Taiwan will soon face a financial crisis similar in type and scale to that which hit Japan in 1997, a researcher with the Asian Development Bank Institute (ADBI) said in Taipei yesterday.
"It could happen any time. It's likely [to happen] in the next year or so unless drastic measures are taken," Heather Montgomery told reporters yesterday after an international conference.
Attending the conference called "Asian Crisis," organized by the economics department of National Taiwan University, Montgomery, a visiting ADBI researcher, is expected to deliver her report today, detailing indicators that signal a Japan-type financial crisis in Taiwan.
"The decline in land prices significantly eroded the value of the collateral backing their loans. ... The collapse in the equity markets also hurt the banking sector," Montgomery said in her report. She argued that the nation's ratio of non-performing loans (NPLs) has hit an all time high of 12 percent and that major banks' return on assets (ROA) and return of equity (ROE) have also been declining since 1997.
Since the performance of domestic banks is closely tied to the performance of the equity and real-estate market, Montgomery said that Taiwan is not only suffering from "overbanking, but also a lack of exit from the sector" especially for badly-performing smaller financial institutions such as cooperatives and fishermen and farmers' credit associations.
As a result, Taiwan handled problems with the local banking sector by what she called a "convoy system" -- arranged mergers with healthier banks. Montgomery yesterday said that this is similar to measures taken by Japan and, by doing so, banking problems are not solved but prolonged and left for healthier banks to deal with.
The experience and causes of problems in Taiwan's banking sector thus far closely resemble those in the early stages of Japan's banking crisis, the report said.
"Banking crises are often preceded by slowing economic activity, often following a boom, and financial liberalization," Montgomery quoted a study by Graciela Kaminsky and Carmen Reinhart in 1999 as saying.
While identifying a banking crisis as "the closure, mergering, takeover, or large-scale government assistance of an important financial institution that marks the start of a string of similar outcomes for other financial institutions," Japan's banking crisis can be dated as beginning in November 1997, when the Takushoku Bank, one of the top 20 banks, failed, the report said.
Following that criteria, Taiwan may have yet to experience a major bank failure, but all threshold indicators in Kaminsky and Reinhart's study, which have correctively predicted banking crises in other Asian countries, strongly signal an upcoming banking crisis in Taiwan, Montgomery concluded.
The ADBI researcher yesterday further commented on the use of government funds in bailing out troubled banks in Japan, saying that after securing capital injections from the government, "banks did not really change their business practices."
In response to Montgomery's conclusions, Central Bank Governor Perng Fai-nan (
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) would not produce its most advanced technologies in the US next year, Minister of Economic Affairs J.W. Kuo (郭智輝) said yesterday. Kuo made the comment during an appearance at the legislature, hours after the chipmaker announced that it would invest an additional US$100 billion to expand its manufacturing operations in the US. Asked by Taiwan People’s Party Legislator-at-large Chang Chi-kai (張啟楷) if TSMC would allow its most advanced technologies, the yet-to-be-released 2-nanometer and 1.6-nanometer processes, to go to the US in the near term, Kuo denied it. TSMC recently opened its first US factory, which produces 4-nanometer
PROTECTION: The investigation, which takes aim at exporters such as Canada, Germany and Brazil, came days after Trump unveiled tariff hikes on steel and aluminum products US President Donald Trump on Saturday ordered a probe into potential tariffs on lumber imports — a move threatening to stoke trade tensions — while also pushing for a domestic supply boost. Trump signed an executive order instructing US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick to begin an investigation “to determine the effects on the national security of imports of timber, lumber and their derivative products.” The study might result in new tariffs being imposed, which would pile on top of existing levies. The investigation takes aim at exporters like Canada, Germany and Brazil, with White House officials earlier accusing these economies of
Teleperformance SE, the largest call-center operator in the world, is rolling out an artificial intelligence (AI) system that softens English-speaking Indian workers’ accents in real time in a move the company claims would make them more understandable. The technology, called accent translation, coupled with background noise cancelation, is being deployed in call centers in India, where workers provide customer support to some of Teleperformance’s international clients. The company provides outsourced customer support and content moderation to global companies including Apple Inc, ByteDance Ltd’s (字節跳動) TikTok and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd. “When you have an Indian agent on the line, sometimes it’s hard
PROBE CONTINUES: Those accused falsely represented that the chips would not be transferred to a person other than the authorized end users, court papers said Singapore charged three men with fraud in a case local media have linked to the movement of Nvidia’s advanced chips from the city-state to Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) firm DeepSeek (深度求索). The US is investigating if DeepSeek, the Chinese company whose AI model’s performance rocked the tech world in January, has been using US chips that are not allowed to be shipped to China, Reuters reported earlier. The Singapore case is part of a broader police investigation of 22 individuals and companies suspected of false representation, amid concerns that organized AI chip smuggling to China has been tracked out of nations such