ING’s Chief Economist for Higher China, Lynn Music, highlights that Taiwan’s March commerce information far exceeded expectations, with exports and imports surging and the commerce surplus greater than doubling year-on-year within the first quarter of 2026. The report stresses Taiwan’s rising dependence on tech-related exports, rising export costs, and important upside surprises which can be prompting an improve to 2026 GDP progress forecasts regardless of energy-related dangers.
Tech-led commerce growth reshapes progress outlook
“Regardless of the upside shock in import progress, the growth in exports far outweighed the quicker imports after we take a look at the commerce stability. Taiwan’s commerce stability rose to a five-month excessive of USD 21.3bn, whereas its 1Q26 commerce surplus rose to USD 53.0bn, which was up 124.2% YoY. This outperformance will doubtless translate to a different quarter of double-digit GDP progress when Taiwan studies its 1Q26 GDP progress on the finish of April.”
“The continued outperformance has led to Taiwan’s commerce and economic system turning into more and more concentrated and depending on this phase; the subcategory represented 84.0% of whole exports in 1Q26, up from 80.4% in 2025 and 73.2% in 2024.”
“Nonetheless, it is inconceivable to disregard the commerce surplus as soon as once more, greater than doubling within the first quarter of 2026, particularly when contemplating the final time this occurred in 4Q25, web exports added a whopping 11.9ppt to GDP progress. Market forecasts proceed to undershoot precise progress even after waves of upgrades. We’re taking one other shot right here, upgrading our 1Q26 GDP forecast to 11.5% YoY from 10.2%, and our full-year GDP forecast to eight.2% YoY from 6.7%.”
“Whereas we predict that Taiwan’s financial progress will be capable of soak up greater power costs so long as the worldwide tech growth and AI-related investments proceed, power shortages probably impacting manufacturing can be an entire completely different story. As such, our outlook is contingent on some type of decision being reached in Iran within the coming weeks or months, or not less than restricted provide disruption resulting in greater costs however not precise shortages.”
(This text was created with the assistance of an Synthetic Intelligence device and reviewed by an editor.)
