Digital banking transformation is the dominant hiring driver
Across every APAC market, incumbent banks are running multi-year cloud, data, and AI engineering programmes — and the talent demand is outpacing supply. The most contested roles are platform engineers fluent in AWS or GCP, data engineers with real-time streaming experience, and ML engineers who can ship production models, not just notebooks. Product roles supporting these programmes (digital product managers, payments PMs, virtual-card PMs) are similarly stretched.
Compensation has reset upward by 18-30% for these specialisations versus 2022 baselines. Banks willing to consider candidates from non-BFSI tech (consumer internet, ride-hailing, e-commerce) are filling roles 40% faster than those that limit search to in-industry talent.
“BFSI compensation for cloud, data, and AI engineering roles has reset upward by 18-30% across APAC versus 2022 baselines.”
Regulatory tightening is creating sustained compliance demand
MAS, HKMA, BNM, OJK, and the FSC have all issued tighter AML, sanctions, and operational-resilience guidance over the past 18 months. Banks are scaling up compliance, AML, and risk teams to absorb the additional review burden — and competing for a small pool of practitioners who have actually shipped a remediation programme end-to-end.
We see particularly strong demand in three sub-areas: financial crime compliance (transaction monitoring tuning, sanctions screening), regulatory reporting (Basel III/IV, IFRS 9 model validation), and operational risk in cloud and third-party contexts.
Cross-border fintech expansion is reshaping the talent map
Virtual banks and payments platforms launched in one APAC market are now expanding into 2-4 others, and the senior-hire shortlist for each new geography includes candidates who have built or scaled payments products before. This pulls senior PMs, treasury leads, and country-launch GMs out of incumbent banks faster than the incumbents can backfill.
How the six APAC BFSI markets compare
Each market has a distinct mix of digital maturity, regulatory complexity, and fintech competitive intensity. The table below summarises where each one sits today — useful for prioritising hiring investment by geography.
| Market | Digital maturity | Regulatory load | Fintech competition | Talent supply |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Singapore | Very high | High | Very high | Tight |
| Hong Kong | Very high | Very high | High | Tight |
| Malaysia | High | Moderate | Moderate | Improving |
| Indonesia | Moderate | Moderate | Very high | Constrained |
| Taiwan | High | Moderate | Moderate | Improving |
| South Korea | Very high | High | High | Tight |
What this means for hiring teams
Three practical adjustments separate the banks that hit their 2024 plan from those that miss: broaden the candidate pool beyond in-industry, move offer turnaround to under 5 working days for senior briefs, and run cross-border searches for any role above VP — the regional pool is meaningfully larger than any single market.
“Banks that compress senior offer cycles to under 5 working days close 2-3x more shortlisted candidates than those running 10+ day cycles.”
- Open up sourcing to consumer-internet, e-commerce, and ride-hailing tech for engineering and product roles.
- Compress offer cycles for VP and above to under 5 working days.
- Default to regional, not market-only, search for senior leadership.
- Build a structured 90-day onboarding plan — at this comp level, candidates measure decisions in months, not years.



