Misreporting, fraud deepened private capital shortage: Khosru

Star Business Report

Major banking scandals, market manipulation, and financial misreporting have created severe capital shortages in banks and the private sector, Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury said yesterday.

Addressing the “Financial Accounting and Reporting (FAR) Summit 2026” as chief guest at the Pan Pacific Sonargaon Dhaka, he said financial discipline in the banking and capital market sectors has not been restored despite repeated scandals.

He alleged several companies entered the stock market using false representations, which has discouraged strong firms from getting listed and weakened fair competition and price discovery.

Khosru, also the planning minister, said economic management institutions in Bangladesh have become increasingly ineffective, with accountability and monitoring systems failing to function properly.

He noted that regulatory bodies, including the Financial Reporting Council (FRC), play a vital role in ensuring transparency in corporate reporting, but said the overall governance ecosystem has weakened since the council’s establishment in 2015.

He warned against a culture of shareholders treating banks as personal property, despite banks operating mainly with depositors’ funds.

He stressed the need for a transparent and accountable financial system where regulators, institutions, and professional bodies properly discharge their responsibilities.

Referring to the self-regulation model of the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) in issuing exporters’ utilisation certificates, he said similar accountability mechanisms are needed in accounting, auditing, and financial reporting.

The minister said Bangladesh is attracting strong interest from international investors and global fund managers, particularly in bonds and other instruments.

However, he said such investment depends on confidence in the country’s financial reporting, auditing, and governance systems.

He urged regulators and stakeholders to work together to establish global-standard practices and restore investor trust.

Virtually addressing the event, Rashed Al Mahmud Titumir, finance and planning adviser to the prime minister, said past failures in auditing and financial oversight were driven by weak standards, lack of accountability, and conflicts of interest, where audit firms effectively acted as their own regulators.

He said unreliable financial reporting, manipulated valuations, and weak regulation had pushed the banking and capital market sectors into crisis, resulting in loan defaults, instability, and repeated scams.

He added that thousands of small investors lost money due to misleading financial statements of listed companies, while honest entrepreneurs were disadvantaged as dishonest firms attracted investment by showing inflated profits.

He called for stronger regulation, greater independence and authority for the FRC, stricter punishment for fraudulent reporting, and adoption of international standards to restore investor confidence and strengthen economic governance.

Mahmud Hasan Khan Babu, president of BGMEA, said audit reports often failed to reflect the true condition of banks despite serious sectoral weaknesses.

He said asset quality reviews later exposed multiple irregularities, highlighting major gaps in financial reporting accuracy.

He added that poor reporting led to loans being granted to unqualified borrowers, while viable businesses struggled to obtain financing.

He also noted inconsistencies where companies showed strong financial positions to banks but reported losses to tax authorities, creating challenges in tax compliance and loan recovery.

Md Sajjad Hossain Bhuiyan, chairman of the FRC, presented the keynote paper at the event. The inaugural session was chaired by Md Khairuzzaman Mozumder, secretary of the finance division.

The summit was jointly organised by the FRC, the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Bangladesh, and the Institute of Cost and Management Accountants of Bangladesh.