• Trend Micro’s Cyber Risk Index finds cyber preparedness in APAC is improving, but more can be done to train employees and secure infrastructure
  • 87% of organisations in the Philippines foresee a successful attack in 2023

Manila, August 10, 2023 – Trend Micro Incorporated (TYO: 4704; TSE: 4704), a global cybersecurity leader, revealed that cyber risk levels in Asia Pacific (APAC) have improved from the first half to the second half of 2022, according to its latest survey on cyber risk. Nevertheless, organisations remain pessimistic about the threat landscape, with 82% anticipating successful attacks this year. 

The findings come from Trend Micro’s biannual Cyber Risk Index (CRI) report, which measures the gap between respondents’ cybersecurity preparedness versus their likelihood of being attacked. In the second half of 2022, the CRI surveyed more than 3,700 CISOs, IT practitioners, and managers across North America, Europe, Latin/South America, and APAC.

In APAC, enhanced cyber preparedness is a key driver of improved cyber risk levels—which has shifted from “elevated” to “moderate”. However, organisations cannot rest on their laurels with the prospect of threats looming. 

The threats that APAC organisations are most worried about this year are as follows: 

  • Three in four organisations cited that it was “somewhat to very likely” that they would suffer a breach of customer data (74%), intellectual property (74%) or a successful cyberattack (82%). 
  • These figures represent declines of just 2%, 4% and 7% respectively, from the results of the CRI in the first half of 2022. 

Nilesh Jain, Vice President, Southeast Asia & India, Trend Micro: “We’ve seen a drastic improvement in the APAC cyber risk index since the first half of 2022, with figures moving into positive territory at 0.05 from negative levels. This is a promising result as it means that organisations have greatly stepped up to improve their cyber preparedness. It is crucial for organisations to continue this momentum by focusing on the threats that matter most to their business this year. The first step is to gain complete and continuous attack surface visibility and control.”

“To address new complexities arising from an expanding attack surface, security teams need to bolster their capabilities in proactive attack surface risk management. On top of architecture improvements for enhanced interoperability, scalability and agility, having a unified cybersecurity platform with extended detection and response (XDR) capabilities is also critical in enhancing security teams’ visibility and response to cyberthreats across internal and external systems, accounts and devices. This would give organisations a leg-up in understanding, communicating, and mitigating expected risks.” 

The Philippines’ cyber risk declines

Although the Philippines continues to experience “elevated” risk levels, there has been some improvement since the first half of 2022, with cyber risk declining and preparedness improving. 

Table 1: Cyber Risk in APAC & Philippines
Time frameCyber Risk Index & Risk LabelBusiness Implications (Elevated Risk)
APACPhilippines
First half of 2022-0.11Elevated risk-0.21Elevated risk●        High likelihood of a compromise●        Some ability to detect new threats●        Low visibility of threats within network●        Lack of an incident response process
Second half of 20220.05Moderate risk-0.06Elevated risk

However, local organisations remain strongly on guard with over 80% of organisations citing that they are “somewhat to very likely” to experience a breach in customer data (82%), intellectual property (82%), or successful cyberattack (87%) in the next 12 months. 

Expected cyber threats in the Philippines & APAC this year

Organisations in the Philippines and APAC cited ransomware, business email compromise, and botnets among the top five cyber threats that they expect to experience this year. 

Table 2: Top 5 Expected Cyber Threats
APACPhilippines
Business Email Compromise (BEC)RansomwareClickjackingBotnetsCrypto-miningRansomwareBusiness Email Compromise (BEC)BotnetsWatering Hole AttacksDenial of Service (DoS)

Current infrastructure security risks of organisations in the Philippines & APAC

In APAC and the Philippines, primary infrastructure risks cited are people related. Respondents in the Philippines and across the region named employees/personnel as representing three of their top five infrastructure risks.

Table 3: Top 5 Current Security Risks in Infrastructure
APACPhilippines
Negligent insidersCloud computing infrastructure and providersShortage of qualified personnelMobile/remote employeesOrganisational misalignment and complexityNegligent insidersShortage of qualified personnelCloud computing infrastructure and providersOrganisational misalignment and complexityMobile or remote employees

Ian Felipe, Country Manager, Trend Micro Philippines: “Hybrid work has become the norm in the Philippines—Trend Micro’s recent Risky Rewards study revealed that 78% of Filipino businesses believe that offering the ability to work from anywhere has become vital in the war for talent. At the same time, 62% believe there is a strong connection between cybersecurity and overall business risk. Local organisations thus need to master a balancing act between offering employees flexibility and minimising both the security and business risks that arise. Armed with the insights provided by the CRI, CISOs and CIOs in the Philippines can now better evaluate not only the technology solutions, but its people and processes to help mitigate cyber risks across the enterprise.” 

To read a full copy of the Trend Micro CRI 2H 2022, please visit: https://www.trendmicro.com/en_us/security-intelligence/breaking-news/cyber-risk-index


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