
On the fiscal front, total monthly receipts remained lower than the same period last year for the whole Q1 and Q2 (April - September) FY 2020-21. October receipts show signs of improvement. Fiscal expenditure on the other hand was maintained at the same levels of FY 2019-20 in FY 2020-21 till October. The fiscal deficit stood at 119.7% of the Budget Estimates as of October 2020 due to lower receipts.
Credit growth remains sluggish especially due to lower credit uptake by the industry. Credit demand for smaller companies was low from the beginning of fiscal 2020-21 which improved after August. Credit uptake by the large corporates dropped after July 2020.
Household savings increased dramatically from Rs.5.32 lakh crores in Q4 of FY 2019-20 to Rs. 8.16 lakh crores in Q1 of FY 2020-21 - a more than 50% increase. Most of the increase in household savings resulted from an aversion to liabilities. It signifies that the households turned conservative about their finances to deal with impending financial distress.
The unemployment rate shot-up in April and May 2020 above 20% and moderated to below 10% levels after June 2020. Employees' Provident Fund records show healthy job creation in September 2020.......
Provisional estimates of GDP for fy 2018 19 and final estimates of GDP for fy...Md. Mamun Hasan Biddut
According to the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS), Bangladesh GDP grew by 5.24 per cent during 2019-20 raising the per capita income by US$155 to US$2,064. This growth rate has been achieved when the global economy is contracting, in particular the whole developed world where according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) major economies are expected to contract by 2.4 per cent in 2020. The World Bank GDP projection for 2020 predicts a fall by 2.5 per cent for developing countries and 1.8 per cent for developed countries. Even the neighboring country India recorded a contraction of the economy by 23.9 per cent during the April-June quarter of 2020.
This growth rate is also much above the economic growth forecast provided for Bangladesh by the World Bank (WB) at 1.6 percent, International Monetary Fund (IMF) at 3.8 percent and Asian Development Bank (ADB) at 4.5 percent for 2020. While these forecast figures are for the calendar year 2020, but the BBS growth figure is for the 2019-20 financial year. In fact, the Bangladesh government believes that the economy is on track to achieve 8.2 per cent growth rate in 2020-21 and also expects the economy to rebound at a higher pace than before after the pandemic is over (FE, August, 28). There is an implicit message that the economy is not only trekking back to pre-pandemic levels but also will surpass that.
Impact of covid 19 on the rmg export scenario of bangladeshMosaibur Rahman
The study has made on descriptive research, is conducted to identify different dimension of Impact of Covid-19 on the RMG export scenario of Bangladesh. To come up with the result, researchers were not required to visit the factory. For this reason, researchers have ignored the direct data collection and surveys. Consequently, the research technique has relied based on information from secondary sources. Those data collected through Journals, Research articles, Thesis papers, newspapers case studies, online news paper and survey reports, garments Manufacturing Industries Annual reports, BGMEA Yearly report and Files. The data was collected basically through skimming ad scanning out the findings of different secondary source. After the completion of the data collection descriptive analyses was used illustrate the data. This study did not use any unethical means to collect information.
Samuel Benin
POLICY SEMINAR
Virtual Event - The political economy of COVID-19: Impacts on agriculture and food policies
OCT 22, 2020 - 08:30 AM TO 10:00 AM EDT
• Owing to growth concerns, Global Central Banks are reducing interest rates. The Reserve Bank of India
(RBI) too is expected to follow suits and may deliver 25-50 bps rate cut
• Central Banks are expected to continue with the loose monetary policy
• Food inflation is beginning to see some moderation although CPI Inflation continues to remain above
RBI‟s comfort zone. RBI‟s operation twist and LTRO too bodes well for the bond markets
• In light of the above factors, we have added duration across our portfolios as we have become positive
on the duration segment in the near term
• We continue to believe that the best strategy would be to create portfolio maturity in the range of 2-5
years
• We also continue to remain positive on the accrual space, as the divergence between Gsec/AAA & AA/A
yields persist.
Turin Startup Ecosystem 2024 - Ricerca sulle Startup e il Sistema dell'Innov...Quotidiano Piemontese
Turin Startup Ecosystem 2024
Una ricerca de il Club degli Investitori, in collaborazione con ToTeM Torino Tech Map e con il supporto della ESCP Business School e di Growth Capital
Introduction to Indian Financial System ()Avanish Goel
The financial system of a country is an important tool for economic development of the country, as it helps in creation of wealth by linking savings with investments.
It facilitates the flow of funds form the households (savers) to business firms (investors) to aid in wealth creation and development of both the parties
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Similar to bangladesh-economic-and-financial-indicators-january-2022-extended.pdf
The impact of covid-19 in Bangladesh a case study on economic sectorShaksly Snail
The impact of covid-19 in Bangladesh a case study on economic sector
Our Team~
Leader
Shakila Ahmed
Members
Mahfuja Alam, Fatema Tuz Zohora, Juma Akter
Supervisor ~
Ashiqun Nabi
Assistant Professor, Department of
Business Administration
Manarat International University
IMF World Economic Outlook - April 2020 (as updated by June 2020 Forecast)DVSResearchFoundatio
Key Takeaways:
- Global Prospects and Policies
- Deep Downturn in 2020 and Uncertain Recovery in 2021
- Policy Tracker on Responses to COVID-19
- Commodity Market Development and Forecasts
- Global Government Debt and Fiscal Deficits
Summary The global economic situation
The pandemic caused by Covid 19 and the subsequent health and economic impact led to a 3 3 fall in global GDP in 2020 with China being the only major economy to register positive growth 2 3 After a year of the pandemic, a high level of uncertainty remains about how the future will pan out in both pidemiological and economic terms With good progress in the vaccination
programs and the stimulus measures, a return of confidence is expected, as well as the disappearance of any mobility and activity restrictions This, in turn, should lead to an upturn in growth which, according to the IMF, will reach 6 provided that any virus variants and doubts on the efficiency and safety of the vaccines do not dampen these expectations Recovery will be uneven among countries and in good measure it will depend on their productive structures Those with economies dependent on tourism and
sectors that require greater social contact will feel the negative effects of the crisis for longer
Equity Outlook: Long-term view on equity remains positive, however the medium-term view has turned cautious due to valuations moving higher.
Fixed Income: In the current phase, a more nimble and active duration management strategy is recommended
Impact of COVID-19 on Indian Economy: 28th November 2020Sam Ghosh
Indian economy entered a technical recession with two consecutive quarters of GDP contraction in Q2 of FY 2020-21. Results released by the National Statistical Office shows that the GDP of India during the H1 of FY 2020-21 contracted by 15.7% at Constant (2011-12) Prices and 13.3% at Current Prices. While quarterly GDP in Q2 FY 2020-21 in rupee terms improved from Q1 FY 2020-21 by 23% at Constant Prices and 24% at Current Prices, it is still 7.5% and 4% lower than Q2 of FY 2019-20 at Constant and Current Prices respectively. The contraction was caused by a drastic drop in private consumption (which contributes around 60% of Indian GDP) and a drop in gross fixed capital formation.
The policy repo rate has been reduced by 115 basis points from the beginning of 2020 to record low levels. Apart from that, RBI is injecting liquidity through various Open Market Operations and Long Term Repo Operations. Currency with the public increased by ~20% from the end of 2019 to the end of October 2020. We can safely say that the Indian economy is flushed with liquidity.
Consumer inflation remains above the policy range of 4%+2%, and with a GDP contraction, the Indian economy is dealing with stagflation.
On the fiscal front, total monthly receipts remained lower than the same period last year for the whole Q1 and Q2 (April - September) FY 2020-21. October receipts show signs of improvement. Fiscal expenditure on the other hand was maintained at the same levels of FY 2019-20 in FY 2020-21 till October. The fiscal deficit stood at 119.7% of the Budget Estimates as of October 2020 due to lower receipts.
Credit growth remains sluggish especially due to lower credit uptake by the industry. Credit demand for smaller companies was low from the beginning of fiscal 2020-21 which improved after August. Credit uptake by the large corporates dropped after July 2020.
Household savings increased dramatically from Rs.5.32 lakh crores in Q4 of FY 2019-20 to Rs. 8.16 lakh crores in Q1 of FY 2020-21 - a more than 50% increase. Most of the increase in household savings resulted from an aversion to liabilities. It signifies that the households turned conservative about their finances to deal with impending financial distress.
The unemployment rate shot-up in April and May 2020 above 20% and moderated to below 10% levels after June 2020. Employees' Provident Fund records show healthy job creation in September 2020.......
Provisional estimates of GDP for fy 2018 19 and final estimates of GDP for fy...Md. Mamun Hasan Biddut
According to the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS), Bangladesh GDP grew by 5.24 per cent during 2019-20 raising the per capita income by US$155 to US$2,064. This growth rate has been achieved when the global economy is contracting, in particular the whole developed world where according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) major economies are expected to contract by 2.4 per cent in 2020. The World Bank GDP projection for 2020 predicts a fall by 2.5 per cent for developing countries and 1.8 per cent for developed countries. Even the neighboring country India recorded a contraction of the economy by 23.9 per cent during the April-June quarter of 2020.
This growth rate is also much above the economic growth forecast provided for Bangladesh by the World Bank (WB) at 1.6 percent, International Monetary Fund (IMF) at 3.8 percent and Asian Development Bank (ADB) at 4.5 percent for 2020. While these forecast figures are for the calendar year 2020, but the BBS growth figure is for the 2019-20 financial year. In fact, the Bangladesh government believes that the economy is on track to achieve 8.2 per cent growth rate in 2020-21 and also expects the economy to rebound at a higher pace than before after the pandemic is over (FE, August, 28). There is an implicit message that the economy is not only trekking back to pre-pandemic levels but also will surpass that.
Impact of covid 19 on the rmg export scenario of bangladeshMosaibur Rahman
The study has made on descriptive research, is conducted to identify different dimension of Impact of Covid-19 on the RMG export scenario of Bangladesh. To come up with the result, researchers were not required to visit the factory. For this reason, researchers have ignored the direct data collection and surveys. Consequently, the research technique has relied based on information from secondary sources. Those data collected through Journals, Research articles, Thesis papers, newspapers case studies, online news paper and survey reports, garments Manufacturing Industries Annual reports, BGMEA Yearly report and Files. The data was collected basically through skimming ad scanning out the findings of different secondary source. After the completion of the data collection descriptive analyses was used illustrate the data. This study did not use any unethical means to collect information.
Samuel Benin
POLICY SEMINAR
Virtual Event - The political economy of COVID-19: Impacts on agriculture and food policies
OCT 22, 2020 - 08:30 AM TO 10:00 AM EDT
• Owing to growth concerns, Global Central Banks are reducing interest rates. The Reserve Bank of India
(RBI) too is expected to follow suits and may deliver 25-50 bps rate cut
• Central Banks are expected to continue with the loose monetary policy
• Food inflation is beginning to see some moderation although CPI Inflation continues to remain above
RBI‟s comfort zone. RBI‟s operation twist and LTRO too bodes well for the bond markets
• In light of the above factors, we have added duration across our portfolios as we have become positive
on the duration segment in the near term
• We continue to believe that the best strategy would be to create portfolio maturity in the range of 2-5
years
• We also continue to remain positive on the accrual space, as the divergence between Gsec/AAA & AA/A
yields persist.
Similar to bangladesh-economic-and-financial-indicators-january-2022-extended.pdf (20)
Turin Startup Ecosystem 2024 - Ricerca sulle Startup e il Sistema dell'Innov...Quotidiano Piemontese
Turin Startup Ecosystem 2024
Una ricerca de il Club degli Investitori, in collaborazione con ToTeM Torino Tech Map e con il supporto della ESCP Business School e di Growth Capital
Introduction to Indian Financial System ()Avanish Goel
The financial system of a country is an important tool for economic development of the country, as it helps in creation of wealth by linking savings with investments.
It facilitates the flow of funds form the households (savers) to business firms (investors) to aid in wealth creation and development of both the parties
The European Unemployment Puzzle: implications from population agingGRAPE
We study the link between the evolving age structure of the working population and unemployment. We build a large new Keynesian OLG model with a realistic age structure, labor market frictions, sticky prices, and aggregate shocks. Once calibrated to the European economy, we quantify the extent to which demographic changes over the last three decades have contributed to the decline of the unemployment rate. Our findings yield important implications for the future evolution of unemployment given the anticipated further aging of the working population in Europe. We also quantify the implications for optimal monetary policy: lowering inflation volatility becomes less costly in terms of GDP and unemployment volatility, which hints that optimal monetary policy may be more hawkish in an aging society. Finally, our results also propose a partial reversal of the European-US unemployment puzzle due to the fact that the share of young workers is expected to remain robust in the US.
how to sell pi coins effectively (from 50 - 100k pi)DOT TECH
Anywhere in the world, including Africa, America, and Europe, you can sell Pi Network Coins online and receive cash through online payment options.
Pi has not yet been launched on any exchange because we are currently using the confined Mainnet. The planned launch date for Pi is June 28, 2026.
Reselling to investors who want to hold until the mainnet launch in 2026 is currently the sole way to sell.
Consequently, right now. All you need to do is select the right pi network provider.
Who is a pi merchant?
An individual who buys coins from miners on the pi network and resells them to investors hoping to hang onto them until the mainnet is launched is known as a pi merchant.
debuts.
I'll provide you the Telegram username
@Pi_vendor_247
How to get verified on Coinbase Account?_.docxBuy bitget
t's important to note that buying verified Coinbase accounts is not recommended and may violate Coinbase's terms of service. Instead of searching to "buy verified Coinbase accounts," follow the proper steps to verify your own account to ensure compliance and security.
how to swap pi coins to foreign currency withdrawable.DOT TECH
As of my last update, Pi is still in the testing phase and is not tradable on any exchanges.
However, Pi Network has announced plans to launch its Testnet and Mainnet in the future, which may include listing Pi on exchanges.
The current method for selling pi coins involves exchanging them with a pi vendor who purchases pi coins for investment reasons.
If you want to sell your pi coins, reach out to a pi vendor and sell them to anyone looking to sell pi coins from any country around the globe.
Below is the contact information for my personal pi vendor.
Telegram: @Pi_vendor_247
how to sell pi coins in all Africa Countries.DOT TECH
Yes. You can sell your pi network for other cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, usdt , Ethereum and other currencies And this is done easily with the help from a pi merchant.
What is a pi merchant ?
Since pi is not launched yet in any exchange. The only way you can sell right now is through merchants.
A verified Pi merchant is someone who buys pi network coins from miners and resell them to investors looking forward to hold massive quantities of pi coins before mainnet launch in 2026.
I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi merchant to trade with.
@Pi_vendor_247
What price will pi network be listed on exchangesDOT TECH
The rate at which pi will be listed is practically unknown. But due to speculations surrounding it the predicted rate is tends to be from 30$ — 50$.
So if you are interested in selling your pi network coins at a high rate tho. Or you can't wait till the mainnet launch in 2026. You can easily trade your pi coins with a merchant.
A merchant is someone who buys pi coins from miners and resell them to Investors looking forward to hold massive quantities till mainnet launch.
I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi vendor to trade with.
@Pi_vendor_247
what is the best method to sell pi coins in 2024DOT TECH
The best way to sell your pi coins safely is trading with an exchange..but since pi is not launched in any exchange, and second option is through a VERIFIED pi merchant.
Who is a pi merchant?
A pi merchant is someone who buys pi coins from miners and pioneers and resell them to Investors looking forward to hold massive amounts before mainnet launch in 2026.
I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi merchant to trade pi coins with.
@Pi_vendor_247
where can I find a legit pi merchant onlineDOT TECH
Yes. This is very easy what you need is a recommendation from someone who has successfully traded pi coins before with a merchant.
Who is a pi merchant?
A pi merchant is someone who buys pi network coins and resell them to Investors looking forward to hold thousands of pi coins before the open mainnet.
I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi merchant to trade with
@Pi_vendor_247
Exploring Abhay Bhutada’s Views After Poonawalla Fincorp’s Collaboration With...beulahfernandes8
The financial landscape in India has witnessed a significant development with the recent collaboration between Poonawalla Fincorp and IndusInd Bank.
The launch of the co-branded credit card, the IndusInd Bank Poonawalla Fincorp eLITE RuPay Platinum Credit Card, marks a major milestone for both entities.
This strategic move aims to redefine and elevate the banking experience for customers.
Poonawalla Fincorp and IndusInd Bank Introduce New Co-Branded Credit Cardnickysharmasucks
The unveiling of the IndusInd Bank Poonawalla Fincorp eLITE RuPay Platinum Credit Card marks a notable milestone in the Indian financial landscape, showcasing a successful partnership between two leading institutions, Poonawalla Fincorp and IndusInd Bank. This co-branded credit card not only offers users a plethora of benefits but also reflects a commitment to innovation and adaptation. With a focus on providing value-driven and customer-centric solutions, this launch represents more than just a new product—it signifies a step towards redefining the banking experience for millions. Promising convenience, rewards, and a touch of luxury in everyday financial transactions, this collaboration aims to cater to the evolving needs of customers and set new standards in the industry.
1. Bangladesh Economic and Financial Indicators, January 2022
Bangladesh: Selected Indicators
Both infections and deaths have been picking up - reflecting a
surge in the Omicron variant.
New confirmed cases of and deaths due to COVID-19
Mar 8, 2020 - Jan 31, 2022
Vaccination rollout has been picking up with approximately
36.5 percent of population having received two doses of
vaccinations.
Number of registration and people received
vaccination 1/
Mar 2, 2021-Jan 31, 2022 (in Millions)
Bangladesh continues to fall below the Asian average for
vaccine doses administered (per 100 people).
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered per 100 people
as on January 31, 2022, unless otherwise mentioned 2/
The continued pick-up in mobility, starting August, reflects the
pick-up in economic activity in FY22.
Community mobility changes 3/
Feb 2020-Jan 2022 (percent change from baseline)
Migrant worker outflows have recovered, reflecting the removal
of international travel bans.
Overseas employment: country-wise migrant outflows
Feb 2019- Dec 2021 (in thousands)
Reversing the downward trend, since the start of the fiscal year,
remittance inflows more recently have started to pick up.
Wage earners' remittance inflows: country wise
Feb 2019- Dec 2021 (in Billion USD)
1/ Vaccination data takes into account only the first-dose receivers. As on Jan 31, 2022, 62.1 million people received the second dose. 2/ For vaccines
that require multiple doses, each individual dose is counted. As the same person may receive more than one dose, the number of doses per 100
people can be higher than 100. United Kingdom data are as on Jan 30th
, 2021, while Bangladesh data is as on Jan 26th
, 2022. 3/ The baseline is the
median value, for the corresponding day of the week, during the five-week period 3 Jan-6 Feb 2020. Jan 2022 data is as of Jan 31st
, 2022.
Sources: Directorate General of Health Services, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Bangladesh; Our World in Data; Google's COVID-19 Community
Mobility Reports; Bureau of Manpower Employment and Training (BMET), Bangladesh; and IMF staff calculationss
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12/28/2021
1/27/2022
Daily new confirmed cases
Daily new confirmed deaths (RHS)
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
3/2/2021
3/11/2021
3/20/2021
3/29/2021
4/7/2021
4/16/2021
4/25/2021
5/4/2021
5/13/2021
5/22/2021
5/31/2021
6/9/2021
6/18/2021
6/27/2021
7/6/2021
7/15/2021
7/24/2021
8/2/2021
8/11/2021
8/20/2021
8/29/2021
9/7/2021
9/16/2021
9/25/2021
10/4/2021
10/13/2021
10/22/2021
10/31/2021
11/9/2021
11/18/2021
11/27/2021
12/6/2021
12/15/2021
12/24/2021
1/2/2022
1/11/2022
1/20/2022
1/29/2022
Registration Vaccination
25.9
94.1
114.3
113.2
119.5
166.4
222.9
128.3
146.9
193.9
163.2
195.6
147.3
160.4
162.5
207.8
202.4
0 50 100 150 200 250
Africa
Bangladesh
Philippines
Indonesia
India
Sri Lanka
South Korea
World
Asia
Malaysia
Japan
Cambodia
Hong Kong
Europe
United States
China
United Kingdom
-100
0
100
Feb-20
Mar-20
Apr-20
May-20
Jun-20
Jul-20
Aug-20
Sep-20
Oct-20
Nov-20
Dec-20
Jan-21
Feb-21
Mar-21
Apr-21
May-21
Jun-21
Jul-21
Aug-21
Sep-21
Oct-21
Nov-21
Dec-21
Jan-22
Retail and recreation Supermarket and pharmacy
Parks Public transport
Workplaces Residential
0
50
100
150
Feb-19
Apr-19
Jun-19
Aug-19
Oct-19
Dec-19
Feb-20
Apr-20
Jun-20
Aug-20
Oct-20
Dec-20
Feb-21
Apr-21
Jun-21
Aug-21
Oct-21
Dec-21
KSA UAE Kuwait
Oman Qatar Malaysia
Singapore Others Total
0.0
1.0
2.0
3.0
Feb-19
Apr-19
Jun-19
Aug-19
Oct-19
Dec-19
Feb-20
Apr-20
Jun-20
Aug-20
Oct-20
Dec-20
Feb-21
Apr-21
Jun-21
Aug-21
Oct-21
Dec-21
KSA UAE Kuwait
Oman Qatar Malaysia
Singapore Others Total
2. 2
Bangladesh: Real Sector Developments
Provisional official data shows continued support to growth by
private consumption and a slight recovery of private investment
and net exports in FY21.
Contributions to Real GDP Growth 1/
FY11-FY21 (y/y, in percentage points)
Consumption to GDP ratio, in FY21, fell slightly while the
investment to GDP ratio remained flat.
Selected Indicators’ Share in Nominal GDP 1/
FY11-FY21 (in percent)
The y/y growth of the quantum indices highlight a pickup in
activity in FY22 thus far.
Quantum Index of Medium and Large-Scale
Manufacturing Industries and Electricity 1/
FY16-FY22 (Oct) (y/y growth, in percent)
Rice production target, in FY22, was set at 39.5 MMT reflecting
the actual production in FY21 (37.4 MMT). Total target for
wheat and maize, in FY22, was set at 7.1 MMT reflecting the
outturn of 5.5 MMT in FY21.
Major Food Grains Production 2/
FY15-FY22 (Million Metric Tons (MMT))
Twelve-month average headline inflation has been creeping up
since the start of the fiscal year.
Twelve Month Average Inflation
Dec 2018-Dec 2021 (y/y, in percent)
Headline inflation, in Dec 2021, exceeded 6 percent with food
inflation reaching 5.5 percent and non-food reaching 7.0
percent.
Point-to-Point Inflation
Dec 2018-Dec 2021 (y/y, in percent)
1/ FY21 and FY22 data are provisional. 2/ FY21 data are actual, while FY22 data are production targets.
Sources: Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS); Department of Agriculture Extension, Ministry of Agriculture; Bangladesh Bank; and IMF staff
calculations
-4
0
4
8
12
FY11 FY12 FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21
Private Consumption Public Consumption
Private Investment Public Investment
Net exports Statiscal discrepancy
GDP growth
72
74
76
78
80
0
10
20
30
40
FY11 FY12 FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21
Investment Export
Import Remittance
Consumption (RHS)
0
10
20
30
40
FY16
FY17
FY18
FY19
FY20
FY21
FY22
(Jul)
FY22
(Aug)
FY22
(Sep)
FY22
(Oct)
Manufacturing Electricity
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22
Aus Aman Boro Wheat Maize
4
5
6
7
Dec-18
Feb-19
Apr-19
Jun-19
Aug-19
Oct-19
Dec-19
Feb-20
Apr-20
Jun-20
Aug-20
Oct-20
Dec-20
Feb-21
Apr-21
Jun-21
Aug-21
Oct-21
Dec-21
General Food
Non Food Core
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Dec-18
Feb-19
Apr-19
Jun-19
Aug-19
Oct-19
Dec-19
Feb-20
Apr-20
Jun-20
Aug-20
Oct-20
Dec-20
Feb-21
Apr-21
Jun-21
Aug-21
Oct-21
Dec-21
General Food
Non Food Core
3. 3
Bangladesh: External Sector Developments
Current account deficit, in FY22 (Jul-Dec), reached USD 8.2
billion, compared with USD 3.5 billion surplus in FY21 (Jul-
Dec).
Current Account Balance Components 1/
FY16-FY22 (Jul-Dec) (in billion USD)
RMG related intermediate goods contributed the most to the
overall growth in imports in FY22 (Jul-Dec).
Item-wise Contributions to Import Growth 2/
FY17-FY22 (Jul-Dec), (y/y growth, in percentage points)
Remittances, y/y in FY22 (Jul-Dec), declined by 21 percent
while exports grew by 27.3 percent and imports by 54.5
percent in the same period.
Major Balance of Payments Components 3/
FY16-FY22 (Jul-Dec) (y/y growth, in percent)
Reflecting the pick-up in import payments, international
reserve coverage continues to decline.
International Reserves 4/
Dec 2018-Dec 2021, (Billion USD)
Trade competitiveness has somewhat improved, mostly
reflecting the depreciation relative to the currency basket of
trading partners.
Exchange Rates
Dec 2018-Dec 2021
Both letters of credit (LC) opening, and settlement have been
picking up in FY22.
Sector-wise contributions to total LC opening and
settlement
FY19-FY22 (Jul-Nov) (y/y, in percentage points)
1/ FY22 (Jul-Dec) data are provisional. 2/ Data are recorded by customs. 3/ Exports and imports are f.o.b. data. 4/ Net international reserve (NIR) is
gross international reserves (excluding investment on bonds below the grade BBB, Silver Acquisition A/C, deposit with Rupali Bank, Pakistan &
deposit with Sonali Bank, UK) minus total liabilities. Total liabilities comprise reserve liabilities in ACU, IMF Trust Fund Account (ECF) and other
foreign currency clearing accounts, and deposits of IBRD/IDA, and SDR allocation.
Sources: Bangladesh Bank; Export Promotion Bureau (EPB); and IMF staff calculations
-70
-20
30
80
FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY21
(Jul-Dec)
FY22
(Jul-Dec)
Exports Imports
Services Primary Income
Workers' Remittances Other Secondary Income
Current Account Balance
-20
0
20
40
60
FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22 (Jul-
Dec)
Other items Other capital goods
Capital machinery Other intermediate goods
Plastics and rubber articles thereof Fertilizer
Chemicals Petroleum, oil and lubricants
Iron, steel and other base metals RMG intermediate goods
Consumer goods Food grains
Total
-35
15
65
FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22 (Jul-
Dec)
Exports RMG Exports
Other Exports Imports
Remittance
0
5
10
0
6
12
18
24
30
36
42
48
Dec-18
Jan-19
Feb-19
Mar-19
Apr-19
May-19
Jun-19
Jul-19
Aug-19
Sep-19
Oct-19
Nov-19
Dec-19
Jan-20
Feb-20
Mar-20
Apr-20
May-20
Jun-20
Jul-20
Aug-20
Sep-20
Oct-20
Nov-20
Dec-20
Jan-21
Feb-21
Mar-21
Apr-21
May-21
Jun-21
Jul-21
Aug-21
Sep-21
Oct-21
Nov-21
Dec-21
Gross International Reserves (valuation adjusted)
Net International Reserves (BB definition)
Reserves (months of imports, valuation adjusted, RHS)
75
80
85
90
80
100
120
140
160
Dec-18
Feb-19
Apr-19
Jun-19
Aug-19
Oct-19
Dec-19
Feb-20
Apr-20
Jun-20
Aug-20
Oct-20
Dec-20
Feb-21
Apr-21
Jun-21
Aug-21
Oct-21
Dec-21
Nominal Effective Exchange Rate (2010=100)
Real Effective Exchange Rate (2010=100)
Taka per USD (Period average, RHS)
-20
0
20
40
60
Opening Settlement Opening Settlement Opening Settlement Opening Settlement Opening Settlement
FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22 (Jul-Sep) FY22 (Jul-Nov)
Consumer Goods Capital Machinery Intermediate Goods
Petroleum Industrial Raw Materials Others
Total
4. 4
Bangladesh: Fiscal Sector Developments 1/
Total revenue-GDP ratio, in FY22 (Jul-Jan), was 4.7 percent
compared with 5.8 in FY21 (Jul-Jan). VAT and the
supplementary duties-GDP ratio, during the same period,
decreased from 2.5 percent to 2.3.
Central Government Revenue
FY16-FY22 (Jul-Jan) (In percent of GDP)
Preliminary data suggests that total revenue, in FY22 (Jul-Jan),
has decreased by 7.8 percent (y/y) and the decrease in taxes on
others has had the largest impact.
Contribution to Total Revenue Generation
FY16-FY22 (Jul-Jan) (In percentage points)
Total expenditure-GDP ratio, in FY22 (Jul-Jan), decreased from
6.3 percent to 5.2 percent. During the same period, ADP
execution decreased from 1.4 percent to 1.3 percent of GDP.
Central Government (CG) Expenditure
FY16-FY22 (Jul-Jan) (In percent of GDP)
Total expenditure, in FY22 (Jul-Jan), decreased by 7.3 percent
(y/y), where interest payments contributed 1.8 percentage
points.
Contributions to CG’s Expenditure Growth
FY16-FY22 (Jul-Jan), (y/y, In percentage points)
Compared to the same period in the previous FY, the budget
deficit in FY22 (Jul – Jan) has been primarily financed by bank
borrowing.
Fiscal Balance and Sources of Financing
FY16-FY22 (Jul-Jan) (Billion Taka)
Total central government debt, at end-Jan 2022, reached 36.2
percent of GDP from 38.9 percent of GDP at end-Jun 2021.
Domestic debt accounts for roughly two thirds of the total
central government debt.
Central Government Debt
Jun 2016-Jan 2022 (In percent of GDP)
1/ FY21 fiscal data is provisional outturn from Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS) based on FY2005/06. FY22 (Jul-Jan) GDP data is annualized using
provisional GDP estimate of Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS).
Sources: Office of the Controller General of Accounts (CGA), Ministry of Finance; and IMF Staff calculations
0
5
10
15
FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY21
(Jul-Jan)
FY22
(Jul-Jan)
Other VAT and supplementary duties
Customs duties Taxes on income and profits
Total revenue
-15
5
25
FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22 (Jul-
Jan)
Other VAT and supplementary duties
Customs duties Taxes on income and profits
Total revenue
0
4
8
12
16
FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY21
(Jul-Jan)
FY22
(Jul-Jan)
Pay and allowances Subsidies, transfer and net lending
Annual development programme (ADP) Interest payments
Other expenditure Total Expenditure
-20
-10
0
10
20
30
FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY22
(Jul-Jan)
Pay and allowances Subsidies, transfer and net lending
Annual development programme (ADP) Interest payments
Other expenditure Total Expenditure
-1000
0
1000
2000
FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 FY21
(Jul-Jan)
FY22
(Jul-Jan)
Net domestic financing: nonbanks, except NSD
Net domestic financing: NSD
Net domestic financing: banks
Net external financing
Net Finacing
0
10
20
30
40
Jun-16 Jun-17 Jun-18 Jun-19 Jun-20 Jun-21 Jan-22
External debt Domestic debt
5. 5
Bangladesh: Monetary and Financial Market Developments
Reserve money, at end-Dec 2021, grew by 6.5 percent (y/y)
compared with 21.2 percent (y/y) in Dec 2020, mainly driven by
net foreign assets.
Contributions to Reserve Money Growth
Dec 2018-Dec 2021 (y/y, in percentage points)
Broad money (M2), at end-Nov 2021, grew by 10.2 percent with
private sector credit and net foreign assets contributing 7.8 and
1.4 percentage points, respectively, to this growth.
Contributions to Broad Money (M2) Growth
Nov 2018-Nov 2021 (y/y, in percentage points)
Broad money (M3) growth reached 9.9 percent, in Nov 2021,
with M2 and NSC sales accounting for 8.3 and 1.8 percentage
points respectively.
Contributions to Broad Money (M3) Growth
Nov 2018-Nov 2021 (y/y, in percentage points)
Interest rates, which had been on an increasing trend-have
started to decrease.
Interest Rates 1/
Mar 2019-Jan 2022 (in percentage points)
Excess liquid assets (as percent of total demand and time
liabilities), in Dec 2021, reached 15.4 percent compared with
15.9 percent in Dec 2020.
Excess Liquid Assets (as percent of total time and
demand liabilities)
Feb 2019-Dec 2021
Growth of bank advances to the private sector remained flat at
around 8.7 percent in Q1 FY22. The growth was mostly driven
by advances to trade and commerce, and industrial term loan.
Contributions to Growth of Bank Advances (Private
Sector) by Economic Purposes
FY16- Q1 FY22 (y/y, in percentage points)
1/ Deposit and Lending rate are as on November 30th
, 2021.
2/ Excess Liquidity is statutory liquidity eligible liquid assets of banks minus statutory liquidity (excluding cash reserve). Excess Reserve is balance with
Bangladesh Bank in local currency minus required cash reserve. These are provisional data taken from Bangladesh Bank’s Department of Off-Site
Supervision.
Sources: Bangladesh Bank; and IMF Staff calculations
-20
-10
0
10
20
30
40
Dec-18
Feb-19
Apr-19
Jun-19
Aug-19
Oct-19
Dec-19
Feb-20
Apr-20
Jun-20
Aug-20
Oct-20
Dec-20
Feb-21
Apr-21
Jun-21
Aug-21
Oct-21
Dec-21
Net foreign assets Net claims on government
Claims on DMBs Non-reserve liabilities to DMBs
Other net domestic assets Reserve Money
-5
0
5
10
15
20
Nov-18
Jan-19
Mar-19
May-19
Jul-19
Sep-19
Nov-19
Jan-20
Mar-20
May-20
Jul-20
Sep-20
Nov-20
Jan-21
Mar-21
May-21
Jul-21
Sep-21
Nov-21
Other domestic assets Claims on the private sector
Net claims on central government Net foreign assets
Broad money
-2
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
Nov-18
Jan-19
Mar-19
May-19
Jul-19
Sep-19
Nov-19
Jan-20
Mar-20
May-20
Jul-20
Sep-20
Nov-20
Jan-21
Mar-21
May-21
Jul-21
Sep-21
Nov-21
Other
M2
National Savings Certificates (NSC)
Broad Money (M3)
0
2
4
6
8
10
Mar-19
May-19
Jul-19
Sep-19
Nov-19
Jan-20
Mar-20
May-20
Jul-20
Sep-20
Nov-20
Jan-21
Mar-21
May-21
Jul-21
Sep-21
Nov-21
Jan-22
Deposit Rate Lending Rate
Call Money Rate 91-DAY TREASURY BILLS
2-YEAR TREASURY BONDS
0
4
8
12
16
20
Feb-19
Mar-19
Apr-19
May-19
Dec-19
Jan-20
Mar-20
Jun-20
Jul-20
Aug-20
Oct-20
Dec-20
Jan-21
Mar-21
Apr-21
Jun-21
Jul-21
Sep-21
Oct-21
Nov-21
Dec-21
State-owned Banks Specialised Banks
Private Banks (Other than Islamic) Islamic Banks
Foreign Banks Total
-2
2
6
10
14
18
FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 Q1 FY22
Others Consumer finance
Other Institutional loan Trade & Commerce
Transport Construction
Industry: Working capital financing Industry: Term loan
Agriculture: Others Agriculture: Crops
Total
6. 6
Bangladesh: Monetary and Financial Market Developments… Contd.
The loan-to-deposit ratio, in Nov 2021, reached 80.8 percent
from 81.6 percent in Apr 2021. During the period, the ratio
(excluding government deposits) decreased from 87.4 percent to
86.5 percent.
Loan-to-Deposit Ratio
Jan 2019-Nov 2021 (in percent)
CAR of the banking industry, at Sep 2021, decreased to 11.2
from 11.6 percent in Dec 2020. CAR of the SOBs, in Sep 2021,
increased to 6.3 percent from 4.3 percent in Dec 2020
remaining below the regulatory requirement of 10 percent.
Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR)
Dec 2016-Sep 2021 (in percent)
Banking sector’s NPL ratio, in Sep 2021, increased to 8.1
percent from 7.7 percent in Dec 2020. In SOBs, the ratio
remained at about 20.1 percent, and increased to 5.5 percent in
the case of PCBs.
Non-Performing Loan (NPL) Ratio 1/
Dec 2016-Sep 2021 (in percent of loans)
Stressed advances in the banking industry (sum of NPLs,
rescheduled and restructured loans), at end-Dec 2018,
accounted for 20.5 percent of outstanding loans.
Stressed Advances
Dec 2012-Dec 2018 (in percent of loans)
Banking sector advance, at end-Q2 FY22, reached Tk.11579
billion, where private commercial banks accounted for Tk. 8680
billion.
Banking Sector Advance
(FY16-Q1 FY22) (in billion Taka)
The 3-mma DSE broad index, turnover, and price volatility,
which had been picked up since May 2021, is starting to trend
down.
Dhaka Stock Market Performance 1/
Dec 2018-Dec 2021 (3-month moving average)
1/ Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, in Apr 2020 there was no stock market transaction.
Sources: Bangladesh Bank; and IMF Staff calculations
70
80
90
100
Jan-19
Mar-19
May-19
Jul-19
Sep-19
Nov-19
Jan-20
Mar-20
May-20
Jul-20
Sep-20
Nov-20
Jan-21
Mar-21
May-21
Jul-21
Sep-21
Nov-21
Loan-to-deposit ratio
Loan-to-deposit ratio (excl. govt. deposits)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Dec-16
Dec-17
Dec-18
Dec-19
Jun-20
Dec-20
Jun-21
Sep-21
Dec-16
Dec-17
Dec-18
Dec-19
Jun-20
Dec-20
Jun-21
Sep-21
Dec-16
Dec-17
Dec-18
Dec-19
Jun-20
Dec-20
Jun-21
Sep-21
Dec-16
Dec-17
Dec-18
Dec-19
Jun-20
Dec-20
Jun-21
Sep-21
Banking Sector SOBs PCBs FCBs
0
10
20
30
40
Dec-16
Dec-17
Dec-18
Dec-19
Dec-20
Sep-21
Dec-16
Dec-17
Dec-18
Dec-19
Dec-20
Sep-21
Dec-16
Dec-17
Dec-18
Dec-19
Dec-20
Sep-21
Dec-16
Dec-17
Dec-18
Dec-19
Dec-20
Sep-21
Banking Sector SOBs PCBs FCBs
0
5
10
15
20
25
Dec-12 Dec-13 Dec-14 Dec-15 Dec-16 Dec-17 Dec-18
NPL Stressed Advances
0
4000
8000
12000
FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19 FY20 FY21 Q1 FY22
Foreign commercial banks
Private commercial banks
Specialised banks
State owned commercial banks
Total
0
100
200
300
400
500
4000
4500
5000
5500
6000
6500
7000
7500
Dec-18
Feb-19
Apr-19
Jun-19
Aug-19
Oct-19
Dec-19
Feb-20
Apr-20
Jun-20
Aug-20
Oct-20
Dec-20
Feb-21
Apr-21
Jun-21
Aug-21
Oct-21
Dec-21
DSE Broad Index
Turnover (in billions of Taka, RHS)
Price Volatility (3 months moving standard deviation, RHS)