The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Large inflows into Taiwan send stocks near last year’s high

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TAIPEI: Foreign investors have piled into Taiwan’s markets this month, leaving its stocks tantalisin­gly close to last year’s high.

The Taiex is unlikely to reach it, however -- because of the trade war and how many companies’ fortunes are linked to Apple Inc’s latest iphone, say Diana Wu, a senior manager at Capital Securities Corp and David Chu, chairman of Hua Nan Securities Investment Management Co.

Both predict the benchmark gauge will end the year 2.8% higher at 11,200.

Global investors have flocked to Taiwan equities so far in September, with Us$2.3bil of inflows the most among 10 Asian markets tracked by Bloomberg. Optimism over the economy’s dominant semiconduc­tor industry helped the Taiex rise 5.5% from its August low, while the local dollar saw its longest rally in three years.

“The Taiex has very limited upside as the global economy is slowing due to trade war concerns, and the iphone could be in demand only in the short term as consumers may prefer waiting for 5G phones in 2020,” Wu said.

Taiex companies’ earnings growth is expected to drop 6.7% this year, the most since 2015, according to Bloomberg-compiled data.

Rosenblatt Securities Inc. said last week that Apple is seeing “weak” pre-orders for the new iphone, citing conversati­ons it had with retailers. Demand could also be low in China, where 5G phones are in focus, the brokerage added. Greater China, including the mainland, accounted for almost 20% of Apple’s revenue last year, Bloomberg-compiled data show.

Any disappoint­ing iphone sales would be a big headwind for the Taiex. That’s because Apple suppliers Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co., Largan Precision Co. and Nanya Technology Corp. accounted for about 35% of the benchmark’s recent rally.

The benchmark stock gauge fell 0.3% to 10,894.70 at the close on Thursday. Largan advanced 2.1% to its highest since July. Bloomberg

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