Widespread irregularities and scams are reasons that defaulted loans at NBFIs account for 30 percent of disbursed loans
Bangladesh Bank yesterday hiked the interest on deposits with non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) to 9.70 percent and the lending rate to 12.70 percent to help ease the country’s inflationary pressure.
NBFIs can now offer 9.7% for deposits, 12.7% for lending
Non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) should build trust among people since the confidence of many savers has received a blow after they lost money owing to irregularities, Industries Minister Nurul Majid Mahmud Humayun said today.
The Bangladesh Bank today asked non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) to hold hybrid meetings wherever possible in order to cut operating costs and the use of energy.
Recent strains at some banks in the United States and Europe are a powerful reminder of pockets of elevated financial vulnerabilities built over years of low rates, compressed volatility, and ample liquidity.
Non-bank financial institutions in Bangladesh lost 48,637 deposit accounts in the three months to December as savers moved away from NBFIs owing to the imposition of the cap on the deposit rate and the erosion of confidence in the wake of allegations of irregularities at some banks.
Widespread irregularities and scams are reasons that defaulted loans at NBFIs account for 30 percent of disbursed loans
Bangladesh Bank yesterday hiked the interest on deposits with non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) to 9.70 percent and the lending rate to 12.70 percent to help ease the country’s inflationary pressure.
NBFIs can now offer 9.7% for deposits, 12.7% for lending
Non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) should build trust among people since the confidence of many savers has received a blow after they lost money owing to irregularities, Industries Minister Nurul Majid Mahmud Humayun said today.
The Bangladesh Bank today asked non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) to hold hybrid meetings wherever possible in order to cut operating costs and the use of energy.
Recent strains at some banks in the United States and Europe are a powerful reminder of pockets of elevated financial vulnerabilities built over years of low rates, compressed volatility, and ample liquidity.
Non-bank financial institutions in Bangladesh lost 48,637 deposit accounts in the three months to December as savers moved away from NBFIs owing to the imposition of the cap on the deposit rate and the erosion of confidence in the wake of allegations of irregularities at some banks.