Foreign funds snapped a two-month selling streak of Taiwanese equities last month amid renewed optimism around artificial intelligence (AI).
Overseas investors bought US$2.7 billion of Taiwanese shares, according to Bloomberg-compiled data.
That is a turnaround from when they sold stocks in March and April as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) cautioned over persistent weakness in consumer markets and funds rotated to rival South Korea.
Photo: CNA
Sentiment in chip stocks has recovered globally following another bullish forecast from AI chipmaker Nvidia Corp. Taiwan’s dominant position in the AI value chain would get another boost this week as tech giants gather for the nation’s annual electronics showcase event, Computex Taipei.
“Alongside Nvidia’s optimism, there was some cautious positioning on Taiwan earlier in the year which has eased,” Bloomberg Intelligence strategist Marvin Chen said. “While valuations are getting stretched, Taiwan is still Asia’s best proxy for the AI boom.”
Taiwan was the biggest recipient of foreign inflows last month among emerging Asian countries excluding China. That helped fuel a rally in TAIEX to a record high late last month and pushed the benchmark index to become one of the best performers in Asia this year.
Yesterday, the TAIEX moved sharply higher amid enthusiasm over AI development after a speech by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) in Taipei a day earlier. The index closed up 362.54 points, or 1.71 percent, at 21,536.76.
TSMC, which is believed to provide advanced chips for Nvidia’s graphics processing units, led the gains throughout the session and closed 3.05 percent higher at NT$846.
Turnover on the main board totaled NT$433.32 billion (US$13.38 billion) yesterday, with foreign institutional investors buying a net NT$2.9 billion in shares, Taiwan Stock Exchange data showed.
There is still scope for global funds to keep buying given that foreign ownership of TSMC — the largest stock on the index with a weighting of 32 percent — is below the record 80 percent level seen in 2017.
A strong earnings outlook for Taiwanese firms also bodes well for foreign flows into the market. The 12-month forward profit estimate for the TAIEX has risen by more than 8 percent this year compared with little change on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index, data compiled by Bloomberg showed.
A delay in the US Federal Reserve’s rate cuts might still dent the tech rally, while any escalation in cross-strait tensions might deter foreign interest in Taiwan’s stock market.
“Strength of Nvidia and the underlying AI/server theme continue to support associated stocks in Taiwan,” Robeco Hong Kong Ltd Asia Pacific equities head Joshua Crabb said.
Stocks also remain attractive to foreign investors as they “are a lot cheaper than US counterparts,” he added.
Additional reporting by CNA
It was late morning and steam was rising from water tanks atop the colorful, but opaque-windowed, “soapland” sex parlors in a historic Tokyo red-light district. Walking through the narrow streets, camera in hand, was Beniko — a former sex worker who is trying to capture the spirit of the area once known as Yoshiwara through photography. “People often talk about this neighborhood having a ‘bad history,’” said Beniko, who goes by her nickname. “But the truth is that through the years people have lived here, made a life here, sometimes struggled to survive. I want to share that reality.” In its mid-17th to
‘MAKE OR BREAK’: Nvidia shares remain down more than 9 percent, but investors are hoping CEO Jensen Huang’s speech can stave off fears that the sales boom is peaking Shares in Nvidia Corp’s Taiwanese suppliers mostly closed higher yesterday on hopes that the US artificial intelligence (AI) chip designer would showcase next-generation technologies at its annual AI conference slated to open later in the day. The GPU Technology Conference (GTC) in California is to feature developers, engineers, researchers, inventors and information technology professionals, and would focus on AI, computer graphics, data science, machine learning and autonomous machines. The event comes at a make-or-break moment for the firm, as it heads into the next few quarters, with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s (黃仁勳) keynote speech today seen as having the ability to
NEXT GENERATION: The company also showcased automated machines, including a nursing robot called Nurabot, which is to enter service at a Taichung hospital this year Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (鴻海精密) expects server revenue to exceed its iPhone revenue within two years, with the possibility of achieving this goal as early as this year, chairman Young Liu (劉揚偉) said on Tuesday at Nvidia Corp’s annual technology conference in San Jose, California. AI would be the primary focus this year for the company, also known as Foxconn Technology Group (富士康科技集團), as rapidly advancing AI applications are driving up demand for AI servers, Liu said. The production and shipment of Nvidia’s GB200 chips and the anticipated launch of GB300 chips in the second half of the year would propel
State-run CPC Corp, Taiwan (CPC, 台灣中油) yesterday signed a letter of intent with Alaska Gasline Development Corp (AGDC), expressing an interest to buy liquefied natural gas (LNG) and invest in the latter’s Alaska LNG project, the Ministry of Economic Affairs said in a statement. Under the agreement, CPC is to participate in the project’s upstream gas investment to secure stable energy resources for Taiwan, the ministry said. The Alaska LNG project is jointly promoted by AGDC and major developer Glenfarne Group LLC, as Alaska plans to export up to 20 million tonnes of LNG annually from 2031. It involves constructing an 1,290km