REUTERS

MOODY鈥橲 RATINGS has affirmed its long- and short-term ratings and outlooks for BDO Unibank, Inc. and Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI), citing their profitability and strong deposit bases.

The debt watcher affirmed the two banks鈥 鈥淏aa2/P-2鈥 long- and short-term foreign and local currency deposit ratings and 鈥渟table鈥 outlooks, it said in separate statements late on Wednesday.

Also affirmed were their counterparty risk ratings and assessments, baseline credit assessments, and the ratings for their respective medium-term note programs.

For BDO, Moody鈥檚 said the affirmed ratings reflect its strong asset quality, funding and liquidity, adding that it has ample buffers and good profitability.

鈥淭he bank鈥檚 funding and liquidity will remain its key strengths, with a robust and dominant deposit franchise supporting its very high deposit market share, and hence access to lower cost of funding and high current and savings account deposit ratio of 68% as of end-2025. Its less-stable funds ratio stood at an adequate 23.1% as of end-2025, while its core banking liquidity ratio was 20.6% as of the same date,鈥 it said.

It added that BDO鈥檚 nonperforming loan (NPL) ratio is likely to stay stable this year, still supported by write-offs on its fast-growing unsecured retail loans.

Meanwhile, its credit costs may stay elevated amid the surge in the share of consumer loans in its portfolio over the past two years, and amid preemptive provisioning as macroeconomic conditions become more challenging.

鈥淭he bank鈥檚 high concentration to large corporate loans and long-dated investment securities will also pose risks to its asset quality.鈥

The credit rater sees BDO鈥檚 return on assets (RoA) to range from 1.4% to 1.5% this year as net interest margin (NIM) stabilizes, even while credit costs and operating expenses remain elevated.

Meanwhile, capitalization will stay adequate, although capital generation may grow slower as credit demand eases. Widening government bond yields could also hit its Tier 1 ratio.

Moody鈥檚 said BDO鈥檚 deposit ratings will depend largely on the movement of the Philippines鈥 sovereign rating as they are at the same level.

Meanwhile, a significant deterioration in its asset quality, which could drive up credit costs and hit its earnings, as well as increased risks from related party lending or loan concentration, could lead to a downgrade.

BPI
For BPI, Moody鈥檚 said it credit strengths are strong profitability, adequate capital, healthy liquidity, and stable funding supported by its solid deposit franchise.

These balance out its weakening loan quality as it continues to expand its higher-risk retail lending businesses and amid 鈥渃hallenges鈥 in its corporate segment after it reported in the first quarter that 鈥渟everal corporate loans slipped into problem loans due to challenges unrelated to the conflict in the Middle East.鈥

It said the bank鈥檚 problem loan ratio and credit costs have increased amid the seasoning of its retail loans and heightened macroeconomic risks.

鈥淲e expect the retail segments to experience further strain in 2026, given the shrinking financial buffers of retail borrowers amid higher inflation in the Philippines,鈥 Moody鈥檚 said.

鈥淎lthough the bank has tightened credit underwriting and plans to moderate its retail loan growth, we expect the bank鈥檚 asset risks to remain elevated, with credit costs normalizing closer to the 0.9% range in 2026. The bank鈥檚 high concentration to large corporate loans and long-dated investment securities will also pose risks to its asset quality.鈥

Meanwhile, the bank鈥檚 NIM will likely continue expanding in line with growth in its retail loan, while its RoA could decline slightly due to elevated credit costs.

鈥淎dditionally, lower repayment capacities of retail borrowers amid higher inflation will add further upside on the bank鈥檚 credit costs.鈥

The debt watcher said BPI鈥檚 funding and liquidity will remain strong thanks to its strong deposit base.

鈥淎lthough the bank鈥檚 current and savings account deposit ratio has declined to 60% as of March 2026, from 63% the year before, the bank鈥檚 cost of funds remains one of the lowest among its domestic rated peers. As of end-2025, the bank鈥檚 less-stable funds ratio stood at a good level of 17.1% and its core banking liquid assets ratio was 21.7%.鈥

Like BDO, BPI鈥檚 ratings will hinge on the movement of the Philippines鈥 sovereign rating as they are at the same level.

Downgrades could be possible if its solvency metrics, including its asset quality and liquidity ratios, worsen significantly. 鈥 Aaron Michael C. Sy