Bangladesh's banking sector has hit an unprecedented crisis point as non-performing loans (NPLs) and wider classified assets surged to historic highs in the first quarter (Q1) of 2026, posing a severe structural threat to the macroeconomic stability.
According to the Bangladesh Bank's classified loan and provision report revealed on Tuesday for March 2026, total classified loans-which include NPLs and unclassified distressed assets-skyrocketed by Tk 31,487 crore in just three months, reaching a staggering Tk 5.88 lakh crore.
This brings the ratio of classified loans to an unprecedented 32.26 percent of the country's total banking credit ecosystem, meaning nearly one out of every three Taka disbursed by the banking sector is now severely compromised.
While overall classified assets reached 32.26 percent, the central bank's tight definition of pure default loans (NPLs) alone stood at Tk 5.64 lakh crore at the end of March 2026, commanding 30.92 percent of total outstanding loans.
This reflects a sharp quarterly rise from December 2025's figure of Tk 5.49 lakh crore (29.92 percent). More alarmingly, on a year-on-year basis, NPLs ballooned by an astronomical Tk 2.06 lakh crore from the Tk 3.57 lakh crore recorded in March 2025.
TOXIC DEBT: 94 PERCENT DECLARED BAD/LOSS:
A deeper dive into the metrics reveals that the quality of classified assets has deteriorated to fatal stages. A massive Tk 5.51 lakh crore or 93.69 percent of all problem loans has migrated into the 'Bad or Loss' category. Financial experts note that recovery prospects for assets in this bracket are statistically nominal, meaning these losses will severely eat into the capital base of the banks.
Compounding this pipeline of toxic debt is the sharp rise in Special Mention Accounts (SMA) loans showing early signs of distress. SMA assets jumped by 27.8 percent in three months to Tk 1.32 lakh crore, serving as a leading indicator that NPL volumes will experience further upward pressure in the upcoming quarters.
TK 2.05 LAKH CRORE PROVISIONING SHORTFALL:
The sheer magnitude of defaults has left the banking sector dangerously under-cushioned. Against a regulatory required provision of Tk 4.61 lakh crore to cover potential loan losses, the industry has managed to preserve only Tk 2.56 lakh crore.
This has dragged the systemic provisioning shortfall to Tk 2.05 lakh crore, escalating from Tk 1.91 lakh crore in December 2025. This massive deficit impairs the net profitability, capital adequacyratios, and global credit ratings of local commercial banks.
STATE BANKS BLEED, FOREIGN BANKS STABLE:
The systemic rot remains highly concentrated in state-run entities, though private commercial lenders are showing a highly concerning downward spiral:
State-Owned Commercial Banks (SoCBs): Standing at the epicenter of the crisis, SoCBs recorded a classified loan ratio of 45.85 percent, with Tk 1.50 lakh crore out of their Tk 3.27 lakh crore portfolio flagged as distressed. Their pure NPL ratio sits at 45.21 percent.
Private Commercial Banks (PCBs): Holding the largest absolute volume of toxic debt, PCBs saw their classified loan ratio rise from 28.25 percent to 30.11 percent in Q1 2026, with total classified assets reaching Tk 4.16 lakh crore.
Specialized Banks: These state-backed development lenders (focused on agriculture and specific sectors) posted a classified loan ratio of 40.72 percent (Tk 19,175 crore out of Tk 47,086 crore).
Foreign Commercial Banks (FCBs): Consistently outperforming domestic peers through rigorous risk management and governance, FCBs maintained a classified loan ratio of just 4.82 percent (Tk 3,263 crore out of Tk 67,628 crore) and an NPL ratio of 3.99 percent.
The central bank's latest disclosures flash a critical red flag for policy-makers. With nearly a third of the country's credit locked up in unproductive or toxic assets, the capacity of commercial banks to fund new manufacturing, infrastructure, and job-creating ventures is severely restricted, said M. Masrur Reaz is a economist and public policy expert who served as Senior Economist and Program Manager at the World Bank Group.
He warns that if immediate structural reforms, aggressive asset recovery measures, and absolute political neutrality in credit management are not enforced, the resulting liquidity strain, capital erosion, and dent in depositor confidence could significantly derail Bangladesh's mid-term economic recovery.
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