Taiwan, 1.875% 16may2055, TWD (FIGI BBG01T0J7JY7, A14106, TW000A141069, WKN A4EBHG)
国内債券, Senior Unsecured
国内債券, Senior Unsecured
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Taiwan is an island economy in East Asia with Taipei as its capital. The national currency is the New Taiwan dollar (TWD), and the economy is driven by technology, electronics, semiconductors, manufacturing, trade, financial services, and ...
Taiwan is an island economy in East Asia with Taipei as its capital. The national currency is the New Taiwan dollar (TWD), and the economy is driven by technology, electronics, semiconductors, manufacturing, trade, financial services, and domestic consumption. Taiwan has a developed financial system and an important local-currency debt market, although secondary-market liquidity can vary across instruments and maturities.
The Taiwan bonds market is represented by government securities, corporate bonds, bank debentures, financial bonds, convertible bonds, international bonds, and structured instruments. Historically, the market has been large in outstanding volume but less active in trading compared with some other Asian markets. Regulatory development, better settlement infrastructure, repo transactions, derivatives, and institutional participation remain important factors for improving trading activity. The Taiwan government bond market is centered on Central Government Bonds and Treasury Bills issued by the Ministry of Finance, with auctions conducted through the Central Bank of the Republic of China. Government bonds are generally issued across different maturities to finance fiscal needs and provide benchmark yields for the domestic fixed-income market. Treasury Bills are short-term instruments used for cash management and liquidity purposes. Taiwanese government bonds are held mainly by banks, insurance companies, securities firms, pension funds, investment funds, and other domestic institutional investors. They serve as reference instruments for interest rates, bank funding, corporate debt pricing, and portfolio management. The market also benefits from Taiwan's strong external position, large foreign exchange reserves, and stable financial infrastructure. The corporate segment includes bonds issued by banks, technology companies, industrial groups, utilities, and financial institutions. Taiwanese bonds are often plain-vanilla fixed-income instruments, while convertible bonds and international bonds provide additional funding channels for issuers. Structured notes and securitization products exist, but they remain smaller than the conventional bond market. For international investors, Taiwan bonds offer exposure to a high-income Asian economy with strong technology exports and a large domestic savings base. The market remains sensitive to interest rates, TWD movements, financial regulation, cross-border capital flows, and geopolitical risks, while continued market reforms may support deeper liquidity over time. |
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1 000 000
債券
80 234
株
175 910
ETF&投資信託
70 000
インデックス
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