Local Confidence Anchors Taiwan's Market Amid Global Skepticism
As global markets begin to exhibit caution toward artificial intelligence stocks, Taiwan’s domestic investors are charging ahead, undeterred by the fear of an AI valuation bubble. The island’s benchmark stock index is on track to breach the symbolic 30,000-point mark in early 2026, having nearly doubled over the past three years. This optimism is rooted not just in speculation, but in Taiwan’s strategic position as the nucleus of the global semiconductor ecosystem powering the AI revolution.
Despite net foreign outflows exceeding NT$533.8 billion (approximately $17 billion) in 2025 alone, the market remains resilient. Local investors appear more focused on long-term structural fundamentals than on short-term volatility or macroeconomic noise. This divergence in sentiment reflects a deeper belief that Taiwan’s supply-side advantages give it a unique buffer against AI market volatility.
Semiconductors Secure Taiwan’s Central Role in AI Evolution
Concerns about Nvidia’s future market dominance have surfaced globally as Google’s custom TPUs threaten to undercut GPU pricing. However, Taiwan benefits either way. As the foundational base for both Nvidia’s GPUs and Google’s TPUs, Taiwan stands to gain from rising demand regardless of who leads the AI hardware race.
TSMC, the world’s largest contract chip manufacturer, sits at the heart of this hardware production cycle, along with AI-aligned firms like Foxconn, Elite Material, and other upstream suppliers. Analysts argue that the strength of Taiwan’s order books and the pace of innovation in high-end chips will keep revenue momentum intact well into 2027.
Goldman Sachs projects that hyperscaler investment globally will grow to $552 billion in 2026 and $644 billion in 2027, which further reinforces the long-term outlook for hardware demand. Gina Kim of Nordea Asset Management also emphasizes that Taiwan’s role in AI and advanced semiconductors remains “structurally intact,” suggesting persistent upside potential.
No Bubble in Sight, Say Analysts and Fund Managers
Unlike the speculative fervor that marked the dot-com boom, Taiwan’s AI-linked stocks are supported by real earnings and competitive business models. The market’s current price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio stands at a relatively moderate 21, lower than both the Nasdaq and Japan’s Nikkei, indicating that despite soaring valuations, Taiwan’s market isn’t detached from corporate fundamentals.
Li Fang-kuo, head of Uni-President’s securities investment division, dismisses bubble fears, arguing that companies like Nvidia and other “magnificent seven” names enjoy gross margins of 70% or more figures that are not remotely comparable to the revenue-less companies of the early 2000s.
This sentiment is echoed by Goldman Sachs, whose strategists maintain an overweight position on tech and AI shares, stating that the current cycle, while frothy in appearance, does not yet meet the criteria of a speculative bubble.
Foreign Sell-Off Contrasts With Strong Domestic Accumulation
While foreign investors have continued to reduce their exposure driven by concerns about trade tensions, AI profit sustainability, and a desire to lock in gains domestic capital has filled the vacuum. Analysts attribute this divergence not to opposing market views, but to different time horizons and risk tolerances.
Foreign investors, often guided by macro-hedging strategies, have been more reactive to rising tensions with Beijing and broader geopolitical instability. Yet these same issues appear to have less influence on local institutions and retail investors, who instead focus on Taiwan’s entrenched role in global tech supply chains.
HSBC strategists recently noted that the average Asian portfolio contains a 10% allocation to a single stock TSMC highlighting both concentration risk and the confidence investors place in Taiwan’s leading position.
Taiwan’s Strategic Position Shields It From AI Volatility
While the rest of the world debates whether the AI boom has morphed into a bubble, Taiwan's domestic investors are doubling down. They are buoyed by a clear structural advantage: the island's indispensable role in manufacturing the core hardware powering the global AI transition.
The market’s upward trajectory, backed by robust earnings and manageable valuations, presents a contrast to the overheated conditions that typically precede a bubble burst. As long as capital expenditure in AI infrastructure continues to rise, and Taiwan maintains its dominance in advanced semiconductors, the rally appears far from over regardless of who leads the AI race.
Even with foreign capital fleeing and geopolitical risks looming, Taiwan's market narrative remains internally driven, structurally resilient, and fundamentally optimistic. The island’s near-future market prospects will likely be shaped less by fears of overvaluation and more by the durable demand for the silicon foundation of tomorrow’s intelligent machines.
Source: Reuters