
Taiwan exports to US hit record high as tariff threat looms
US President Donald Trump slapped a 32 percent toll on Taiwanese products in April. It was later paused for 90 days, but a global 10 percent levy is still in place.
As Taipei and Washington negotiate a trade deal, American companies have ramped up orders of Taiwanese-made high-tech products in case the higher tariff takes effect next month.
Taiwanese shipments to the United States soared 87.4 percent in May from a year ago to US$15.5 billion, finance ministry figures showed.
Both figures were a record high, Bloomberg News reported.
Taiwan's total exports hit US$51.7 billion -- also the highest ever.
Shipments of information, communication and audio-video products soared 111.1 percent and electronic parts were up 28.4 percent, the data showed.
The overall growth 'was impressive but I would caution that a lot of it is because of export frontloading as the US may still apply tariffs on chips and exempted electronic products,' Michelle Lam, Greater China economist at Societe Generale SA, was quoted by Bloomberg as saying.
'We are bound to see a slowdown later in the year.'
Taiwan's government has sought to avoid Trump's threatened levies by pledging increased investment in the United States, more purchases of US energy and greater defence spending.
Its trade surplus with the United States is the seventh highest of any country, reaching $73.9 billion in 2024.
Around 60 percent of Taiwan's exports to the United States are information and communications technology products, including semiconductors.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
3 minutes ago
- The Star
Back in the USSR and a bit of the bizarre feature ahead of Trump-Putin summit
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) -A flurry of superpower-style signalling from Washington and Moscow over the war in Ukraine heralded the first U.S.-Russian summit in four years, but on the ground in Alaska there was a mix of the bizarre, the peculiar and even moose and a bear. Donald Trump wants Friday's summit at a Cold War-era air force base to be the start of the end of the deadliest war in Europe since World War Two. Vladimir Putin, ascendant in the war, has meanwhile offered the prospect of a possible deal to limit strategic nuclear weapons, which the Kremlin hopes would usher in a much broader discussion of U.S. and Russian global interests beyond Ukraine. In Anchorage, nearly 5,000 miles (8,000 km), from the front lines of the war, Putin's foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, arrived in a sweatshirt with the old Soviet Union initials "USSR" ("СССР") across the front. A bear and a moose ambled across at least one live television feed. The Kremlin press pool was housed in an Alaska Airlines Center, where a semi-open-plan room was subdivided by partitions and some reporters were seen making their own camp-style beds. They were fed for free at a nearby university campus, Russian reporters said. Putin, flying eastwards from Moscow and then eastern Russia, and Trump, flying northwest, were due to meet at 11 a.m. (1900 GMT) in Anchorage, on Friday, according to the latest timings, though it was unclear if Putin would be late - as he often is. The state, whose far western tip lies just 55 miles (90 km) from the Russian Far East, is homeland to indigenous peoples and was settled by Europeans including Russians from the 18th century. The United States purchased Alaska from Russia for $7.2 million in 1867 and no Russian leader has visited before. "I understand the historical moment. It's kind of exciting," said Russian-American Anchorage resident and former school teacher Galina Tomisser. "I just want to hope and they say the hope dies last, so that there will be some fruitful results from this meeting, from this summit," she told Reuters. Different waves of emigrants from the former Soviet Union have settled in Alaska, including both Russians and Ukrainians. Pro-Ukrainian protesters held up a large Ukrainian flag with the words 'ALASKA STANDS WITH UKRAINE'. "This is just grandstanding for Donald Trump," said Anchorage resident Helen Sharratt, 65, and originally from England. "He likes to look good and think he's doing something, but he's not doing anything. And meeting with Putin is, I mean, actually, I don't know who's worse in terms of making a deal and not actually adhering to it." At the Chilkoot Charlie's bar in Anchorage a collection of Soviet and czarist memorabilia adorns the Russian room, including pictures of Vladimir Lenin and the last Tsar Nicholas II, who was shot by the Bolsheviks in 1918. On the other side of the world, in Moscow, matryoshka dolls featuring Putin and Trump were selling well. In Ukraine, though, there was fear and apprehension about what Putin and Trump might agree to at a meeting to which Ukraine and its European backers were not invited. "I don't think anything good will come of it. There won't be a positive outcome; the conflict will continue. At best, it will be a frozen conflict, nothing else," Konstantyn Shtanko told Reuters in Kyiv. (Reporting by Reuters in Anchorage, Moscow and KyivWriting by Guy FaulconbridgeEditing by Frances Kerry)


The Star
3 minutes ago
- The Star
Bursa Malaysia takes a breather despite positive market sentiment
KUALA LUMPUR: Bursa Malaysia took a breather on Friday, mirroring the subdued performance of regional markets, despite positive sentiment following the release of Malaysia's second-quarter 2025 (2Q 2025) gross domestic product (GDP) data. At 5 pm, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) eased 4.71 points, or 0.30 per cent, to close at 1,576.34 from yesterday's close of 1,581.05. The benchmark index opened 0.70 of-a-point firmer at 1,581.75, and moved between 1,571.19 and 1,581.79 throughout the day. The broader market was negative, with decliners leading advancers 488 to 449, while 497 counters were unchanged, 1,138 untraded and seven suspended. Turnover declined to 2.01 billion units worth RM2.03 billion from 2.40 billion units worth RM2.66 billion yesterday. UOB Kay Hian Wealth Advisors Sdn Bhd head of investment research Mohd Sedek Jantan said market sentiment was steady following the release of Malaysia's 2Q 2025 GDP data, which expanded 4.4 per cent year-on-year, aligning with the company's forecast range of 4.30 to 4.50 per cent and only marginally below the advance estimate of 4.5 per cent. "The outcome defied earlier expectations that April's reciprocal tariffs, announced by United States (US) President Donald Trump, coupled with prolonged US trade policy uncertainty, would prompt a more pronounced slowdown as businesses adopted a wait-and-see stance. "With policy direction from Washington now clearer, we believe the worst of the trade-related drag has passed, allowing growth to remain supported in the near term,' he told Bernama. In today's session, banking stocks led gains among the FBM KLCI constituents. "The sector is often viewed as a proxy for economic momentum, and with GDP data broadly meeting market expectations, investors rotated into financials on the belief that a resilient macro backdrop will support sustained credit demand and earnings visibility. "This sectoral strength helped offset weakness in selected commodity-linked and export-oriented counters, which remain sensitive to shifts in global trade sentiment,' he added. Externally, Mohd Sedek noted that immediate market attention is shifting to Trump's meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska later today, coinciding with the release of US retail sales data. "While headline risk from the geopolitical front may generate intraday volatility in late US trading, market beta is more likely to respond decisively at Monday's opening,' he said. Among the heavyweights, CIMB added 5.0 sen to RM7.25, Maybank eased 4.0 sen to RM9.80, Tenaga Nasional went down 6.0 sen to RM13.62, IHH Healthcare declined 8.0 sen to RM6.82, while Public Bank was flat at RM4.45. Of the most active counters, Tanco perked up 1.0 sen to 73 sen, Oxford Innotech went up 3.5 sen to 44.5 sen, Zetrix AI inched down half-a-sen to 89.5 sen, Bina Puri was 1.5 sen lower at 35 sen, and TWL was flat at 2.5 sen. Across the broader market, the FBM Emas Index fell 29.86 points to 11,731.06, the FBMT 100 Index slipped 30.86 points to 11,512.86, the FBM Emas Shariah Index slumped 53.60 points to 11,654.85, the FBM 70 Index sank 29.25 points to 16,660.68, while the FBM ACE Index jumped 46.91 points to 4,713.45. By sector, the Financial Services Index increased 29.54 points to 18,080.07, the Plantation Index slipped 77.62 points to 7,504.03, the Industrial Products and Services Index eased 1.22 points to 157.72, while the Energy Index perked up 1.34 points to 740.83. The Main Market volume declined to 1.17 billion units valued at RM1.82 billion from Thursday's 1.33 billion units valued at RM2.42 billion. Warrants turnover dwindled to 474.97 million units worth RM66.97 million from 683.46 million units worth RM100.19 million previously. The ACE Market volume decreased to 359.0 million units worth RM135.16 million from 391.12 million units worth RM142.13 million yesterday. Consumer products and services counters accounted for 217.46 million shares traded on the Main Market; industrial products and services (143.74 million), construction (102.71 million), technology (138.34 million), financial services (63.09 million), property (185.03 million), plantation (25.07 million), REITs (37.19 million), closed-end fund (1,100), energy (85.52 million), healthcare (77.37 million), telecommunications and media (25.44 million), transportation and logistics (38.10 million), utilities (32.27 million), and business trusts (3,500). - Bernama


New Straits Times
3 minutes ago
- New Straits Times
Bursa Malaysia takes a breather despite positive market sentiment
KUALA LUMPUR: Bursa Malaysia took a breather on Friday, mirroring the subdued performance of regional markets, despite positive sentiment following the release of Malaysia's second-quarter 2025 (2Q 2025) gross domestic product (GDP) data. At 5pm, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) eased 4.71 points, or 0.30 per cent, to close at 1,576.34 from yesterday's close of 1,581.05. The benchmark index opened 0.70 of-a-point firmer at 1,581.75, and moved between 1,571.19 and 1,581.79 throughout the day. The broader market was negative, with decliners leading advancers 488 to 449, while 497 counters were unchanged, 1,138 untraded and seven suspended. Turnover declined to 2.01 billion units worth RM2.03 billion from 2.40 billion units worth RM2.66 billion yesterday. UOB Kay Hian Wealth Advisors Sdn Bhd head of investment research Mohd Sedek Jantan said market sentiment was steady following the release of Malaysia's 2Q 2025 GDP data, which expanded 4.4 per cent year-on-year, aligning with the company's forecast range of 4.30 to 4.50 per cent and only marginally below the advance estimate of 4.5 per cent. "The outcome defied earlier expectations that April's reciprocal tariffs, announced by United States (US) President Donald Trump, coupled with prolonged US trade policy uncertainty, would prompt a more pronounced slowdown as businesses adopted a wait-and-see stance. "With policy direction from Washington now clearer, we believe the worst of the trade-related drag has passed, allowing growth to remain supported in the near term," he told Bernama. In today's session, banking stocks led gains among the FBM KLCI constituents. "The sector is often viewed as a proxy for economic momentum, and with GDP data broadly meeting market expectations, investors rotated into financials on the belief that a resilient macro backdrop will support sustained credit demand and earnings visibility. "This sectoral strength helped offset weakness in selected commodity-linked and export-oriented counters, which remain sensitive to shifts in global trade sentiment," he added. Externally, Mohd Sedek noted that immediate market attention is shifting to Trump's meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska later today, coinciding with the release of US retail sales data. "While headline risk from the geopolitical front may generate intraday volatility in late US trading, market beta is more likely to respond decisively at Monday's opening," he said. Among the heavyweights, CIMB added 5.0 sen to RM7.25, Maybank eased 4.0 sen to RM9.80, Tenaga Nasional went down 6.0 sen to RM13.62, IHH Healthcare declined 8.0 sen to RM6.82, while Public Bank was flat at RM4.45. Of the most active counters, Tanco perked up 1.0 sen to 73 sen, Oxford Innotech went up 3.5 sen to 44.5 sen, Zetrix AI inched down half-a-sen to 89.5 sen, Bina Puri was 1.5 sen lower at 35 sen, and TWL was flat at 2.5 sen.