Some businesses just keep getting bigger. These 15 have the most reliable earnings growth on the exchange — not a one-year fluke, but year-after-year expansion, led by Meghna Petroleum Limited. Here's the story behind the numbers.
LiveUpdated June 28, 202615 companiesFrom official Dhaka Stock Exchange filings
Topping the list is Meghna Petroleum Limited — fuel & power. Profits have been climbing — earnings rose +23% over the past year, and the balance sheet is in good shape, with little debt weighing it down. The bottom line: top-tier pick.
Next up, Prime Bank PLC. — bank. Profits have been climbing — earnings rose +21% over the past year, and the balance sheet is in good shape, with little debt weighing it down. The bottom line: top-tier pick.
Next up, City Bank PLC. — bank. Profits have been climbing — earnings rose +16% over the past year, and the balance sheet is in good shape, with little debt weighing it down. The bottom line: solid & dependable.
Profits have been climbing — earnings rose +30% over the past year.
Price৳94.0
How to read this list
Real growth investing is about finding businesses that keep getting bigger — not ones that had a single good year. We look for companies with several years of steady profit growth, strong returns on the money they put to work, and improving margins. The names at the top are the genuine compounders of Bangladesh's market.
Common questions
What makes a stock a 'high-growth' name here?
We look for profits that have grown consistently over several years (not one fluke year), strong returns on capital, and margins that are widening rather than shrinking. Those together point to a real growth business.
How is growth investing different from value investing?
Value investing is about buying cheap. Growth investing is about buying quality businesses whose earnings keep rising, even at a fair price. This list is about the quality of the business, not how cheap it is today.
Do growth stocks pay dividends on the DSE?
Some do, some don't. High-growth businesses often reinvest profits for expansion rather than paying dividends. A low dividend yield on a growth stock is not a negative — it reflects capital allocation priorities, not financial weakness.