logo
No place to hide from any China-Taiwan conflict, investors say

No place to hide from any China-Taiwan conflict, investors say

Japan Times22-05-2025
Foreign investors could once barely imagine that China would invade Taiwan, but with Donald Trump as president of the United States, many view it as a tail-risk scenario they must prepare for, although they cannot find ways to do so.
The democratically governed island has long been a point of contention in U.S.-China relations, which have worsened since Trump entered the White House in January and launched tariffs that have rattled markets.
Investors fear that if China attempts to take over what it considers "sacred" territory, it risks a war that ushers in the end of Taiwan as a market with its own currency and identity, while the only other alternative is peace and the status quo.
For investors, the options therefore are to stay out completely or stay invested and hope for the best.
The risk of any invasion is difficult to hedge, said Mukesh Dave, chief investment officer at Aravali Asset Management, a global arbitrage fund based in Singapore.
"You can't settle any trades, the currency might disappear altogether," he said. "You either carry on like it's business as usual, or stay away."
The odds of China invading Taiwan have risen to 12% on betting platform Polymarket from close to none earlier this year.
Skittish foreign investors have pulled nearly $11 billion out of Taiwan stocks this year, although much of that was fueled by concerns over tariffs and the economy and they made a tentative return in May.
The benchmark index is down 6% this year.
While the United States has long stuck to a policy of "strategic ambiguity," on Taiwan, not making clear whether it would respond militarily to an attack, Trump's predecessor, Joe Biden, said during his time in office that U.S. forces would defend the island if China were to attack.
Rising geopolitical tensions from Trump's talk of a new global order and his disregard for Russia's takeover of swathes of Ukraine have raised doubts about such U.S. protection for Taiwan.
While Taiwan has lived under the threat of Chinese invasion since 1949, when the defeated Republic of China government fled there after losing a civil war with Mao Zedong's communists, the two sides have not exchanged shots in anger for decades.
Yet tension has simmered across the Taiwan Strait that separates the island from China. China's two-day war games around Taiwan in April further fueled investor worries.
The latest barbs came this week as Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te used a news conference marking his first year in office to pledge peace with China, only to have China's Taiwan Affairs Office say his remarks were a "two-faced tactic" and that Taiwan cannot "stop the inevitable trend of national reunification."
Lai, whom China calls a "separatist," rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims, saying only the island's people can decide their future.
Goldman Sachs' Cross-Strait Risk Index, which gauges the intensity of geopolitical risk by counting the number of news articles mentioning tension, has been rising since Trump won the U.S. election last year.
"If aggression toward Taiwan occurs, the investment decision becomes binary: stay exposed and absorb extreme volatility, or exit swiftly to preserve capital," said Steve Lawrence, chief investment officer of Balfour Capital Group.
The Taiwan investment rationale centers on Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), the world's largest contract chipmaker and the semiconductor industry's crown jewel. TSMC, which counts Nvidia and Apple as major clients and whose stock is listed in Taipei and New York, powered the stock market to record highs earlier this year.
"TSMC is so big that the expectation among investors is the United States will defend Taiwan, and defend it strongly," said Dave of Aravali. "That is the hope."
Yet TSMC has been in Trump's crosshairs as he unleashed tariffs in April and later delayed some duties to negotiate with foes and allies alike.
Local fund managers say while there may be no way for investors to hedge against an actual war, they do have options to hedge against possible market declines driven by fear of war.
However, Li Fang-kuo, chairman of Uni-President's securities investment advisory unit in Taiwan, is skeptical of the need for such hedging, as he believes foreign investors are misreading the level of risk of a cross-strait war.
"We shouldn't interpret it from a geopolitical risk perspective. The key issue is the tariffs."
Rich Nuzum, global chief investment strategist at pension fund adviser Mercer, said his clients that have looked at the risk found the best option was to diversify.
"I think stress-testing for crisis is being done more and more."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Japan plans to step up defenses against outside election interference
Japan plans to step up defenses against outside election interference

NHK

time4 hours ago

  • NHK

Japan plans to step up defenses against outside election interference

The Japanese government is considering stepping up measures to stop other countries interfering in elections through false online information or other means. The government says that in the Upper House election in July, some false information about political parties and candidates appears to have been spread by automated bots, possibly from overseas. Japan's National Security Secretariat and the Cabinet Intelligence and Research Office work together to handle such threats. But some critics say Japan's system is weaker than those of Western nations. They also say the development of AI technologies is making the risk of other countries interfering in elections even greater. The government is now considering setting up a new unit in the Cabinet Secretariat to play a central role in addressing the risk and making legal arrangements. Officials are also studying advanced measures used in other countries to establish what needs to be done in Japan. Digital Transformation Minister Taira Masaaki told NHK that Japan is now a target. He said elections are the foundation of democracy, and that it is important to bolster the country's defenses to prevent foreign interference through false online information.

Myanmar's Rakhine State Sees ‘Dramatic Rise' in Hunger Due to Conflict, Aid Cuts
Myanmar's Rakhine State Sees ‘Dramatic Rise' in Hunger Due to Conflict, Aid Cuts

The Diplomat

time4 hours ago

  • The Diplomat

Myanmar's Rakhine State Sees ‘Dramatic Rise' in Hunger Due to Conflict, Aid Cuts

Myanmar's conflict-torn Rakhine State has witnessed a 'dramatic rise in hunger' due to the continuing civil war and funding cuts from major foreign donors, including the United States, the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) said this week. Rakhine, which borders Bangladesh in Myanmar's west, has seen some of the most intense fighting in the four years since the military's seizure of power in February 2021. In a statement on Tuesday, the WFP said that in central Rakhine, the number of families not able to afford to meet basic food needs had risen to 57 percent, up from 33 percent in December 2024. It said that the situation in the northern part of the state was likely much worse 'due to active conflict and access issues.' The WFP said that reports from its Community Feedback Mechanism also revealed 'an alarming rise in distress signals' in Rakhine. 'Families are being forced to take desperate measures to survive: rising debt, begging, domestic violence, school drop-outs, social tensions, and even human trafficking,' it stated. The WFP said that the crisis was 'being driven by prolonged conflict, severe movement restrictions, soaring food prices and the reduction of support due to a significant decrease in humanitarian funding.' Since late 2023, Rakhine State has seen heated battles between the Myanmar army and the Arakan Army (AA), which is fighting to establish an ethnic Rakhine homeland in western Myanmar. The AA claims that it has established effective control over 14 of Rakhine State's 17 township centers, as well as one township in neighboring Chin State, but the Myanmar military is desperately fighting to hold onto the three coastal townships that are still under its control. This has prompted it to blockade important roads both within Rakhine and between it and neighboring states, closing off vital trade routes. The situation in Rakhine has been compounded by funding withdrawals, the WFP said, noting that this had forced it to cut lifesaving support to more than 1 million people across Myanmar in April. While the WFP statement did not mention it, a major cause is clearly U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to gut the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) earlier this year. In March, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that 83 percent of USAID programs had been permanently cut and that the remaining 17 percent would be managed by the State Department. According to the AFP news agency, the U.S. was the WFP's largest donor in 2024, funding nearly half of the $9.7 billion of contributions it secured from international donors. The shuttering of USAID has affected many projects in Rakhine State, where organizations providing healthcare and other support to communities in Rakhine State have reportedly been forced to cease operations. This has also had deleterious impacts on the refugee camps across Rakhine's border with Bangladesh, which are home to around 1 million Muslim Rohingya, most of whom were driven out of Rakhine State by the Myanmar military in 2017. In May, Refugees International warned that 'drastic U.S. aid cuts – compounded by smaller reductions from other donors – have had widespread negative impacts on the Rohingya community and are undermining prospects for durable solutions for refugees.' A similar situation prevails at the refugee camps that still dot Thailand's border with Myanmar. There, hospitals serving more than 100,000 refugees were forced to close after the International Rescue Committee (IRC), which funds the medical clinics, wound up its operations in January due to the withdrawal of U.S. funding.

Japan eyes tax relief for barrier-free movie theaters
Japan eyes tax relief for barrier-free movie theaters

Japan Times

time4 hours ago

  • Japan Times

Japan eyes tax relief for barrier-free movie theaters

The Cultural Affairs Agency is considering providing tax relief to operators of movie theaters if they renovate them to improve accessibility for people with disabilities, officials said. The initiative aims to help people enjoy cultural and artistic activities regardless of their disability. The agency plans to submit this proposal as part of its tax reform requests for fiscal 2026, which starts in April next year. Currently, operators of theaters and music halls can get a one-third reduction in the fixed property and city planning taxes if they carry out barrier-free renovations that meet government standards. While the agency plans to request that cinema operators be added to the list of businesses eligible for the tax reduction, it will also ask for a two-year extension of the tax relief, which is set to expire at the end of fiscal 2025. Eligible barrier-free renovations are expected to include installing viewing spaces and restrooms for wheelchair users and widening corridors to allow wheelchair users to pass each other.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store