InfluenceAsia Annual Financial Leadership Ranking / Bankers 50 / 2025

Annual Editorial and Financial Leadership Ranking

2025 InfluenceAsia Bankers 50

A rigorous annual ranking recognizing bankers whose leadership, institutional discipline, capital stewardship and market influence shaped Asian and global banking in 2025.

  • Asia
  • Bankers
  • 2025 Edition
  • Financial Leadership Research
50 Ranked Bankers
7 Weighted Dimensions
24% Stewardship Weight
2025 Editorial Horizon

Editorial Positioning

A formal record of Asian banking authority.

2025 InfluenceAsia Bankers 50 identifies banking leaders whose work carried exceptional institutional consequence in a year defined by AI adoption, rate-cycle transition, wealth migration, Asian capital formation, Gulf financial expansion, India's credit deepening, China's balance-sheet discipline, Japanese banking renewal and Southeast Asia's digital-banking maturity.

The 2025 edition treats banking influence as the ability to steward trust at scale. The strongest bankers in this list did more than manage large institutions; they protected capital, modernized franchises, directed credit, built cross-border corridors, strengthened wealth platforms, advanced digital capabilities and preserved institutional confidence during a complex macroeconomic cycle.

01

Independent Editorial Ranking

Independent, evidence-led, institution-aware and publication-ready. The ranking is designed as an original InfluenceAsia list rather than a compensation table, balance-sheet table, award compilation or corporate publicity exercise.

02

Asian Banking Scope

Asia and the global Asian banking community, including commercial bankers, investment bankers, private bankers, development-finance leaders and cross-border financial executives with a substantial Asian connection.

03

2025 Time Control

Written from the standpoint of the 2025 edition. Later appointments, later exits, later litigation, later performance and post-2025 outcomes are not used as ranking arguments.

Annual Theme

Banking Under Structural Transition: Trust, Technology and Capital Corridors

In 2025, the most influential bankers operated at the intersection of balance-sheet discipline and structural change. Artificial intelligence began altering operating models. Asian wealth and corporate capital became more mobile. Japanese and Gulf banks expanded cross-border ambition. Indian banks entered a deeper credit cycle. Chinese banks managed scale under pressure. Wealth, payments, trade finance, investment banking and development finance all required a new standard of institutional judgment.

Digital banking; AI operating models; wealth management; cross-border capital; credit discipline; infrastructure finance; investment banking; green finance; financial inclusion; Asia-Middle East corridors; institutional resilience.

Research Dimensions

Seven weighted dimensions behind the 2025 order.

Placement reflects the combined strength of institutional stewardship, 2025 market relevance, scale and balance-sheet impact, strategic transformation, Asia and global connectivity, governance discipline and public or institutional legacy.

24% Institutional Stewardship

The quality of leadership over a bank, banking group, development institution or financial franchise of systemic relevance.

18% 2025 Market Relevance

Visible relevance to the banking, macroeconomic, credit, wealth, technology and capital-market questions shaping 2025.

16% Scale and Balance-Sheet Impact

Influence over assets, deposits, loans, capital formation, liquidity, profitability, risk discipline or systemically important financial flows.

14% Strategic Transformation

Evidence of digital modernization, AI adoption, wealth-platform buildout, cross-border expansion, investment-banking renewal or franchise repositioning.

12% Asia and Global Connectivity

Contribution to Asian banking authority, regional corridors, emerging-market finance, diaspora influence or global institutional relevance.

8% Governance and Risk Discipline

Capacity to maintain trust, resilience, regulatory credibility, capital strength and prudent risk culture.

8% Public and Institutional Legacy

Influence on banking standards, talent formation, inclusion, sustainability, financial architecture or long-term institutional confidence.

Top Board

The leading ten bankers of the 2025 edition.

No. 1

Tan Su Shan

Singapore / Universal Banking, Wealth and Institutional Banking

DBS Group

No. 2

Georges Elhedery

Lebanon / Global Asia / Global Banking, Wealth and Asia-Middle East Corridors

HSBC

No. 3

Liao Lin

China / Systemic Commercial Banking

Industrial and Commercial Bank of China

No. 4

Piyush Gupta

India / Singapore / Digital Banking and Institutional Transformation

DBS Group

No. 5

Masato Kanda

Japan / Asia-Pacific / Development Finance and Regional Capital

Asian Development Bank

No. 6

Hana Al Rostamani

United Arab Emirates / Gulf Banking and Sustainable Finance

First Abu Dhabi Bank

No. 7

Hironori Kamezawa

Japan / Global Banking and Japanese Financial Renewal

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group

No. 8

Bill Winters

Asia, Africa and Middle East Corridor / Emerging-Market Banking and Wealth

Standard Chartered

No. 9

Challa Sreenivasulu Setty

India / Public-Sector Banking and Financial Inclusion

State Bank of India

No. 10

Sashidhar Jagdishan

India / Private-Sector Banking and Integration

HDFC Bank

Full Ranking

Complete 50-person ranking and editorial rationale.

InfluenceAsia uses a 100-point editorial research framework. Scores are comparative indicators within this 2025 edition, not compensation figures, regulatory ratings, investment recommendations, credit ratings or legal judgments.

Rank Banker Institution Banking Domain Score Editorial Rationale
1 Tan Su Shan Singapore DBS Group Universal Banking, Wealth and Institutional Banking 99.2 Tan leads the 2025 edition as the new chief executive of Southeast Asia's largest bank. Her influence rests on continuity with renewal: deep wealth-management experience, institutional-banking command, regional credibility and the task of extending DBS's digital and balance-sheet strength into a more complex Asian banking cycle.
2 Georges Elhedery Lebanon / Global Asia HSBC Global Banking, Wealth and Asia-Middle East Corridors 98.9 Elhedery is ranked second for steering one of the world's most important Asia-facing banks through restructuring, cost discipline and strategic refocus. In 2025, HSBC's role between Asia, the Middle East, Europe and global capital markets made his decisions unusually consequential.
3 Liao Lin China Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Systemic Commercial Banking 98.6 Liao is included for leading the world's largest commercial bank by assets through a period requiring credit discipline, technology modernization and support for China's real economy. His 2025 influence reflects the scale at which ICBC transmits policy, credit, liquidity and institutional confidence.
4 Piyush Gupta India / Singapore DBS Group Digital Banking and Institutional Transformation 98.3 Gupta is ranked for completing one of Asia's defining modern banking tenures in 2025. His leadership turned DBS into a global reference point for digital transformation, customer architecture, disciplined capital allocation and Asian universal-banking excellence.
5 Masato Kanda Japan / Asia-Pacific Asian Development Bank Development Finance and Regional Capital 98.0 Kanda is included for assuming leadership of Asia's central development-finance institution in 2025. His influence lies in directing capital toward resilience, infrastructure, climate transition and inclusive growth at a moment when public and private finance must work in closer alignment.
6 Hana Al Rostamani United Arab Emirates First Abu Dhabi Bank Gulf Banking and Sustainable Finance 97.7 Al Rostamani is ranked for leading the UAE's largest bank through a period of Gulf financial expansion, sustainability positioning and cross-border capital ambition. Her role combines institutional scale, gender leadership, climate-finance visibility and the emergence of Abu Dhabi as a global banking center.
7 Hironori Kamezawa Japan Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Global Banking and Japanese Financial Renewal 97.4 Kamezawa is included for guiding Japan's largest banking group through a higher-rate environment, overseas expansion and institutional modernization. His 2025 relevance reflects MUFG's importance to Japan's corporate sector, global banking corridors and disciplined international growth.
8 Bill Winters Asia, Africa and Middle East Corridor Standard Chartered Emerging-Market Banking and Wealth 97.1 Winters is ranked for leading a bank whose franchise is structurally tied to Asia, Africa and the Middle East. In 2025, Standard Chartered's growth in wealth, global banking and markets reinforced its role as a connector institution across emerging-market capital flows.
9 Challa Sreenivasulu Setty India State Bank of India Public-Sector Banking and Financial Inclusion 96.8 Setty is included for leading India's largest bank during a decisive credit and technology cycle. His influence rests on SBI's reach into households, small enterprises, public finance, digital payments and the institutional confidence required to support India's growth ambitions.
10 Sashidhar Jagdishan India HDFC Bank Private-Sector Banking and Integration 96.5 Jagdishan is ranked for leading India's largest private-sector banking franchise through post-merger integration, deposit discipline, digital expansion and credit normalization. His 2025 relevance lies in the bank's ability to convert scale into durable profitability and service quality.
11 Gu Shu China Agricultural Bank of China Rural Finance and Systemic Banking 96.2 Gu is included for leading a bank central to rural finance, agricultural modernization and China's national credit architecture. In 2025, ABC's scale made his leadership important to inclusive finance, county-level banking, food-system support and systemic balance-sheet stability.
12 Zhang Jinliang China China Construction Bank Infrastructure Finance and Commercial Banking 95.9 Zhang is ranked for leading a bank deeply linked to housing, infrastructure, public-sector finance and corporate banking in China. His 2025 influence reflected the challenge of preserving asset quality while supporting construction, urban renewal and productive credit allocation.
13 Ge Haijiao China / Hong Kong Bank of China Cross-Border Banking and RMB Finance 95.6 Ge is included for leading one of China's most important cross-border banking institutions. In 2025, Bank of China's reach across trade, offshore RMB, Hong Kong finance and international corporate banking made his leadership central to China's financial connectivity.
14 Abdulla Mubarak Al-Khalifa Qatar Qatar National Bank Gulf Banking and International Expansion 95.3 Al-Khalifa is ranked for leading QNB as one of the Middle East's most internationally relevant banking groups. His influence in 2025 rested on balance-sheet strength, cross-border funding, regional diversification and the bank's role in Qatar's long-term financial development.
15 Shayne Nelson United Arab Emirates Emirates NBD Gulf Banking and Cross-Border Expansion 95.0 Nelson is included for building Emirates NBD into a larger, more international banking group and for advancing the UAE's role in regional finance. His 2025 influence was amplified by the bank's strategic interest in India and its scale across retail, wealth, corporate and Islamic banking.
16 Toru Nakashima Japan Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Global Banking and Strategic Investment 94.7 Nakashima is ranked for leading SMFG through international expansion, corporate-banking strength and strategic investment into India. In 2025, his influence reflected Japanese banks' renewed appetite for Asia growth, risk-managed overseas assets and global corporate relationships.
17 Masahiro Kihara Japan Mizuho Financial Group Corporate and Investment Banking 94.4 Kihara is included for sharpening Mizuho's ambition in global investment banking, wealth and corporate finance. His 2025 strategy emphasized culture, profitability, advisory capability and the use of international platforms to support Japanese and Asian corporate clients.
18 Helen Wong Hong Kong / Singapore OCBC Regional Banking and Greater China Strategy 94.1 Wong is ranked for leading OCBC through its 2025 transition year while maintaining a disciplined regional franchise. Her influence combined Greater China experience, wholesale-banking depth, wealth management and the strengthening of OCBC's ASEAN and North Asia position.
19 Wee Ee Cheong Singapore United Overseas Bank ASEAN Banking and Long-Term Stewardship 93.8 Wee is included for leading UOB with exceptional continuity and a clear ASEAN orientation. His 2025 relevance reflected the bank's integration discipline, regional footprint, family-enterprise trust, technology investment and long-term commitment to Southeast Asian growth.
20 Khairussaleh Ramli Malaysia Maybank ASEAN Banking and Sustainability 93.5 Khairussaleh is ranked for strengthening Maybank's regional banking franchise through customer focus, digital transformation, sustainability commitments and disciplined execution. In 2025, Maybank remained a benchmark for Malaysian banking scale and ASEAN institutional relevance.
21 Mary Huen Hong Kong Standard Chartered Hong Kong and GCNA Cross-Border Banking and Wealth 93.2 Huen is included for leading Standard Chartered's Hong Kong, Greater China and North Asia franchise. Her 2025 influence came from cross-border wealth, digital innovation, affluent-client strategy and the bank's role in one of Asia's most contested financial centers.
22 Ahmed Abdelaal Egypt / United Arab Emirates Mashreq Digital Banking and Corporate Finance 92.9 Abdelaal is ranked for making Mashreq a regional reference point in digital banking, corporate solutions and international expansion. His 2025 influence reflected the Gulf's move toward invisible banking, embedded finance, AI-enabled service and sustainable institutional growth.
23 Vis Raghavan India / Global Citi Investment, Corporate and Commercial Banking 92.6 Raghavan is included for leading Citi's global banking organization and reshaping its corporate, commercial and investment-banking model. His 2025 relevance was especially strong in Asia, where capital markets, sponsor finance, M&A and client coverage became central to Citi's recovery.
24 Jin Liqun China / Asia Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank Multilateral Infrastructure Finance 92.3 Jin is ranked for concluding a decade of leadership that established AIIB as a serious infrastructure-finance institution. In 2025, his influence remained visible in green investment, multilateral credibility, project discipline and Asia's development-finance architecture.
25 Muhammad Sulaiman Al Jasser Saudi Arabia Islamic Development Bank Islamic Development Finance 92.0 Al Jasser is included for leading a major Islamic development-finance institution serving member economies across Asia, the Middle East and Africa. His 2025 influence lies in mobilizing capital for development, resilience, infrastructure, trade and Sharia-compliant financial architecture.
26 Yang Jong Hee South Korea KB Financial Group Financial Holding and Digital Banking 91.7 Yang is ranked for leading Korea's largest financial group through AI, data infrastructure, shareholder-return discipline and non-bank diversification. In 2025, KB's scale made his decisions important to Korean banking stability and the future of integrated financial groups.
27 Jin Ok-dong South Korea Shinhan Financial Group Financial Holding and Global Banking 91.4 Jin is included for leading Shinhan through global partnerships, governance discipline and overseas expansion. His 2025 influence reflected Shinhan's continued effort to combine Korean retail strength with broader capital-market, payments and international-banking ambitions.
28 Ham Young-joo South Korea Hana Financial Group Banking, FX and Digital Assets 91.1 Ham is ranked for steering Hana through renewed tenure, international banking, foreign-exchange strength and digital-asset strategy. In 2025, his leadership helped keep Hana central to Korea's banking competition and its evolving payments and asset ecosystem.
29 Yim Jong-yong South Korea Woori Financial Group Financial Holding and Non-Bank Expansion 90.8 Yim is included for guiding Woori through governance repair, internal-control focus and expansion beyond core banking. His 2025 relevance was tied to restoring institutional trust while pursuing brokerage, insurance and overseas growth.
30 Sandeep Bakhshi India ICICI Bank Private-Sector Banking and Risk Discipline 90.5 Bakhshi is ranked for maintaining ICICI Bank's disciplined execution, asset-quality improvement and diversified franchise strength. In 2025, ICICI remained one of India's most important private-sector banks, with digital capability, retail scale and risk control central to its influence.
31 Amitabh Chaudhry India Axis Bank Private Banking Transformation 90.2 Chaudhry is included for continuing Axis Bank's multi-year transformation across retail, corporate, digital, wealth and transaction banking. His 2025 influence reflected the competitiveness of India's private banks and the importance of execution after large franchise-building moves.
32 Ashok Vaswani India Kotak Mahindra Bank Digital Banking and Strategic Renewal 89.9 Vaswani is ranked for bringing global banking and digital-platform experience to Kotak Mahindra Bank. In 2025, his influence lay in the attempt to modernize a founder-built Indian banking franchise while preserving customer trust, capital quality and long-term strategic independence.
33 Novan Amirudin Malaysia CIMB Group ASEAN Banking and Investment Banking 89.6 Novan is included for leading CIMB at a time when regional banking, wholesale finance and investment-banking capability were central to ASEAN growth. His background in capital markets gave CIMB a sharper institutional profile in 2025.
34 Kevin Lam Malaysia Hong Leong Bank Retail Banking and Franchise Quality 89.3 Lam is ranked for strengthening Hong Leong Bank's earnings quality, digital capability, lending discipline and operational resilience. His 2025 influence reflected the value of focused execution in a competitive Malaysian banking market.
35 Jahja Setiaatmadja Indonesia Bank Central Asia Private Banking Franchise Stewardship 89.0 Setiaatmadja is included for completing a highly respected tenure at BCA and moving into a supervisory role during a leadership transition. His influence in 2025 reflected BCA's exceptional franchise quality, transaction-banking strength and conservative institutional culture.
36 Hery Gunardi Indonesia Bank Rakyat Indonesia Microfinance and Public Banking 88.7 Gunardi is ranked for taking charge of BRI in 2025 after leading major state-linked banking transformation work. His influence centers on Indonesia's micro, ultra-micro and SME banking architecture, where financial inclusion is also a national economic strategy.
37 Darmawan Junaidi Indonesia Bank Mandiri Digital Banking and Corporate Finance 88.4 Junaidi is included for leading Bank Mandiri through a broad digital and performance transformation during his 2020-2025 tenure. His 2025 relevance reflected Mandiri's role in corporate finance, retail migration, public-sector banking and Indonesia's digital financial infrastructure.
38 Nestor V. Tan Philippines BDO Unibank Universal Banking and Regional Representation 88.1 Tan is ranked for leading the Philippines' largest bank and elevating Filipino banking visibility through international industry representation. His 2025 influence combined long-tenure stability, scale, deposit strength, corporate relationships and institutional credibility.
39 Jose Teodoro Limcaoco Philippines Bank of the Philippine Islands Retail Banking and Digital Transformation 87.8 Limcaoco is included for leading BPI as it approached a major institutional milestone with sharper technology, customer and purpose-led positioning. His influence lies in modernizing one of Asia's oldest banks without diluting its trust franchise.
40 Chartsiri Sophonpanich Thailand Bangkok Bank Corporate Banking and ASEAN Connectivity 87.5 Chartsiri is ranked for long-term stewardship of Thailand's leading corporate bank and its international network. In 2025, Bangkok Bank's role in ASEAN trade, business banking, China connectivity and family-enterprise finance kept his influence substantial.
41 Kattiya Indaravijaya Thailand Kasikornbank Retail Banking, Digital Banking and Inclusion 87.2 Kattiya is included for leading Kasikornbank through retail transformation, digital service expansion and inclusive banking. Her 2025 influence reflected both operational leadership and the visibility of senior female banking leadership in Thailand.
42 Arthid Nanthawithaya Thailand SCBX Financial Technology and Bank Holding Transformation 86.9 Arthid is ranked for guiding SCBX as a bank holding company built around data, technology, digital assets and platform finance. His influence in 2025 reflected Thailand's effort to move banking beyond branch-centric models into a broader technology-led financial ecosystem.
43 Hakan Aran Turkey Isbank Digital Banking and Corporate Resilience 86.6 Aran is included for leading Turkey's largest private bank through volatility while emphasizing embedded finance, technology and sustainability. His 2025 influence lay in maintaining institutional capability in a demanding macroeconomic and currency environment.
44 Luanne Lim Hong Kong / Singapore HSBC Hong Kong / Hang Seng Bank Hong Kong Banking and Leadership Transition 86.3 Lim is ranked for her 2025 transition from leading HSBC Hong Kong to taking charge of Hang Seng Bank. Her profile combines operational depth, Hong Kong market knowledge, leadership development and the stewardship of a systemically important local franchise.
45 Amy Lo Hong Kong UBS Global Wealth Management Asia Private Banking and Asian Wealth 86.0 Lo is included for leadership in Asian wealth management at exceptional scale. In 2025, UBS's Asia private-banking franchise reflected the continued migration of family wealth, entrepreneurial liquidity and global portfolio needs across Hong Kong, Singapore and Greater China.
46 Kaustubh Kulkarni India / Singapore Citi Asia Investment Banking 85.7 Kulkarni is ranked for his role in strengthening Citi's Asia investment-banking leadership after a long career in regional dealmaking. His 2025 relevance reflected the renewed contest for M&A, sponsor finance and capital-market share across Asian corridors.
47 Irfan Siddiqui Pakistan Meezan Bank Islamic Banking 85.4 Siddiqui is included for building Meezan Bank into Pakistan's leading Islamic-banking franchise and completing a long founder-operator tenure in 2025. His influence rests on Sharia-compliant banking scale, profitability, customer trust and the institutionalization of Islamic finance.
48 Hanan Friedman Israel Bank Leumi Universal Banking and AI Transformation 85.1 Friedman is ranked for leading one of Israel's largest banks through resilience, technology adoption and AI-led banking modernization. His 2025 influence reflected Israel's ability to preserve financial confidence under pressure while continuing digital transformation.
49 Yadin Antebi Israel Bank Hapoalim Universal Banking and Leadership Renewal 84.8 Antebi is included for taking forward Bank Hapoalim after a major leadership transition. In 2025, his influence lay in preserving the strength of a key Israeli banking franchise while managing credit, client confidence and the demands of a complex operating environment.
50 Onur Genc Turkey / Spain BBVA Global Banking and Digital Strategy 84.5 Genc completes the 2025 list as a Turkish-born global banking chief whose leadership connects digital banking, emerging-market exposure and international balance-sheet strategy. His influence reflects the global reach of Asian-origin banking talent beyond Asia-domiciled institutions.

Methodology and Legal Statement

Prepared as an independent InfluenceAsia editorial ranking.

InfluenceAsia prepared this ranking as an original editorial research product. The list, scoring architecture, placement logic, written profiles and presentation language are controlled by InfluenceAsia. Inclusion does not imply endorsement by the bankers, banks, regulators, shareholders, clients, investors, public agencies or industry bodies named or implied.

Review Process

Candidates are assessed by banking domain, then normalized across commercial banking, investment banking, private banking, development finance, Islamic finance and cross-border financial leadership.

Verification Standard

Every included banker must have a verifiable leadership role in a bank, banking group, development-finance institution, private-banking platform, investment-banking franchise or systemically relevant financial institution.

No Endorsement

Inclusion in the ranking does not constitute endorsement, sponsorship, partnership, employment representation, investment advice, legal advice, financial advice, credit advice or official approval by any person or organization named or implied.