Regulatory & Policy News
View all(66)Manageable Capital Impact from Higher Gold Loan Risk Weights 📈
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka’s tighter capital treatment on gold-backed lending will have a manageable impact on rated financial institutions, though finance companies face greater pressure than banks due to higher exposure and more aggressive underwriting. • Overall Risk Density Changes The revised risk weightings will increase the average risk density of gold portfolios from 1% to ~12% for Fitch-rated banks, and from 5% to ~26% for finance companies. The changes take effect on 1 September 2026. • Impact on Commercial Banks Effect on Common Equity Tier 1 ratios is modest, estimated at 2bp to 35bp. People’s Bank holds the highest exposure at ~20% of gross loans (peers are below 10%), but its conservative loan-to-value (LTV) profile limits the capital impact. • Impact on Finance Companies Regulatory Tier 1 capital ratios could decline between 1pp and just over 5pp. Asia Asset Finance PLC is most affected, with gold loans comprising over two-thirds of its book. LB Finance PLC and Mahindra Ideal Finance PLC face moderate pressure of 1pp-2pp. • Key Sector Pressures & Risks The regulatory changes add pressure to already strained capital bases at HNB Finance PLC (approaching minimums) and Merchant Bank of Sri Lanka & Finance PLC (already below minimum requirements at end-March 2026). While credit-positive for long-term stability, a sharp drop in gold prices remains the key downside risk for the non-banking financial sector.
📈 Data Gaps Emerge in Sri Lanka's Public Debt Reporting After PDMO Transition
Parliament's Committee on Public Finance (CoPF) has raised concerns over reduced transparency and accessibility of public debt and government securities market data following the transfer of debt management from the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) to the new Public Debt Management Office (PDMO). • The Issue: Detailed debt tables—historically published by the CBSL breaking down Treasury Bills, Treasury Bonds, and foreign borrowings—have become harder to access. Publication of detailed secondary market government securities summaries (yields, volumes, transaction counts) has also faced interruptions. • Market Risks: CoPF Chairman Dr. Harsha de Silva warned that these information gaps risk creating an uneven playing field, fuel market speculation, increase volatility, and cause market distortions. • The Official Stance: CBSL Governor Dr. Nandalal Weerasinghe clarified that statutory authority for debt data publication now rests strictly with the PDMO under the Public Debt Management Act. While CBSL no longer receives privileged early access to this fiscal data, the Governor maintained that the data remains available on the CBSL website, though the presentation structure has changed. • Next Steps: Lawmakers emphasized that even if data is technically online, it remains difficult to locate and interpret for investors, researchers, and Parliamentarians. CoPF has proposed a joint engagement between CBSL and PDMO officials to resolve accessibility issues and restore comprehensive public disclosures.
🚨 CBSL Denies Regulation Claims by Kasagala Green Plantation; Confirms Investigation
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) has categorically refuted public statements made by Kasagala Green Plantation Ltd. (KGPL) Director Malwattage Ranjith Nandana Pieris during an ITN television broadcast on June 8. • The False Claims: The KGPL Director stated that the company is regulated by the CBSL, submits mandatory data to the apex bank every six months, and is subject to direct CBSL inquiries for any operational concerns. The CBSL labeled these claims as completely incorrect, misleading, and legally baseless. • The Investigation: Far from regulating the entity, the CBSL revealed that it is actively investigating KGPL under the Finance Business Act, No. 42 of 2011 (FBA). • The Scope: The ongoing probe aims to determine whether the plantation company has unlawfully conducted finance businesses or accepted public deposits in direct violation of Section 2 of the FBA. • Public Warning: The CBSL issued this formal clarification to prevent serious financial damage to the public, who may have been misled by the television and social media broadcast.
🚭 Sri Lanka Marks World No Tobacco Day with Focus on Protecting Youth
• National Ceremony: The national event for World No Tobacco Day is being held today (June 15) at the Taj Samudra Hotel, Colombo, under the patronage of Health and Mass Media Minister Dr. Nalinda Jayatissa. • Theme & Objective: This year's theme is "Exposing the Tobacco Industry’s Deceitful Tactics – Opposing Tobacco and Nicotine Products." The program is jointly organized by the National Authority on Tobacco and Alcohol, the Health Ministry, and the WHO. • Key Focus Areas: The national program centers heavily on protecting Sri Lankan youth from tobacco and nicotine addiction to foster a tobacco-free generation. Public health officials highlighted that safeguarding children and adolescents is a critical priority due to the industry's evolving products and marketing. • Economic & Health Discussions: Key discussions and lectures by top medical, academic, and global health experts will address the current state of cigarette consumption, addiction management, and the direct physical, mental, and economic damages caused by tobacco use in the country.
📑 Top Seminar on Recent Sri Lankan Tax Changes Scheduled for June 24
• Overview: A mid-year tax reform seminar will be held on 24 June 2026 at Cinnamon Lakeside (2:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.) to address sweeping changes reshaping individual and business obligations. • Key Legislative Changes: Focuses on significant structural updates to the Income Tax, VAT, and SSCL (Social Security Contribution Levy) regimes. Key adjustments include increased Capital Gains Tax (CGT) rates and reduced liability thresholds for both VAT and SSCL. • Compliance & Enforcement: Highlights the intensifying regulatory environment, specifically the criminalisation of tax offences and the introduction of digital VAT, alongside expanded administrative powers granted to the CGIR. • Expert Panelists: Features prominent state and private sector figures, including IRD Senior Commissioner Aboobacker Nafeel, Finance Ministry Advisor Thanuja Perera, and leading tax consultants from KPMG and Gajma & Co. • Target Audience: Critical for corporate leadership, banking & finance directors, tax consultants, compliance officers, and legal specialists navigating national economic compliance.
📈 Court of Appeal Rules Primary Dealers Exempt from VAT on Financial Services
In a landmark ruling on 11 June 2026, the Court of Appeal allowed the appeal of Wealthtrust Securities Ltd. against the Commissioner General of Inland Revenue, establishing that primary dealers are not subject to VAT on Financial Services for core government securities operations. • Overall Ruling & Impact Core activities of licensed primary dealers—including bidding, purchasing, holding, and selling Government securities—are classified as investment activities, not a "supply of financial services". The Court ruled that primary dealers cannot be characterized as lenders to the Government of Sri Lanka, completely annulling the disputed VAT assessments for the 2012/2013 and 2013/2014 assessment years. • Key Legal & Sector Breakdowns Regulatory Prohibition: Under Central Bank regulations, primary dealers are strictly prohibited from granting loans, meaning they legally cannot be categorized as providing loans when purchasing securities. Investment vs. Loan: The Court endorsed a framework using seven criteria to distinguish investments from loans, highlighting that securities involve market-driven competitive auctions, fixed interest rates set by the Central Bank, and free transferability in the secondary market without collateral. • Procedural & Administrative Outcomes Duty to Give Reasons: The Inland Revenue Department (IRD) failed its mandatory obligation under Section 29 of the VAT Act to communicate reasons for rejecting the tax returns, rendering the assessments null and void. TAC Time Limits: The Court ruled that the Tax Appeals Commission’s (TAC) 270-day determination period is directory, not mandatory, meaning procedural delays beyond this period do not automatically invalidate a TAC jurisdiction.
Sri Lanka Proposes Rigid Resilience & Accountability Framework for 2026 📈
The Sri Lankan government has introduced a legislated KPI Charter tied to mandatory legal consequences to address deep structural vulnerabilities and recent climate crises. • Overall Strategy: Establishes an Independent National Accountability Commission (INAC) to enforce statutory targets, protecting vulnerable populations from policy failures. • Food Security & Agriculture: Addresses severe disruptions where 20% of children are malnourished and tea and paddy cultivation face a 60% El Niño drought risk. Cyclone Ditwah destroyed 20% of the Maha harvest, leaving 32% of households food-insecure. • Wages & Social Protection: Links the minimum wage to the Anker living wage (targeting LKR 70,000/month by 2028). Median household income currently sits 35-48% below living wage standards. • Climate & Fiscal Policy: Mandates a minimum 0.5% of GDP for climate adaptation by 2027, scaling up to 2% by 2032 following US$ 814 Mn in climate losses. Social protection spending must reach 8% of the national budget by 2027. • Data & Human Capital: Overhauls the ICT/BPM and professional sectors by targeting a reduction in tertiary-educated departures from 150,000 to below 80,000 by 2028 to counter severe brain drain. _Note: Framework targets and structural metrics are based on provisional 2026 data and ongoing IMF program conditions._
📈 Sri Lanka’s Waste Management: Moving Beyond the Slogan
The 'Clean Sri Lanka' initiative highlights a sharp contrast between curated social media imagery and the realities of a fragmented, outdated municipal waste framework that impacts public health and national resources. • Overall Waste & Plastic Figures • National generation estimated at over 7,000 tonnes of municipal solid waste per day. • Annual plastic consumption exceeds 300,000 tonnes, primarily single-use plastics like lunch sheets, bags, and PET bottles. • Poor data alignment across multiple agencies leaves exact recycling and plastic ratios unquantified based on provisional data. • Sector Disruption & Key Challenges • Tourism & Environment: Pristine tourist corridors obscure the reality of litter-strewn backroads and plastic-clogged canals that actively damage coastal ecosystems and fisheries. • Governance & Infrastructure: Institutional fragmentation across ministries, local councils, and the CEA creates overlapping mandates, weak enforcement, and poor accountability. • Public Health: Open waste burning and groundwater contamination create severe respiratory and waterborne disease risks. • Proposed Strategic Solutions • Institutional Reform: Establishing a unified National Waste Authority to separate standard-setting from the environmental regulation functions of the CEA. • Circular Economy: Implementing Extended Producer & Importer Responsibility (EPIR) to mandate that manufacturers and importers finance collection and recycling. • Waste-to-Energy (WtE): Replicating and scaling the current 10MW Kerawalapitiya WtE plant model by up to tenfold to reduce residual landfill volume by up to 90%.
📈 Transfer Pricing: Balancing the Scales in Cross-Border Taxation
A recent analysis by the Head of Tax at Deloitte Sri Lanka and Maldives outlines the critical dual nature of transfer pricing—the mechanism used to price transactions between related corporate entities—warning that treating it purely as a government anti-avoidance tool leads to double taxation. • The Core Challenge: Revenue authorities often view transfer pricing unilaterally to protect their domestic tax base. However, adjusting a transaction price upward in one country mathematically implies the related entity across the border paid too little, disrupting international trade equity if not balanced. • The Arm’s Length Principle: The international standard requires related-party transactions to reflect open-market prices between independent parties. True alignment requires tax authorities to respect the economic contributions, assets, and risks of foreign affiliates rather than treating them as passive profit recipients. • Symmetry vs. Practice: While relief mechanisms like Corresponding Adjustments and Mutual Agreement Procedures (MAP) exist to eliminate double taxation, they are not automatic. In practice, conflicting analytical frameworks between nations can lead to multinational enterprises being taxed on more than 100% of their actual profits. • Strategic Outlook: For a fair international tax environment that supports cross-border investment and key fields like the ICT/BPM and multi-national apparel & textiles sectors, tax authorities must review group-wide data (master files and local files) proactively. True adherence to the standard requires recognizing that arm's length limits revenue authorities just as it limits taxpayers.
⚖️ Sri Lanka's CIABOC Logs 2,686 Complaints & 70 Arrests YTD End-April 2026
Sri Lanka’s anti-corruption commission (CIABOC) accelerated enforcement efforts during the first four months of 2026, managing a total workload of 3,349 cases (including roll-overs). • Enforcement & Arrests: A total of 70 suspects were arrested through April 2026. This includes 32 suspects caught during 38 raids and 38 suspects arrested by specialized units. High-profile individuals taken into custody include a Quazi Judge, a Zonal Education Director, and various Police and Local Government officials. • Complaints Breakdown: Out of 2,999 reviewed complaints, 501 were directed for full investigation. Conversely, 1,965 complaints lacked sufficient facts or fell outside the Anti-Corruption Act, while 315 were referred to other state institutions. • Legal Action & Filings: CIABOC filed 38 new cases against 51 accused individuals, including former state executives and a former Minister of Petroleum Resources Development. Filings were dominated by bribery (16 cases), followed by corruption (11 cases), and money laundering (6 cases). • Convictions & Revenue: Courts delivered 14 convictions across 13 concluded cases, involving Police officers, Quazi Judges, and a former Sri Lanka Ports Authority director. Prosecutions generated Rs. 1.88 Mn in government revenue (Rs. 800,000 in fines, Rs. 1 Mn in compensation). • Judicial Caseload: Pending anti-corruption litigation in the court system edged up to 314 cases by end-April (from 305 at end-2025), with High Courts handling the bulk at 295 pending matters.
📈 Medicine Prices Under Review Amid Rising Import Costs and Supply Pressures
• Overall Situation: Health Minister Dr. Nalinda Jayatissa announced that the Health Ministry is reviewing pharmaceutical industry requests to revise maximum retail prices (MRPs) upward. No final decision has been made yet, but regulations allow for price revisions if the exchange rate fluctuates by more than 5%. • The Core Issue: Sri Lanka is heavily dependent on imported medical supplies, with imports valued at US$ 667 Mn last year. The Sri Lankan rupee's depreciation, volatile exchange rates, and higher global supply chain expenses (freight, fuel, and clearance charges) are driving up local operational costs. • Supply Chain Risks: The Sri Lanka Chamber of the Pharmaceutical Industry (SLCPI) warned that escalating costs and regulatory delays threaten the uninterrupted availability of essential and life-saving medicines. • National Impact: The SLCPI emphasized that failure to address these pricing pressures could trigger severe healthcare sector strains, leading to medicine shortages, delayed patient treatments, and heavy operational pressure on hospitals and pharmacies.
Sri Lanka’s Path to Development: An Assessment of the NPP's First Year 📈
A constructive analysis of the National People’s Power (NPP) government highlights the critical challenges and achievements in its mission to elevate Sri Lanka from a developing to a developed nation, based on provisional first-year observations. • Governance & Institutional Reform Positive: Strong anti-corruption push and initial institutional reform efforts. Key Pitfalls: Slow decision-making and an inability to shed the "opposition mindset." Progress is hindered by a disproportionate representation of traditional Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) loyalists in key administrative roles rather than merit-based appointments, weakening policy execution. • Economic & Public Sector Performance Positive: Early signs of macroeconomic stabilisation and strong progress within the power sector. Key Pitfalls: Poor communication regarding economic achievements and limited direct relief for citizens, leaving several high-profile campaign promises unmet. Furthermore, wage increases in the public sector lack integration with key performance indicators (KPIs). • Strategic Outlook Challenges: Public frustration is growing due to perceived indecisiveness, poor stakeholder management, and international communication gaps, despite the government holding a powerful two-thirds parliamentary majority. The Way Forward: To sustain public trust, the administration urgently needs a structured national action plan featuring short-, medium-, and long-term objectives backed by measurable, data-driven outcomes.