|

Taiwan: Undervalued TWD with rotational flows – BNY

Geoff Yu at BNY notes that Taiwan’s strong equity performance in 2026 has coincided with net institutional outflows, mainly from U.S. pensions and hedge funds, while APAC and EMEA investors provide support. TWD FX activity remains subdued and tied to rebalancing rather than directional demand, with Taiwan’s currency still screening as fundamentally undervalued.

TAIEX strength, muted TWD flows

"Taiwan looks different, with TWD activity tied more to periodic rebalancing than to outright directional equity demand. Both currencies still screen as fundamentally undervalued, which helps explain why investor interest has held up even without meaningful FX appreciation."

"Taiwan: Taiwanese equities saw $1.73bn of net institutional outflows year to date. Again, the Americas were the main sellers, with $4.33bn of net sales. U.S. pension funds and hedge funds led the move, making up almost 75% of total selling from the region."

"Taiwan looked more like rotation than exit. The market also saw heavy semiconductor selling (-$5.59bn), but that was offset by buying in Technology Hardware (+$3.74bn), Capital Goods (+$232mn) and Banks (+$132mn). The message: investors were not exiting Taiwan wholesale."

"By investor type in Taiwan: The mix was different. Pension funds (-$3.12bn) and hedge funds (-$1.78bn) were the main sellers, while government and agency accounts bought $906mn. Taiwan selling was less mutual-fund driven and more concentrated in pensions and hedge funds than South Korea."

"Taiwan remains much quieter. TWD activity is still subdued. Spot volumes, which track equity purchases more directly, are below the rolling one-year average."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD loses momentum, flirts with 1.3200

GBP/USD is struggling to maintain its positive bias on Thursday, retreating toward the 1.3200 region in response to the pick in the buying interest around the Greenback. That said, Cable remains under scrutiny as cautious market sentiment keeps investors focused on the US-Iran conflict and political effervescence in the UK.

EUR/USD trims gains, challenges 1.1400

EUR/USD now gives away part of its earlier advance, receding toward the 1.1400 contention zone on Thursday. Meanwhile, the pair’s recovery comes amid extra losses in the US Dollar, at the time when while investors continue to monitor developments in the Middle East and sentiment surrounding global technology stocks.

Gold remains bid and close to $4,100

Gold accelerates its recovery and approaches the key $4,000 mark per troy ounce at the end of the week, adding to Thursday’s advance. However, expectations for a hawkish Fed remain steady and keep the yellow metal’s potential upside contained.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin at $60,000, Ethereum at $1,500, and XRP at $1 face a make-or-break test

Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), and Ripple (XRP) are trading in the red on Friday after three consecutive days of losses, testing their respective make-or-break support levels.

Week ahead – NFP report to challenge Dollar strength and the hawkish Fed

Dollar strength dominates markets, as the hawkish Fed overshadows geopolitics and lower oil prices. NFP week could drive September Fed hike expectations and boost market volatility. The euro lacks fresh bullish catalysts, all eyes on the preliminary inflation report and the ECB Forum.

Regime change: Inside Kevin Warsh's first move to make the Fed unreadable on purpose

The rate did not move. That was the least interesting thing about Kevin Warsh's first meeting in charge of the Fed. The FOMC held its benchmark at 3.50%-3.75% for the fourth straight meeting, exactly as priced, and then the new chair used his first press conference to dismantle the machinery the market has leaned on for a decade.