Alberto M. de Larrazabal
Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. appointed long-time Ayala Group executive Alberto M. de Larrazabal a independent director as it reshuffles its board to bolster its push into digital finance.
De Larrazabal, who currently serves as president and chief executive officer of real estate investment trust AREIT Inc. and AC Infrastructure Holdings Corp., joined the board effective Jan. 26, RCBC said in a filing to the Philippine Stock Exchange.
His appointment is subject to standard regulatory approvals regarding his interlocking positions across the Ayala conglomerate.
De Larrazabal previously served as the chief finance officer and finance group head of Ayala Corp. until the end of 2025. His career spans more than two decades, including high-level roles at Globe Telecom Inc., San Miguel Corp., and a stint as head of the consumer sector at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Hong Kong.
De Larrazabal fills the seat vacated by Erika Fille T. Legara, who has been moved to the bank’s advisory board.
Legara, an expert in data science, has been an independent director since July 2022. The bank said the shift will allow Legara to provide more “hands-on collaboration” as RCBC ramps up its initiatives in artificial intelligence and data analytics.
De Larrazabal will assume Legara’s former seats on the risk oversight, audit and compliance, corporate governance and nominations, and related party transactions committees.
In a separate board change, RCBC named Kaoru Furuya as a director, replacing Gayatri P. Bery. The transition follows the International Finance Corp.’s sale of its stake in the bank to Sumitomo Mitsui.
Furuya, a managing director and senior general manager at SMBC’s global banking unit, also sits on the board of Cambodia’s ACLEDA Bank Plc. He will join RCBC’s risk oversight committee and serve as an advisor to the audit and compliance committee.
The appointments come as RCBC continues to defend its market share against both traditional rivals and a growing crop of digital banks.
While the bank did not disclose specific compensation details, its focus remains on leveraging the expertise of its board to navigate a high-interest-rate environment in the Philippines, where the benchmark rate remains at 6.5 percent.