In a region dominated by global financial giants and fast-rising multinationals, one Philippine name quietly but firmly claimed its place among the best: The Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) has landed 10th on TIME and Statista’s 2026 list of the 500 Best Companies in the Asia-Pacific, and stands out as the highest-performing company from the Philippines on the prestigious ranking.
The recognition places the Ayala-led bank in elite regional company, alongside financial powerhouses from Singapore and Australia, underscoring how a homegrown institution is holding its own in an increasingly competitive Asia-Pacific business landscape.

Banking and financial services dominated the 2026 ranking, with five banks making the Top 10. The list is led by Singapore’s DBS Bank and Australia’s Commonwealth Bank, reflecting the sector’s continued strength amid a stabilizing regional economy.
The ranking evaluated companies across three key metrics: employee satisfaction, revenue growth, and environmental, social, and governance (ESG) performance — areas where the Philippine bank scored strongly enough to earn a place among Asia-Pacific’s most admired enterprises.
The broader backdrop to the ranking is a region learning to navigate global uncertainty. TIME noted that anxiety gripped markets when Donald Trump returned to the White House in 2025, triggering tariff tensions and trade disruptions. But by year’s end, Asia-Pacific economies had adjusted, diversifying their strategies and becoming less dependent on the United States.
BPI’s entry into the Top 10 signals more than a single corporate achievement. It reflects how a Philippine firm can compete on the same footing as the region’s biggest players when measured by workforce satisfaction, financial performance, and sustainability standards.
At a time when regional companies are recalibrating for a new economic era, the bank’s recognition suggests the Philippines is not just participating in Asia-Pacific growth, it is producing institutions capable of leading it.




