Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing hit a record closing high on Friday after Taiwan’s financial regulator changed how much local funds can put into a single stock.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited, TSM
The Financial Supervisory Commission raised the investment cap from 10% to 25% for local equity funds and actively managed ETFs that invest solely in Taiwanese stocks. The new limit applies only to companies with a weighting above 10% in the Taiwan Stock Exchange.
TSMC is the only company that meets that threshold. It holds around 44% of Taiwan’s benchmark index, making it the clear and only beneficiary of the rule change.
TSMC’s Taiwan-listed stock closed up 5% at NT$2,185 — a record high. That put its market cap firmly at the top of Asia’s rankings.
Its ADRs were up 3.3% at $395.49 in premarket trading on Friday. Each ADR represents five ordinary shares, putting the implied share price at around $79.10.
That’s a meaningful premium over the Taiwan-listed price of roughly $69.40 per share at current exchange rates. The ADRs have historically traded at a premium because they’re easier for international investors to access.
The rule change may bring those two prices closer together. With local funds now able to hold larger positions in TSMC, more domestic money can flow into the Taiwan-listed stock — potentially pushing it closer to the ADR price.
Whether that gap closes significantly depends on how aggressively fund managers actually move to increase their TSMC positions under the new framework.
TSMC’s stock was already running hot before Friday. Its share price had surged roughly 150% over the past year, driven by strong demand for AI chips and a string of earnings beats.
The company recently posted first-quarter results that beat estimates, adding further momentum to the rally heading into Friday’s session.
TSMC is the world’s largest contract chip maker, producing advanced semiconductors for clients including Apple and Nvidia. Its position in the AI supply chain has made it one of the most closely watched stocks globally.
Friday’s move was driven specifically by the domestic regulatory change, not a new earnings release or product announcement.
The regulatory update was announced Thursday and came into effect after the regulator issued a formal order on Friday.
Other large-cap Taiwanese stocks also moved higher on Friday following the rule change, though none had as direct a connection to the new threshold as TSMC.
TSMC’s ADRs were trading at $395.49 in premarket, up 3.3% on the day.
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