The China Development Industrial Bank (中華開發), Taiwan's largest bank by market value, plans to merge with China United Trust & Investment Ltd (中聯信託), the Chinese-language media reported yesterday.
With the announcement, they become the latest banks to announce mergers under the government's plan to promote consolidation in the financial sector.
The reports did not cite sources on the bank merger, but said the merger would be announced tomorrow. Officials from the institutions could not be reached for comment yesterday.
"The merger would help the competitive landscape of Taiwan's financial sector after a longstanding status quo," said Spencer White, head of research at Merrill Lynch in Taipei.
The government has been trying to encourage bank mergers in Taiwan ahead of the nation's entry into the WTO. Taiwan has over 350 banks and cooperatives, many of them lacking the size or international experience to compete once the financial market opens to foreign firms.
Legislators passed a bank merger law on Nov. 24, and are considering a bill later this year that will allow banks, insurers, investment management companies and securities firms to be operated by one institution.
According to company president Benny Hu (
The government also has plans for Taiwan Cooperative Bank (台灣合作金庫) to take over rival Chinfon Bank (金豐).
The Central Weather Administration (CWA) yesterday said it expected to issue a sea warning for Typhoon Fung-Wong tomorrow, which it said would possibly make landfall near central Taiwan. As of 2am yesterday, Fung-Wong was about 1,760km southeast of Oluanpi (鵝鑾鼻), Taiwan’s southernmost point, moving west-northwest at 26kph. It is forecast to reach Luzon in the northern Philippines by tomorrow, the CWA said. After entering the South China Sea, Typhoon Fung-Wong is likely to turn northward toward Taiwan, CWA forecaster Chang Chun-yao (張峻堯) said, adding that it would likely make landfall near central Taiwan. The CWA expects to issue a land
Taiwan’s exports soared to an all-time high of US$61.8 billion last month, surging 49.7 percent from a year earlier, as the global frenzy for artificial intelligence (AI) applications and new consumer electronics powered shipments of high-tech goods, the Ministry of Finance said yesterday. It was the first time exports had exceeded the US$60 billion mark, fueled by the global boom in AI development that has significantly boosted Taiwanese companies across the international supply chain, Department of Statistics Director-General Beatrice Tsai (蔡美娜) told a media briefing. “There is a consensus among major AI players that the upcycle is still in its early stage,”
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