Foreign exchange losses caused by a stronger Taiwan dollar led funds managed by the Bureau of Labor Funds to lose NT$92.9 billion (US$3.18 billion) in May, bureau data showed yesterday.
Accumulated losses, which reflect decreases in the value of assets in the funds’ portfolios and/or declines in income on investments, rose to NT$291.97 billion in the first five months of this year after the loss in May.
While concerns over trade friction between the United States and China eased, sending major markets higher, the rapid appreciation of the Taiwan dollar against the US dollar resulted in forex losses in overseas assets when their value was converted to the Taiwan dollar.
Photo: CNA
In May, the local currency soared NT$2.088, or nearly 7 percent, against the US dollar amid market speculation that the US had pressured Taiwan to allow its currency to appreciate as part of ongoing trade and tariff negotiations between the two sides.
Taiwan’s central bank denied, however, that it came under pressure from Washington.
The Taiex, the weighted index on the Taiwan Stock Exchange, fell 7.33 percent in May, but the MSCI World Index rose 5.32 percent and the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Index grew 5.28 percent.
According to the bureau, 56.91 percent of the investments made by the labor funds were made overseas and the remaining 43.09 percent was invested domestically.
The combined value of the funds managed by the bureau, including the Labor Pension Fund, the Labor Retirement Fund, the Labor Insurance Fund, the Employment Insurance Fund, and the Arrear Wage Payment Fund, totaled NT$6.89 trillion as of the end of May.
Based on that amount, the NT$291.97 billion losses represented a rate of return of minus 4.26 percent in the first five months of this year, according to the bureau.
The value of assets in the new Labor Pension Fund, launched in 2015, totaled NT$4.55 trillion at the end of May, the highest of any fund, and its rate of return so far this year to the end of May was minus 4.32 percent, the bureau said.
The Labor Retirement Fund, which has been in place since 1984, had about NT$1.03 trillion in assets as of the end of May, with a rate of return of minus 4.17 percent, the bureau said.
Meanwhile, the Bureau of Public Service Pension Fund said yesterday that the Public Service Pension Fund managed by the bureau had NT$45.32 billion in losses in the first five months of 2025, with a rate of return of minus 4.52 percent.
AGING: While Japan has 22 submarines, Taiwan only operates four, two of which were commissioned by the US in 1945 and 1946, and transferred to Taiwan in 1973 Taiwan would need at least 12 submarines to reach modern fleet capabilities, CSBC Corp, Taiwan chairman Chen Cheng-hung (陳政宏) said in an interview broadcast on Friday, citing a US assessment. CSBC is testing the nation’s first indigenous defense submarine, the Hai Kun (海鯤, Narwhal), which is scheduled to be delivered to the navy next month or in July. The Hai Kun has completed torpedo-firing tests and is scheduled to undergo overnight sea trials, Chen said on an SET TV military affairs program. Taiwan would require at least 12 submarines to establish a modern submarine force after assessing the nation’s operational environment and defense
A white king snake that frightened passengers and caused a stir on a Taipei MRT train on Friday evening has been claimed by its owner, who would be fined, Taipei Rapid Transit Corp (TRTC) said yesterday. A person on Threads posted that he thought he was lucky to find an empty row of seats on Friday after boarding a train on the Bannan (Blue) Line, only to spot a white snake with black stripes after sitting down. Startled, he jumped up, he wrote, describing the encounter as “terrifying.” “Taipei’s rat control plan: Release snakes on the metro,” one person wrote in reply, referring
The coast guard today said that it had disrupted "illegal" operations by a Chinese research ship in waters close to the nation and driven it away, part of what Taipei sees a provocative pattern of China's stepped up maritime activities. The coast guard said that it on Thursday last week detected the Chinese ship Tongji (同濟號), which was commissioned only last year, 29 nautical miles (54km) southeast of the southern tip of Taiwan, although just outside restricted waters. The ship was observed lowering ropes into the water, suspected to be the deployment of scientific instruments for "illegal" survey operations, and the coast
Taiwan’s two cases of hantavirus so far this year are on par with previous years’ case numbers, and the government is coordinating rat extermination work, so there should not be any outbreaks, Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Director-General Philip Lo (羅一鈞) said today in an interview with the Liberty Times (the Taipei Times’ sister newspaper). An increase in rat sightings in Taipei and New Taipei City has raised concerns about the spread of hantavirus, as rats can carry the disease. In January, a man in his 70s who lived in Taipei’s Daan District (大安) tested positive posthumously for hantavirus, Taiwan’s