Taiwan’s stock market is now worth more than the United Kingdom’s, according to recent Bloomberg data, in a shift driven almost entirely by the insatiable global appetite for AI chips. The island’s listed companies carry a combined valuation of roughly $4.3 trillion, edging past Europe’s largest equity market, despite Taiwan’s economy being less than a quarter the size of the UK’s. South Korea, powered by Samsung and SK hynix, is roughly $140 billion behind and closing fast.
As for Taiwan’s stock market constituents, TSMC makes up the bulk, with a market cap of approximately US$1.98 trillion, or 40% of Taiwan’s entire stock market value. No other major economy has this degree of single-company dependence. By comparison, Apple represents roughly 7% of the S&P 500.
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South Korea’s market, KOSPI, has already overtaken both Germany and France this year and is up 44% in 2026. Samsung and SK hynix account for nearly half the index’s total weighting. The former’s share price has nearly quadrupled since the start of 2025, while SK hynix has risen roughly sixfold over the same period. These gains reflect the ongoing memory supercycle, with demand for HBM far exceeding current production capacity.
The disparity between these semiconductor-heavy Asian markets and Europe highlights how narrowly the financial benefits of the AI infrastructure boom are distributed. Taiwan’s GDP is roughly $977 billion, according to IMF estimates, versus the UK’s $4.3 trillion. While the gap between those two economies hasn’t changed, the gap between their stock markets has.
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