Taiwan Stocks Extend Losses on Profit-Taking

2026-04-29 04:11 By Chusnul Chotimah 1 min. read

The TAIEX, Taiwan’s benchmark stock index, dropped 156 points, or 0.5%, to 39,365 in Wednesday morning trading, tracking a downbeat session on Wall Street overnight amid signals of weakness in OpenAI and rising oil prices.

The broader index was down for a second straight day, as traders took profits after it hit a record high for the second time in a week and breached the psychological 40,000 level for the first time intraday on Monday.

Traders were cautious ahead of the Fed’s monetary policy decision later today.

The decline was mainly driven by contract chipmaker TSMC, which accounts for more than 40% of total market capitalization, and fell 0.7%.

Electronic technology and technology services stocks also weighed on the index, with other early losers including ASE Technology Holding (-2.7%), MediaTek (-1.7%), and Hon Hai Precision Industry (-0.4%).



News Stream
TAIEX Plunges 4.3% to 2-Week Low on Tech Weakness
The TAIEX, Taiwan’s benchmark stock index, plunged 1,953 points, or 4.3%, to 43,117 in Monday morning trading, falling for the third straight session and touching its lowest level since May 22. The decline tracked losses on Wall Street on Friday, where a tech selloff weighed on sentiment. Traders were also concerned that high interest rates could weigh on AI-related stocks. Investors continued to take profits after the index hit a record high last Wednesday, closing at 46,459, the first close above the 46,000 level, as optimism over AI investment continued to support sentiment. All sectors traded in the red, with electronic technology slumping 5.0%, technology services plunging 7.0%, and process industries falling sharply by 6.2%. TSMC, the world's largest contract chipmaker, which accounts for more than 40% of the market's total value, dropped 2.5%. Other sharp losers included MediaTek (-6.2%), Delta Electronics (-5.4%), Hon Hai Precision (-6.5%), and ASE Technology (-8.3%).
2026-06-08
TAIEX Pulls Back from Record Peak, Ends 1.7% Lower
The TAIEX, Taiwan’s benchmark stock index, dropped 782 points, or 1.7%, to close at 45,677 on Thursday, snapping a four-session winning streak, as traders took profits after the index hit a record high in the previous session. The broader index pulled back from the record peak of 46,459 reached a day earlier, after closing above the 46,000 level for the first time as optimism over AI investment continued to lift sentiment. The index tracked a fall on Wall Street overnight amid renewed escalation of the Middle East conflict. The index was mainly weighed down by electronic technology and producer manufacturing stocks. Electronic technology stocks shed 2.2%, with TSMC, the world's largest contract chipmaker, which accounts for more than 40% of the market's total value, falling 1.7% after gaining 1.7% on Wednesday. Other decliners included MediaTek (-2.5%), Delta Electronics (-1.2%), Hon Hai Precision (-5.2%), ASE Technology (-4.1%), and United Microelectronics (-4.2%).
2026-06-04
Taiwan Stocks Retreat from Record High on Profit-Taking
The TAIEX, Taiwan’s benchmark stock index, dropped 623 points, or 1.3%, to 45,836 around noon on Thursday, erasing gains from the previous four sessions, as traders took profits after the index hit a record high in the previous session. The broader index retreated from the record peak of 46,459 reached a day earlier, marking the first break above the 46,000 level as optimism over AI investment continued to lift sentiment. The index tracked a fall on Wall Street overnight amid renewed escalation of the Middle East conflict. The index was mainly weighed down by electronic technology, health services, producer manufacturing, and non-energy minerals. Electronic technology stocks fell 1.4%, with TSMC, the world's largest contract chipmaker, which accounts for more than 40% of the market's total value, losing 0.8% after gaining 1.7% in the previous session. Losses were also seen in Delta Electronics (-1.0%), Hon Hai Precision (-3.4%), and ASE Technology (-2.6%).
2026-06-04