Currencies June 24, 2026 02:49 PM

Barclays Sees Taiwan Dollar Remaining Steady as Tech Exports and CBC Actions Support Currency

Firm predicts limited TWD volatility in coming months as central bank intervention and a technology-driven export surge underpin the currency

By Maya Rios
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Barclays projects the Taiwan dollar will stay relatively stable in the near term, trading around the 31-32 range against the U.S. dollar. The bank cites ongoing strength in Taiwan's technology exports, a rising current account surplus and the Central Bank of China's willingness to intervene in foreign exchange markets as key supports for the currency.

Barclays Sees Taiwan Dollar Remaining Steady as Tech Exports and CBC Actions Support Currency
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Key Points

  • Barclays forecasts the Taiwan dollar will remain relatively stable, trading in the 31-32 range against the U.S. dollar in the near term.
  • Taiwan's technology export boom is expected to deliver record volumes this year, widening the current account surplus and supporting growth.
  • CBC has conducted two-way FX intervention this year and may resist TWD weakness to limit imported inflation; insurer hedge ratios fell to about 44.3% at end-April following regulatory and IFRS 17 changes.

Barclays expects the Taiwan dollar to remain relatively steady in the coming months, with the currency having traded within a 31-32 range against the U.S. dollar over the past six months since the Middle East conflict began. The bank highlights a combination of strong technology-sector export performance and central bank behavior as elements supporting this outlook.

The Central Bank of China (CBC) appears comfortable with the current USDTWD trading band but may act to resist further TWD weakness in order to limit pressures from imported inflation. So far this year, the CBC has engaged in two-way foreign exchange intervention with the stated aim of smoothing the TWD’s path.

Taiwan is benefiting from a boom in the technology sector, with record export volumes expected this year. Barclays points out that these elevated export flows are contributing to a growing current account surplus and are supportive of the macro growth outlook.

Notably, exporters have not increased conversions of their dollar proceeds to local currency. Much of the current account surplus is being recycled overseas rather than being converted into TWD, a dynamic that has implications for local foreign exchange demand.

Foreign equity outflows accelerated in June, adding another variable for currency movements. Barclays says further direction for the TWD will in part depend on whether technology stocks continue their gains, which could influence capital flows and exchange-rate behavior.

Regulatory and accounting changes have also affected domestic financial-sector behavior. Taiwan life insurance companies saw their hedge ratios drop to around 44.3% at the end of April, following regulatory adjustments and the implementation of IFRS 17 accounting rules. Barclays notes that these lower hedge ratios are reducing upward pressure on the TWD.

Since the Middle East conflict began, the TWD has outperformed most of its Asian currency peers. Barclays observes that the central bank may be biased against TWD weakness as a means to manage the risk of rising imported inflation.


Data and drivers to watch: the pace of technology export volumes, continued CBC two-way intervention, the evolution of foreign equity flows and the trajectory of insurer hedge ratios under IFRS 17.

Risks

  • Continued foreign equity outflows could put downward pressure on the TWD if capital leaves at pace - this would impact equity markets and currency liquidity.
  • If technology stocks stop gaining, currency movements could become more volatile as tech-driven export and capital-flow dynamics shift - this would affect the technology sector and broader export-related growth.
  • Changes in exporter conversion behavior or a reversal of CBC intervention would alter exchange-rate dynamics and could influence imported inflation and trade-exposed industries.

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