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Taiwan's Q1 2026 Manufacturing PMI Surges to 58.5, Strong AI and Semiconductor Demand Drives Fastest Expansion in Nearly Four Years

2026-03-15

Core Overview: Taiwan's manufacturing sector is experiencing a strong recovery. According to the latest data, Taiwan's Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) for Q1 2026 climbed further to 58.5 from the previous reading of 57.2. Even with fewer working days due to the Lunar New Year holiday, the data defied the headwinds, marking five consecutive months in the expansion zone and recording the fastest pace of expansion in nearly four years since March 2022. This indicates that the overall manufacturing industry is in a highly active stage.

Key Components: Breaking down the components, the leading indicators—"New Orders" and "Production" indices—both demonstrated explosive momentum, surging to 63.7% and 59.8%, respectively. Among the six major industries, the Electronic and Optical industry performed the strongest, with its future six-month outlook index reaching a high of 66.7%. Additionally, the future six-month outlook index for the overall manufacturing sector also rose significantly by 3.1 percentage points to 64.1%, reflecting the market's high confidence in the future economic climate.

In-depth Attribution: The main driver of this wave of strong expansion comes from substantial order pulling in the technology sector. The Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research (CIER) pointed out that the continuously robust demand related to the AI and semiconductor supply chains is the biggest contributor. In addition to the sustained demand for high-end semiconductor manufacturing processes, memory and CPUs have also experienced price hikes and shortages, subsequently driving up rush orders for laptops and early stocking by clients. CIER President Lien Hsien-ming stated that Taiwan's exported high-tech products are highly favored by international clients; fully loaded orders and the industry's heat—defying the noise of US tariffs—have become the core engines supporting the PMI's continued upward trajectory.

Outlook and Risks: Looking ahead, in the short term (1-2 months), driven by AI business opportunities and semiconductor rush orders, the electronic and optical industry will maintain a state of scrambling for materials and high activity, ensuring the overall expansion trend of the manufacturing sector. However, in the medium term (3-6 months), three major risks must be closely monitored: First, escalating geopolitical conflicts, such as the war in the Middle East, have caused the raw material price index to break above 70% for two consecutive months, pushing up inflation and logistics freight costs; second, the variable of delayed supplier delivery times; finally, the transportation equipment industry contrarily plummeted by 10.3 percentage points, falling into contraction due to a wait-and-see approach toward US tariff policies. Related trade barriers remain a downside risk that needs to be guarded against in the future.

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