Taiwanese investors borrow heavily to ride the TSMC-fueled AI stock rally

Taiwanese investors borrow heavily to ride the TSMC-fueled AI stock rally

Margin debt in Taiwan has hit levels not seen since September 2000, and brokerages are starting to pump the brakes.

The last time margin debt in Taiwan looked like this, the dot-com bubble was about to pop. Total margin borrowing has now surpassed $13B, a threshold the island nation’s stock market hasn’t crossed since September 2000. The fuel behind the fire: a retail investor frenzy centered on TSMC and the broader AI trade.

Taiwan’s benchmark Taiex index has surged to levels not seen in a quarter century, and TSMC, the chipmaker that fabricates processors for virtually every major AI company on the planet, accounts for over 40% of the index’s weighting. When TSMC moves, the entire Taiwanese market moves with it.

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The margin debt problem

The pace of borrowing in Taiwan has been staggering. In a single day during late May to early June, margin debt spiked by approximately NT$21.3B, roughly $680M. That’s not a gradual buildup. That’s retail investors collectively slamming the accelerator.

Brokerages have noticed. Several are now hitting their internal lending limits, which has forced them to raise collateral requirements and bump up interest rates on margin loans.

TSMC and the AI gravity well

The concentration risk alone is worth flagging. When a single stock represents more than 40% of an entire country’s benchmark index, the fortunes of millions of investors rise and fall with one company’s earnings reports, one geopolitical development, one shift in AI spending patterns.

Taiwan’s stock market has recently emerged as the fifth largest globally, with a market capitalization ranging from $4.1T to $4.95T. That’s a remarkable achievement for an island of roughly 24 million people.

What this means for investors

The fact that brokerages are already tightening their lending standards is a double-edged sword. On one hand, it could act as a natural cooling mechanism, slowing the pace of speculative borrowing before it reaches truly dangerous levels. On the other hand, restricting access to leverage can itself trigger selling if investors who were counting on additional margin find they can’t get it and need to reduce existing positions.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Taiwanese investors borrow heavily to ride the TSMC-fueled AI stock rally

Taiwanese investors borrow heavily to ride the TSMC-fueled AI stock rally

Margin debt in Taiwan has hit levels not seen since September 2000, and brokerages are starting to pump the brakes.

The last time margin debt in Taiwan looked like this, the dot-com bubble was about to pop. Total margin borrowing has now surpassed $13B, a threshold the island nation’s stock market hasn’t crossed since September 2000. The fuel behind the fire: a retail investor frenzy centered on TSMC and the broader AI trade.

Taiwan’s benchmark Taiex index has surged to levels not seen in a quarter century, and TSMC, the chipmaker that fabricates processors for virtually every major AI company on the planet, accounts for over 40% of the index’s weighting. When TSMC moves, the entire Taiwanese market moves with it.

Advertisement

The margin debt problem

The pace of borrowing in Taiwan has been staggering. In a single day during late May to early June, margin debt spiked by approximately NT$21.3B, roughly $680M. That’s not a gradual buildup. That’s retail investors collectively slamming the accelerator.

Brokerages have noticed. Several are now hitting their internal lending limits, which has forced them to raise collateral requirements and bump up interest rates on margin loans.

TSMC and the AI gravity well

The concentration risk alone is worth flagging. When a single stock represents more than 40% of an entire country’s benchmark index, the fortunes of millions of investors rise and fall with one company’s earnings reports, one geopolitical development, one shift in AI spending patterns.

Taiwan’s stock market has recently emerged as the fifth largest globally, with a market capitalization ranging from $4.1T to $4.95T. That’s a remarkable achievement for an island of roughly 24 million people.

What this means for investors

The fact that brokerages are already tightening their lending standards is a double-edged sword. On one hand, it could act as a natural cooling mechanism, slowing the pace of speculative borrowing before it reaches truly dangerous levels. On the other hand, restricting access to leverage can itself trigger selling if investors who were counting on additional margin find they can’t get it and need to reduce existing positions.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.