Bangladesh Banking Sector — Investment Intelligence Report | M A Fazal & Co.
Investment Intelligence Report

Bangladesh Banking Sector
— Investor Assessment 2026

A comprehensive analysis of 34 scheduled banks for high-level investors. Sector KPIs, NPL landscape, regulatory reform status, and a bank-by-bank investment ranking — all backed by primary sources.

Report Date
May 2026
Banks Assessed
34 Scheduled Banks
Data Sources
BB · Bonik Barta · World Bank · IMF · DSE
Coverage
PCB · SOCB · Islamic Banks
Prepared by M A Fazal & Co., Chartered Accountantswww.mafazal.com  |  For informational purposes only. Not investment advice.

Sector Overview

Bangladesh's banking sector stands at a pivotal but turbulent juncture — undergoing the most far-reaching regulatory overhaul in its history, even as headline NPL and capital numbers reach historic lows.

Bangladesh operates 61 scheduled commercial banks — 6 state-owned commercial banks (SOCBs), 43 private commercial banks (PCBs), 9 foreign commercial banks (FCBs), and 3 specialised development banks — regulated by Bangladesh Bank (BB) under the Bank Company Act 1991.[1]

The sector entered FY2026 under acute stress. Following the political transition in August 2024, Bangladesh Bank dissolved the boards of 14 banks and launched asset quality reviews (AQRs), which exposed decades of concealed non-performing loans. The true scale of bad loans — hidden through regulatory forbearance and politically-directed rescheduling — was finally laid bare.[2]

Yet the reform architecture now in place is the most credible since independence. The IMF's $5.5 billion programme (of which $3.65 billion has been disbursed), alongside World Bank and ADB support, provides both the financial cushion and the external discipline to sustain reforms. Risk-based supervision rolled out from January 2026. IFRS-9 adoption is mandated by December 2027. The Bank Resolution Ordinance 2025 provides BB with a legal framework to intervene in failing banks without court delays.[3]

Investment thesis in one line: The sector is bifurcated. A small cluster of 4–5 private banks with strong governance are delivering record profits at historically cheap valuations. The rest — particularly state-owned banks and distressed Islamic banks — are effectively insolvent and uninvestable for at least 3–5 years.

Sector Structure (2025)

By number of banks — Source: Bangladesh Bank[1]
43 Private Commercial Banks, 6 State-Owned Commercial Banks, 9 Foreign Commercial Banks, 3 Specialised Banks
PCBs — 43 SOCBs — 6 FCBs — 9 Specialised — 3

NPL Trend (%) — Sector-wide

Gross NPL ratio over time — Sources: BB FSR, World Bank[4]
NPL: Jun2023 10.1%, Dec2023 approx 12%, Mar2024 20%, Dec2024 20.2%, Mar2025 24.1%, Sep2025 35.73%, peak Jun2025 36%

Key Sector Metrics

Critical financial health indicators as of the latest available data (2025–26). All figures sourced from BB publications, World Bank, and leading financial press.

System-wide CAR
1.53%
vs. 12.50% regulatory minimum
TBS, May 2026[5]
Sector NPL Ratio
35.73%
of total disbursed loans (Sep 2025)
Daily Star, Dec 2025[6]
Capital Shortfall
Tk 1.71L Cr
19 banks — worst in history
New Age, 2025[7]
Banks with Net Loss
17
failed to generate net profit in 2024
BB via New Age, Apr 2026[8]
Sector Avg ROE
7.42%
median 4.8% — top-10 avg: 16.78%
Bonik Barta, Oct 2025[9]
Pvt Credit Growth
6.29%
Sep 2025 — 21-year historic low
LightCastle, Feb 2026[10]
Remittance Inflow
$30.04B
FY2024-25 — all-time record (+26.8%)
BBF Digital, Mar 2026[11]
Top-10 Bank Avg CAR
14.9%
well above 12.5% minimum
Bonik Barta, Oct 2025[9]
IMF Programme
$5.5B
$3.65B disbursed; $800M withheld
BBF Digital, Mar 2026[11]

CAR Comparison — by Bank Category

Capital Adequacy Ratio — Sources: ADB 2025, BB FSR, Bonik Barta[12]
System-wide 1.53%, SOCBs 5.4%, All PCBs 12.3%, Top-10 PCBs 14.9%, Regulatory Minimum 12.5%

H1 2025 — Profit Leaders vs Loss-Makers

Combined H1 2025 net profit (Tk Crore) — Source: Daily Star, 2025[13]
Profit: BRAC 708, Pubali 578, Prime 415, Jamuna 305, EBL 302. Loss: AB Bank -1758, FSIB -1691, IFIC -1128, National -985

The NPL Crisis — Root Causes & Outlook

Bangladesh's non-performing loan problem is not cyclical — it is structural, rooted in three decades of governance failures, political interference, and regulatory forbearance.

The official NPL ratio jumped from 10.11% in June 2023 to 20.20% by December 2024 — simply by Bangladesh Bank adopting the Basel III loan classification standard (3-month overdue rule vs. the previous 6-month rule). This reclassification didn't create new bad loans; it revealed ones that had been concealed for years through regulatory forbearance and politically-directed rescheduling.[11]

By September 2025, the sector-wide NPL ratio reached 35.73% — nearly 4.5x the South Asian average of 7.9% (World Bank, 2025). Some distressed banks reported default ratios exceeding 50–87%. First Security Islami Bank ended 2024 with the highest bad loan ratio at 87.5%. Union Bank's NPLs reached nearly 90% of outstanding loans by March 2025.[14]

The S Alam Group — a single conglomerate — was identified by BFIU as having borrowed Tk 2.25 lakh crore directly and indirectly from 10 banks and one financial institution. Of this, Islami Bank alone disbursed Tk 1.05 lakh crore to the group — a staggering concentration of connected-party exposure.[15]

Key structural driver: Banks held 67% of all public debt by May 2026. Under Basel III, government securities carry 0% risk weight — banks earn 10–12% risk-free yield with zero capital charge. This has crowded out private lending, with private sector credit growth falling to a 21-year low of 6.29%.[5]

21 Banks — NPL Under Control (2024)

Banks that bucked the rising bad loan trend — Source: Daily Star, July 2025[14]

Trust Bank Dutch-Bangla Bank Jamuna Bank MTB NCC Bank Bank Asia Shahjalal Islami BRAC Bank Eastern Bank City Bank Prime Bank Habib Bank Pubali Bank Midland Bank Dhaka Bank Uttara Bank NRB Commercial

Worst NPL Cases (2024)

Banks with NPL exceeding 40% — Source: Daily Star, New Age[14,7]

BankNPL / Status
First Security Islami Bank87.5%
Union Bank~90% (Mar 2025)
Janata Bank (SOCB)CRAR -34.6%
Padma BankCapital -Tk4,985Cr
AB BankH1 2025 loss Tk1,758Cr

Reform Agenda — What Has Changed

The 2025–26 regulatory overhaul is the most credible in Bangladesh's banking history. Backed by IMF conditions, it addresses structural failures that previous governments tolerated.

Aug 2024

Political Transition — Board Dissolutions

Interim government assumes power. Bangladesh Bank dissolves boards of 14 banks controlled by politically-connected groups (S Alam, Salman F Rahman, Saifuzzaman). AQRs commissioned.

Source: TBS, BBF Digital[11]
Nov 2024

New Loan Classification Rules

BB Master Circular amends NPL classification — 3-month overdue standard (from 6 months), aligned with Basel III. Provisioning tightened. True scale of bad loans begins to emerge.

Source: TBS, Jan 2025[16]
Jun 2025

3-Year Banking Reform Roadmap Released

Government commits to NPL reduction targets (SOCBs to 10%, PCBs to below 5% — both by June 2026), AQR completion, new bankruptcy and distressed asset laws, IFRS-9 by December 2027.

Source: Daily Star, Jul 2025[17]
Sep 2025

Bank Resolution Ordinance 2025 Enacted

Grants BB full legal authority to intervene in failing banks immediately, without waiting for courts. Creates Bridge Bank mechanism. Five distressed Islamic banks merged into Sammilito Islami Bank PLC.

Source: Financial Express, BBF Digital[3,11]
Jan 2026

Risk-Based Supervision — Full Rollout

BB transitions from checklist-based inspections to continuous risk-based monitoring. Pilot inspections completed for 20 banks covering ~50% of system assets. New dividend policy restricts payouts for 25+ banks.

Source: Chambers & Partners, 2026[18]
Jun 2026

NPL Deadline — Target Date

Binding deadline for SOCBs to reduce NPL to 10% and PCBs to below 5%. IFRS-9 Expected Credit Loss model adoption underway. Results of this deadline will be a key investment signal.

Source: Daily Star, Financial Express[17,18]
Dec 2027

IFRS-9 Full Compliance Deadline

All banks must adopt Expected Credit Loss (ECL) model. Forward-looking provisioning will initially spike NPL numbers but create genuinely honest balance sheets for the first time.

Source: Financial Express, Nov 2025[19]

Bank-wise Investment Ranking — All 34 Banks

Ranked using seven internationally-recognised indicators: ROA, ROE, NPL ratio, Net Profit, NAVPS, Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR), and Operating Profit per Branch. Primary source: Bonik Barta Top Banks 2024 Annual Ranking (October 2025), supplemented by BB FSR, New Age, Daily Star, and TBS.

Verdict Key:   STRONG BUY  BUY  HOLD  CAUTION  AVOID  — Based on NPL, CAR, profitability, governance, dividend eligibility and reform trajectory. Not a solicitation to trade.

# Bank Name Type BB Score
/70 pts
NPL Status CAR 2025 Dividend Verdict
◆ TIER 1 — STRONG BUY  |  Sector-leading fundamentals. Core portfolio allocation.
1 BRAC Bank PLCDSE: BRACBANK | Founded 2001 PCB
47.08
Very Low (<3%) Strong (>12%) 30% (15%C+15%S)
↑ from 25% in 2024
STRONG BUY
◆ TIER 2 — BUY  |  Strong governance, record profits, dividend-paying. Medium-to-long term.
2 City Bank PLCDSE: CITYBANK | Founded 1983 PCB
44.94
Low (<5%) Strong 25%+ (2024) BUY
3 Prime Bank PLCDSE: PRIMEBANK | Founded 1995 PCB
40.81
Controlled 2nd Best 17.5% (2024) BUY
4 Eastern Bank Ltd (EBL)DSE: EBL | Founded 1992 PCB
37.66
Very Low (<3%) Adequate 20%+ (2024) BUY
◆ TIER 3 — HOLD  |  Adequate fundamentals. Weakness in 1–2 metrics. Active monitoring required.
5 Pubali Bank PLCDSE: PUBALIBANK PCB
~35
Moderate 14th among ranked Record 2024 HOLD
6 Dutch-Bangla Bank (DBBL)DSE: DUTCHBANGL PCB
32.71
<10% 12th Regular HOLD
7 Uttara Bank PLCDSE: UTTARABANK PCB
32.30
Moderate Adequate Regular HOLD
8 Trust Bank PLCDSE: TRUSTBANK PCB
31.21
<10% Below avg Regular HOLD
9 Mutual Trust Bank (MTB)DSE: MTB PCB
29.59
<10% 17th (legacy) Regular HOLD
10 Bank Asia PLCDSE: BANKASIA PCB
~28
<10% Adequate Regular HOLD
11 Jamuna Bank PLCDSE: JAMUNABANK PCB
~26
<10% 4th best Regular HOLD
12 NCC Bank PLCDSE: NCCBANK PCB
~24
<10% Moderate Limited HOLD
◆ TIER 4 — CAUTION  |  Elevated NPL / weak CAR. Speculative. Long-term distressed-value only.
13 Dhaka Bank PLCDSE: DHAKABANK PCB
~22
7th best Lower tier Limited CAUTION
14 Midland Bank PLCDSE: MIDLANDBNK PCB
~21
4th best 3rd best Very limited CAUTION
15 Shahjalal Islami BankDSE: SHAHJABANK PCB-I
~20
Moderate 13th Limited CAUTION
16 Southeast Bank PLCDSE: SEBL PCB
~18
Elevated Lower Very limited CAUTION
17 Mercantile Bank PLCDSE: MERCANBANK PCB
~16
Elevated Lower Ineligible 2025 CAUTION
◆ TIER 5 — AVOID  |  Insolvent / near-insolvent. Capital shortfall. Dividend ineligible. No near-term investment case.
18 One Bank PLCDSE: ONEBANK PCB
~15
High Low Ineligible 2025 AVOID
19 UCB (United Commercial Bank)DSE: UCB PCB
~14
Very High Very Low Ineligible 2025 AVOID
20 Islami Bank Bangladesh (IBBL)DSE: ISLAMIBANK PCB-I
N/R
Tk47,618Cr (Mar25) Under stress None — first in 40 yrs AVOID
21 Al-Arafah Islami BankDSE: ALARABANK PCB-I
~13
Very High Deficit Tk254Cr Ineligible 2025 AVOID
22 Standard Bank PLCDSE: STANDBANKL PCB
~10
Very High Deficit Tk1,862Cr Ineligible 2025 AVOID
23 IFIC Bank PLCDSE: IFICBANK PCB
<10
Tk17,182Cr Deficit Tk9,029Cr Ineligible 2025 AVOID
24 AB Bank PLCDSE: ABBANK PCB
<10
Very High Deficit Tk518Cr Loss Tk1,758Cr H1'25 AVOID
25 National Bank LtdDSE: NBL PCB
<8
Very High Deficit Tk7,799Cr Ineligible 2025 AVOID
26 NRB Bank PLCDSE: NRBBANK PCB
13.37
High Weak Ineligible 2025 AVOID
27 Premier Bank PLCDSE: PREMBANKL PCB
~12
Very High Very Low Ineligible 2025 AVOID
28 Padma Bank PLCDSE: PADMABANK PCB
<5
Catastrophic Deficit Tk4,985Cr Ineligible 2025 AVOID
29 Bangladesh Commerce BankDSE: BDCOMBANK PCB
<5
Catastrophic >60% Deficit Tk1,656Cr Ineligible 2025 AVOID
30 ICB Islami BankDSE: ICBIBANK PCB-I
<5
Catastrophic Deficit Tk1,909Cr Ineligible 2025 AVOID
31 Sonali Bank PLCState-owned | Founded 1972 SOCB Not ranked 32%+ (SOCB avg) Far below min None/Minimal AVOID
32 Janata Bank PLCState-owned | Founded 1972 SOCB Not ranked Catastrophic CRAR −34.6% None AVOID
33 Agrani Bank PLCState-owned | Founded 1972 SOCB Not ranked High Well below min None AVOID
34 Rupali Bank PLCState-owned | Founded 1972 SOCB Not ranked High Below min None/Minimal AVOID

PCB = Private Commercial Bank  |  PCB-I = Private Commercial Bank (Islamic)  |  SOCB = State-Owned Commercial Bank. Score based on 7 indicators: ROA, ROE, NPL, Net Profit, NAVPS, CAR, OPB — maximum 70 pts. Source: Bonik Barta Top Banks 2024 Annual Ranking, October 2025.[9] Note: EXIM Bank, First Security Islami Bank, Global Islami Bank, Social Islami Bank, and Union Bank excluded from Bonik Barta ranking as they are undergoing merger processes.

Investor Strategy & Key Monitorables

For high-level investors navigating Bangladesh's bifurcated banking landscape in 2026.

Portfolio Allocation Framework

A
Core (60–70% of banking allocation)
BRAC Bank, City Bank, Eastern Bank — sector-leading governance, strong CAR, record profits
B
Tactical (20–30%)
Prime Bank, Pubali Bank, Jamuna Bank — accumulate on dips, monitor NPL quarterly
C
Avoid (0%)
All SOCBs, ICB Islami, National Bank, IFIC, AB Bank, Padma Bank, BCB, distressed Islamic banks

Key Monitorables

Jun 2026 NPL deadline — PCBs must hit <5%; SOCBs <10%. Compliance = strong buy signal for top banks.
Elections Post-election political stability and continuation of IMF reform conditions. IMF $800M tranche release.
IFRS-9 Provisioning shock from ECL adoption — will temporarily compress earnings. Well-capitalised banks absorb it best. Use dips to buy.
BRACBANK P/E ~9.6x vs market 19.3x. Analyst target Tk126. If sector de-risks, 35–55% re-rating potential from current levels.
LDC 2026 Bangladesh LDC graduation Nov 2026 — RMG export preferences phasing out. Monitor banks with RMG concentration.

Valuation opportunity: BRAC Bank's P/E of ~9.6x vs. the Bangladesh market average of 19.3x reflects a sector-wide discount applied to all bank stocks. If the bank delivers even moderate earnings growth over 3 years and the sector de-risks through reform, a re-rating to 13–15x P/E implies 35–55% upside. The bank's payout ratio is only 14–16%, leaving significant room to grow dividends as CAR headroom expands. Source: Simply Wall St, TBS[20]

References & Sources

  • [1]Bangladesh Bank. (2025). Scheduled Banks in Bangladesh. Bangladesh Bank Official Website. www.bb.org.bd
  • [2]BBF Digital. (March 9, 2026). Why 2025 Marked a Turning Point for Bangladesh's Banks. bbf.digital
  • [3]The Financial Express. (November 23, 2025). Banking on Change: Key Reforms Transforming Bangladesh's Financial Sector. thefinancialexpress.com.bd
  • [4]World Bank. (2025). Bangladesh Development Update. Washington D.C. / The Daily Star. (December 2025). Bangladesh Economy in 2025 and Expectations for 2026. thedailystar.net
  • [5]The Business Standard. (May 2026). Banks Are Quietly Abandoning Private Sector. tbsnews.net
  • [6]The Daily Star. (December 2025). Bangladesh Economy in 2025 and Expectations for 2026. thedailystar.net
  • [7]New Age. (2025). 19 Banks Suffer Record Capital Shortfall of Tk1.71 Lakh Crore. newagebd.net
  • [8]New Age. (April 17, 2026). 17 Banks Fail to Generate Net Profit in 2024: BB. newagebd.net
  • [9]Bonik Barta. (October 26, 2025). BRAC, City, and Prime Lead the Ranking — Top Banks 2024 Annual Ranking. With LankaBangla Asset Management Co. Ltd. en.bonikbarta.com
  • [10]LightCastle Partners. (February 2026). Bangladesh Macroeconomic and Growth Outlook 2026. lightcastlepartners.com
  • [11]BBF Digital. (March 2026). Why 2025 Marked a Turning Point for Bangladesh's Banks — Record NPLs, Landmark Mergers, Sweeping Reforms. bbf.digital
  • [12]Asian Development Bank. (2025). Stabilizing and Reforming the Banking Sector Program — Supporting Document. adb.org
  • [13]The Daily Star. (2025). Six Banks Shine, Five Hit Record Losses — H1 2025 Banking Results. thedailystar.net
  • [14]The Daily Star. (July 4, 2025). 21 Banks Bucked Rising Bad Loan Trend in 2024. thedailystar.net
  • [15]The Business Standard. (March 2025). NPLs in S Alam-Controlled Banks Under Hasina Jumps by Tk86,000 Crore. tbsnews.net
  • [16]The Business Standard. (January 11, 2025). Banks Brace for Stricter NPL Rules, Fear Loss, Eroding Capital Base. tbsnews.net
  • [17]The Daily Star. (July 6, 2025). Inside the 3-Year Plan to Fix Banks. thedailystar.net
  • [18]Chambers & Partners. (December 2025). Banking Regulation 2026 — Bangladesh. Global Practice Guides. practiceguides.chambers.com
  • [19]The Financial Express. (November 2025). Banking on Change: Key Reforms Transforming Bangladesh's Financial Sector. thefinancialexpress.com.bd
  • [20]The Business Standard. (April 26, 2026). BRAC Bank Posts 57% Growth, Records Tk2,251 Crore Profit in 2025. Simply Wall St — BRACBANK Analysis. tbsnews.net / simplywall.st
  • [21]World Bank Blog. (December 21, 2025). Towards a Stable and Inclusive Financial Sector in Bangladesh. blogs.worldbank.org
  • [22]Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD). (January 10, 2026). State of the Bangladesh Economy in FY2025-26: First Reading. Dhaka. cpd.org.bd
  • [23]Bangladesh Bank. (July 17, 2025). Sustainability Finance Report 2024 — Recognised Sustainable Banks. BSS / Daily Star. bb.org.bd
Disclaimer: This report has been prepared by M A Fazal & Co., Chartered Accountants (www.mafazal.com) for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, a solicitation to buy or sell any securities, or a recommendation of any financial product. All data is sourced from publicly available published materials — Bangladesh Bank publications, audited bank financials, and leading financial press — and is believed to be accurate as of May 2026. Figures may have changed since publication. Investors must conduct their own due diligence and consult a registered investment advisor before making any investment decisions. Past financial performance is not indicative of future results. M A Fazal & Co. accepts no liability for any investment decisions made based on this report.

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