UBS analysts indicate that alterations in Taiwan's life insurance regulatory landscape have diminished the probability of a sudden surge in the USD/TWD exchange rate akin to the spike observed during April-May 2025. Since June 2025, the USD/TWD rate has climbed from approximately 29 to 31.6; however, this movement is primarily considered a market correction rather than the onset of a persistent strengthening trend.
The recent uptick is viewed as markets balancing after a notable rally in the Taiwanese dollar, cautioning against extending this pattern as indicative of future movements. Crucially, foreign exchange hedging costs have fallen meaningfully, especially within the Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) market. The 12-month USD/TWD NDF hedging cost dropped to 0.6% annually, considerably lower than the onshore equivalent of roughly 2.1% per annum.
These reduced hedging expenses are likely to draw increased hedging activity from Taiwan's life insurance companies. Despite potential transitions from foreign exchange hedging practices to capital buffering dictated by risk assessments, these insurers remain obligated to establish substantial reserves for FX volatility. With total net foreign assets amounting to TWD 15 trillion (about $474.7 billion), they need to expand their FX volatility reserves substantially—from the current TWD 384 billion ($12.2 billion) to an estimated TWD 1.5 trillion ($47.5 billion). This necessitates accumulating a shortfall of roughly TWD 1.12 trillion ($35.3 billion) over a period.
UBS forecasts the USD/TWD exchange rate to decline to around 30.3 by the close of 2026, interpreting the recent rise as a temporary pullback rather than a fundamental directional shift. Insurance and foreign exchange markets, especially firms involved in hedging and managing currency risk, are directly impacted by these developments. The broader financial sector also faces adjustments due to evolving regulatory and capital reserve requirements.