More than half of local banks ineligible for dividend payouts
More than half of the country’s scheduled banks will not be able to pay dividends this year, as rising bad loans and provisioning shortfalls continue to erode their financial strength.
This follows a dividend payout policy introduced by the Bangladesh Bank (BB) in March last year, which has tightened eligibility rules for profit distribution.
Under the policy, banks using provisioning deferrals are not allowed to issue dividends from 2024. From 2025 onwards, commercial lenders with non-performing loans (NPLs) above 10 percent of their total loan portfolio are also disqualified, regardless of profitability.
As of December last year, 29 banks, both state-owned and private, had double-digit NPL ratios. This accounts for nearly half of all scheduled banks. Of them, 17 listed lenders will be unable to pay dividends this year solely due to high defaulted loans.
Banks are required to finalise their balance sheets by April 30 under regulatory rules, and many have already announced dividend plans.
However, the central bank has withheld approval for more than 20 banks due to high levels of bad loans and the use of deferral facilities to meet provisioning requirements.
Some lenders even met the BB governor seeking approval, but failed to secure permission.
All state-owned banks are ineligible to pay dividends because of their high bad loan ratios. These include Krishi Bank, Agrani Bank, Janata Bank, Sonali Bank, Rupali Bank, Rajshahi Krishi Unnayan Bank, Probashi Kallyan Bank, BASIC Bank and Bangladesh Development Bank.
A large number of private commercial banks have also failed to qualify.
These include AB Bank, Modhumoti Bank, NRBC Bank, Al-Arafah Islami Bank, Standard Bank, One Bank, IFIC Bank, Islami Bank Bangladesh, ICB Islamic Bank, NRB Bank, Bengal Commercial Bank, Mercantile Bank, Global Islami Bank, EXIM Bank, First Security Islami Bank, Social Islami Bank, Union Bank, SBAC Bank, Padma Bank, United Commercial Bank, Shimanto Bank, National Bank, Premier Bank, Meghna Bank, Bangladesh Commerce Bank and Citizens Bank.
They have been disqualified due to elevated bad loans and reliance on provisioning deferral facilities. Some of these banks are still seeking approval to declare at least stock dividends and are continuing discussions with the central bank.
Tarek Reaz Khan, managing director and chief executive of NRB Bank PLC, said the bank will not be able to declare a dividend this year due to the BB policy.
“We are reducing our provisioning shortfall, and other financial indicators of the bank are improving,” he added.
Sharif Zahir, chairman of United Commercial Bank (UCB), said the bank’s financial position is improving.
“We submitted a three-year plan to the central bank and are working in line with it. However, we are still unable to pay dividends this year,” he said.
Md Touhidul Alam Khan, managing director of NRBC Bank, said the lender has improved across several indicators, including governance, but is unable to pay dividends due to the use of provisioning deferral facilities.
As per the BB rules, a bank may only pay cash dividends from the net profit of the relevant financial year and cannot use accumulated profits. Even then, payouts are capped at 30 percent of paid-up capital or 50 percent of net profit, whichever is lower.
Despite the restrictions, a small group of listed banks have declared dividends.
These include City Bank, BRAC Bank, Pubali Bank, Dhaka Bank, Uttara Bank, Eastern Bank, Prime Bank, NCC Bank, Dutch-Bangla Bank, Mutual Trust Bank, Bank Asia, Jamuna Bank, Shahjalal Islami Bank, Southeast Bank, Trust Bank and Midland Bank.
Outside of the listed category, Community Bank has declared a dividend.
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