According to www.thedailystar.net, the International Islamic Trade Finance Corporation (ITFC) has raised its trade finance facility for Bangladesh to $3.3 billion for fiscal year 2026–27, marking a 48% increase from the $2.23 billion provided in fiscal year 2025–26.
Financing structure and allocation
The ITFC financing package is segmented across three critical import categories: $2.5 billion is allocated to the Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation (BPC) for fuel oil imports; $600 million supports liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports; and the remaining $200 million is designated for fertiliser imports. The agreement was signed in Jeddah on Monday, July 3, 2026 — a date confirmed by Mohammad Mizanur Rahman, Additional Secretary of the Economic Relations Division (ERD).
Leadership and implementation
The financing agreement was formally inked by Md Shahriar Kader Siddiky, ERD Secretary, and Adeeb Yousuf Al Aama, Chief Executive Officer of the ITFC. According to ERD officials, the upward revision reflects heightened import cost volatility triggered by ongoing tensions in the Middle East, which have disrupted global energy supply chains and amplified price uncertainty for key inputs. As a result, Bangladesh’s import-dependent energy and agricultural sectors required expanded liquidity buffers ahead of FY27.
Financial terms and repayment framework
All ITFC financing carries a repayment period of 12 to 18 months, with interest rates calculated as the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) plus a spread ranging from 1.65 percentage points to 1.70 percentage points. This structured, short-term tenor aligns with the working capital cycle for bulk commodity imports — particularly for fuel oil and LNG, where delivery, customs clearance, and domestic distribution typically occur within six to twelve months. The fertiliser component similarly supports seasonal procurement ahead of the Rabi and Kharif cropping seasons, ensuring timely availability for smallholder farmers across Bangladesh.
Strategic context and regional implications
This financing expansion comes amid broader regional efforts to shore up import resilience in South Asia. In FY26, the ITFC extended $2.23 billion to Bangladesh — the largest single-country allocation in its portfolio that year. The ITFC has previously supported Bangladesh’s food security initiatives through parallel facilities for rice and wheat imports, but FY27 marks the first time energy and fertiliser financing are bundled under a unified, record-level envelope. Analysts note that similar facilities have been scaled up in Pakistan and Sri Lanka over the past two fiscal years, reflecting coordinated multilateral response to persistent Red Sea shipping disruptions and Middle Eastern geopolitical instability.
Source: thedailystar.net
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










