Bank Asia PLC has executed a formal participation agreement with Bangladesh Bank to expand credit distribution channels and strengthen financing support for Cottage, Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (CMSMEs) across the country.
Under the terms of this contractual agreement, Bank Asia will act as a primary financial intermediary to disburse concessionary credit lines to grassroots entrepreneurs. These operations will be carried out under two dedicated central bank initiatives: the “Cluster Financing” scheme and the “FSFDMSME” scheme. According to an official corporate release, the disbursement strategy is designed to provide viable small businesses with the liquidity required to fund fixed-asset procurement, complete structural modernisations, and pursue long-term business expansion.
Structural Parameters of the Refinance Operations
The underlying financial architecture of this partnership relies on capital pools allocated from the central bank’s internal reserves. The operational boundaries governing the disbursement of these funds are structured in the table below:
| Refinance Framework | Source Reserve Allocation | Capped Borrower Interest Rate | Mandated Investment Portfolios |
| SME Cluster Financing Scheme | BDT 3,000 crore | 7 per cent | Targeted development of specialised geographic business clusters and industrial modernization. |
| FSFDMSME Scheme | BDT 1,500 crore | 7 per cent | Capital expenditure financing, fixed asset acquisition, and working capital expansion. |
Executing Officials and Economic Significance
The formal exchange of the agreement was completed at the Bangladesh Bank head office on 18 May 2026. The signing was witnessed by a senior executive delegation representing both the regulatory authority and the commercial bank.
The central bank’s regulatory team was represented by Deputy Governor Nurun Nahar, Executive Director Husne Ara Shikha, and Director Nawshad Mustafa. Bank Asia’s corporate delegation was led by Deputy Managing Director Syed Zulkar Nayen and the Head of Small Business, Mohammad Saifuddowla.
This agreement permits Bank Asia to extend credit facilities to eligible small enterprises at a capped interest rate of 7 per cent. By utilising the BDT 3,000 crore cluster fund and the BDT 1,500 crore FSFDMSME facility, the initiative introduces low-cost financing into the market at a time when standard commercial borrowing rates remain elevated. Economists note that targeting these funds at fixed-asset purchasing and regional cluster development will help shield micro-enterprises from broader macroeconomic pressures, reinforcing financial inclusion and protecting employment across the real economy.
