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Tuesday · May 26, 2026
Taiwan Overtakes India As World's Fifth-Largest Stock Market

Taiwan Overtakes India As World's Fifth-Largest Stock Market

(Bloomberg) - Taiwan overtook India in stock market value, powered mainly by a breakneck rally in the world’s largest chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.

The island’s market capitalization climbed to $4.95 trillion as of Monday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. India’s value has dropped to $4.92 trillion. Taiwan’s stock market is now the fifth largest in the world, behind only the US, mainland China, Japan and Hong Kong.

Taiwan’s ascent up the global equity rankings is largely driven by TSMC, which now accounts for about 42% of the benchmark index, representing intense market concentration. The chipmaker’s shares have rallied 46% this year as it has benefited from the artificial intelligence trade, in which its semiconductors have a dominant market position.

The surge in the island’s market value highlights intense optimism in AI that is triggering a global rally in tech shares, disproportionately benefiting manufacturing hubs such as Taiwan and South Korea. India, on the other hand, is grappling with surging energy cost, slowing corporate earnings growth and the lack of companies directly linked to the AI buildout.

“Taiwan’s rising market capitalization is fundamentally a reflection of its heavy concentration in tech hardware, which is currently at the center of the AI investment cycle,” said Yi Ping Liao, a fund manager at Franklin Templeton. “Markets with limited exposure to tech hardware are increasingly being overshadowed by tech hardware–heavy markets such as Taiwan and Korea.”

The Taiex Index fell 0.3% on Tuesday. The gauge remains among the world’s best performers this year, having risen more than 50%. TSMC shares closed 1.7% lower.

New regulations are also in TSMC’s favor. Taiwan’s financial regulator last month increased the limit that domestic funds can invest in a single stock. Under the new guideline, funds that invest solely in Taiwanese stocks can hold up to 25% of their net assets in any listed company whose weighting exceeds 10% in the Taiwan Stock Exchange, up from a previous limit of 10%. Currently, only TSMC meets the criterion.

The change may help lure in more than $6 billion of inflows to TSMC, JPMorgan Chase & Co. said in a note.

While Taiwan has overtaken in market value, India’s $4.15 trillion-dollar economy — among the fastest growing in the world — still trumps the island’s $977 billion gross domestic product, according to International Monetary Fund estimates.

Indian stocks have fallen this year amid record foreign outflows, driven by elevated valuations and a weakening rupee. Higher energy costs have also stoked inflation concerns and clouded growth prospects.

Global funds have sold nearly $24 billion of local equities so far this year as they chased the AI boom in Taiwan and Korea. India’s gauge is down 8%, heading for its first annual drop after a decade of gains. India’s weight in the MSCI emerging markets index has also fallen to about 12% from 19% last year.

“India has been quite ignored for the better part of two years,” Alison Shimada, portfolio manager at Allspring Global Investments, told Bloomberg TV on Monday. “It is an expensive market so one has to be selective, but I think in terms of financialization of savings, it is very prominent in India and people are moving into financial assets,” she said.

By Bernadette Toh and Ashutosh Joshi
May 26, 2026

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