Taiwan’s stock market ended Tuesday slightly in the red, with the Taiwan Weighted Index falling 0.06% at the close. The decline was modest, but it reflected weakness across several industrial groups — particularly glass and electricity-related sectors, which weighed on overall sentiment.
Trading activity showed a mixed picture of investor confidence. Some companies posted sharp gains while others suffered steep drops, suggesting that money was rotating quickly rather than flowing in one clear direction. The narrow index move masked large swings beneath the surface.
One standout performer was Copartner Technology Corp (TW:3550), which surged 9.97% — up 1.70 points — to finish at 18.75 TWD, marking a new 52-week high. The jump signaled strong demand for the stock despite the broader market softness.
Two other firms also rallied sharply. Acelon Chemicals & Fiber Corp (TW:1466) climbed 9.90% (up 1.50 points) to 16.65 TWD, while Ta Liang Technology Co Ltd (TW:3167) advanced 9.83% (up 20.50 points) to 229.00 TWD in late trading. These moves showed that select industrial names still attracted buyers.
Big losers highlight market volatility
Losses were just as dramatic on the downside. Several stocks hit near-limit declines, illustrating how quickly sentiment can turn.
- Zinwell Corporation (TW:2485) fell 9.99% (down 4.60 points) to 41.45 TWD
- Gigastorage Corp (TW:2406) dropped 9.95% (down 3.25 points) to 29.40 TWD
- Chenbro Micom Co Ltd (TW:8210) slid 9.95% (down 108.00 points) to 977.00 TWD
The report did not specify how many stocks rose versus fell, but the wide gap between top gainers and losers suggested a choppy, stock-by-stock market rather than a broad trend.
Commodities and currency moves add caution
Global commodity prices also softened, reinforcing the cautious mood. U.S. crude oil for March delivery slipped 0.42% (down $0.27) to $64.09 per barrel, while Brent crude for April declined 0.30% (down $0.21) to $68.83 per barrel.
Gold moved lower as well: the April Gold Futures contract fell 0.36% (down $18.34) to $5,061.06 per troy ounce, signaling reduced safe-haven demand.
On the currency front, the Taiwanese dollar edged slightly stronger. USD/TWD fell 0.07% to 31.54, meaning fewer Taiwan dollars were needed to buy one U.S. dollar. The TWD/CNY rate was effectively flat at 0.22, changing only 0.05%.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Dollar Index Futures rose 0.08% to 96.76, indicating mild strength in the greenback globally even as it eased against Taiwan’s currency.
What this means for investors
Tuesday’s session offered no clear direction for Taiwan’s market. The tiny 0.06% index drop hides sharp individual stock swings, mixed commodity signals, and small but meaningful currency shifts. Investors appeared selective, rewarding a few strong names while punishing others aggressively.
For now, the market looks steady but fragile — moving sideways rather than breaking decisively higher or lower.


