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Taiwan overtakes India as world’s 5th largest stock market

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Taiwan overtakes India as world's 5th largest stock market
Taiwan overtook India in stock market value, powered mainly by a breakneck rally in the world’s largest chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.

The island’s market capitalization climbed to $4.95 trillion as of Monday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. India’s value has dropped to $4.92 trillion. Taiwan’s stock market is now the fifth largest in the world, behind only the US, mainland China, Japan and Hong Kong.

Taiwan’s ascent up the global equity rankings is largely driven by TSMC, which now accounts for about 42% of the benchmark index, representing intense market concentration. The chipmaker’s shares have rallied 49% this year as it has benefited from the artificial intelligence trade, in which its semiconductors have a dominant market position.

The surge in the island’s market value highlights intense optimism in AI that is triggering a global rally in tech shares, disproportionately benefiting manufacturing hubs such as Taiwan and South Korea. India, on the other hand, is grappling with surging energy cost, slowing corporate earnings growth and the lack of companies directly linked to the AI buildout.

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456914832Bloomberg

“Taiwan’s rising market capitalization is fundamentally a reflection of its heavy concentration in tech hardware, which is currently at the center of the AI investment cycle,” said Yi Ping Liao, a fund manager at Franklin Templeton. “Markets with limited exposure to tech hardware are increasingly being overshadowed by tech hardware–heavy markets such as Taiwan and Korea.”


New regulations are also in TSMC’s favor. Taiwan’s financial regulator last month increased the limit that domestic funds can invest in a single stock. Under the new guideline, funds that invest solely in Taiwanese stocks can hold up to 25% of their net assets in any listed company whose weighting exceeds 10% in the Taiwan Stock Exchange, up from a previous limit of 10%. Currently, only TSMC meets the criterion.
The change may help lure in more than $6 billion of inflows to Taiwan, JPMorgan Chase & Co. said in a research note.While Taiwan has overtaken in market value, India’s $4.15 trillion-dollar economy — among the fastest growing in the world — still trumps the island’s $977 billion gross domestic product, according to International Monetary Fund estimates.

456914964Bloomberg

Indian stocks have fallen this year amid record foreign outflows, driven by elevated valuations and a weakening rupee. Higher energy costs have also stoked inflation concerns and clouded growth prospects.

Global funds have sold nearly $24 billion of local equities so far this year as they chased the AI boom in Taiwan and Korea. India’s gauge is down 8%, heading for its first annual drop after a decade of gains. India’s weight in the MSCI emerging markets index has also fallen to about 12% from 19% last year.

“India has been quite ignored for the better part of two years,” Alison Shimada, portfolio manager at Allspring Global Investments, told Bloomberg TV on Monday. “It is an expensive market so one has to be selective, but I think in terms of financialization of savings, it is very prominent in India and people are moving into financial assets,” she said.

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Navy chief's warning over sea lanes, submarine politicisation

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Navy chief's warning over sea lanes, submarine politicisation

The head of Australia’s Navy, who will soon lead Australia’s defence force more broadly, says access to global sea lanes has become an existential crisis for the nation.

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Business

Bank holiday sun boosts South West tourism

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Bank holiday sun boosts South West tourism

Business owners in Devon and Cornwall describe how “the sun just brings everybody out”.

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Business

BOJ’s new trend gauge shows inflation exceeding target

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BOJ’s new trend gauge shows inflation exceeding target


BOJ’s new trend gauge shows inflation exceeding target

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MinRes, Ganfeng invest $490m in Mt Marion underground lithium expansion

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MinRes, Ganfeng invest $490m in Mt Marion underground lithium expansion

Mineral Resources and its JV partner are investing $490 million in an underground expansion of its Mt Marion lithium mine, a move it expects will pay off in less than a year.

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ECB should raise rates in June, even if Iran peace deal is struck, Schnabel says

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ECB should raise rates in June, even if Iran peace deal is struck, Schnabel says


ECB should raise rates in June, even if Iran peace deal is struck, Schnabel says

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TACHI-S Co., Ltd. 2026 Q4 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (OTCMKTS:TCISF) 2026-05-26

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

This article was written by

Seeking Alpha’s transcripts team is responsible for the development of all of our transcript-related projects. We currently publish thousands of quarterly earnings calls per quarter on our site and are continuing to grow and expand our coverage. The purpose of this profile is to allow us to share with our readers new transcript-related developments. Thanks, SA Transcripts Team

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Ferrari unveils first fully electric car

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Ferrari unveils first fully electric car

The new Luce model has divided opinion on social media, and comes despite intense pressure from Chinese EV makers.

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Asia Pacific Firms Shift to Multi-Hybrid Cloud Amid AI and Technical Debt

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The Environmental Cost of AI’s Gold Rush

A landmark IDC study commissioned by Dell Technologies reveals a sweeping and far-reaching infrastructure transformation currently underway across eleven distinct Asia-Pacific markets, signaling a profound shift in the way organizations across the region are building, managing, and modernizing their technology foundations.

Key takeaways

  • 46% of Asia Pacific organizations rank cloud migration as their top infrastructure modernization priority, yet most have not fully built out strong hybrid environments.
  • 94% of surveyed enterprises are considering or planning cloud repatriation, signaling a decisive shift toward multi-hybrid models driven by data sovereignty, cost, and security concerns.
  • AI workloads and rising technical debt are accelerating the move to private and hybrid cloud, with enterprises demanding open, scalable architectures that avoid vendor lock-in.

Across the Asia Pacific, the era of all-in public cloud adoption is giving way to something more nuanced. Pressured by tightening IT budgets, mounting technical debt, and the voracious compute demands of artificial intelligence, enterprises throughout the region are engineering a quiet but decisive infrastructure reset, one built on the flexibility of multi-hybrid cloud.

That is the central finding of a comprehensive new study commissioned by Dell Technologies and conducted by IDC, published in the InfoBrief titled Unlocking Business Agility Through Private Cloud Modernization in Asia/Pacific. Drawing on multiple IDC data sources and surveys conducted in 2025 across eleven markets, including Australia, Greater China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand, the research paints a vivid picture of a region in the midst of fundamental change.

Cloud Migration as a Top Imperative

The numbers are striking. Nearly half of all organizations in the Asia Pacific, 46%, have named cloud migration as their top strategy for infrastructure modernization, citing the need for resilient, adaptable IT environments that can evolve alongside rapidly shifting business demands.

Yet ambition is outpacing execution. While 46 percent of organizations see cloud migration as their top modernization priority, fewer have fully built strong hybrid environments, a gap that signals both a significant challenge and a substantial opportunity for technology vendors and enterprise IT leaders alike.

The Great Cloud Rethink

If the first wave of digital transformation was defined by a rush to the public cloud, the second wave appears to be more considered. Organizations today are shifting away from single-provider or rigid cloud-first strategies, with leading enterprises embracing multi-hybrid cloud models that require infrastructures that are sufficiently dynamic, reliable, and agile to support new business models. These architectures allow enterprises to build purpose-fit digital ecosystems and deploy or migrate applications seamlessly across private, public, or hybrid environments.

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Nowhere is this recalibration more apparent than in the trend toward cloud repatriation, the practice of moving workloads back from public cloud environments to on-premises or private infrastructure. 94% of surveyed organizations in the Asia Pacific indicated they are considering or planning some degree of cloud repatriation, a figure that underscores how profoundly priorities around data control, security, and cost management have shifted.

Data sovereignty in cloud computing is emerging as a key factor influencing how organizations design their cloud environments. In India, this is especially visible as companies rethink where workloads should reside, often choosing to move some of them back from public cloud environments to maintain better control over security and performance.

AI: The Infrastructure Accelerant

Artificial intelligence is no longer a peripheral consideration in cloud strategy; it is increasingly its primary driver. AI is rapidly becoming a major priority for organizations seeking to unlock greater value from their data, with modern AI initiatives requiring high-performance compute, scalable storage, and robust networking that carefully planned hybrid and private cloud environments can deliver.

ai agent

The maturation of enterprise IT is closely linked to hybrid and multi-cloud approaches, with organizations seeing hybrid cloud as the most efficient, practical path to leverage AI’s capabilities while managing the challenges of scale, security, and compliance required by modern data workloads.

Technical Debt: A Ticking Clock

One of the study’s more sobering findings concerns the accumulation of technical debt across the region. The Asia Pacific region is beginning to experience the impact of technical debt that is expected to grow significantly, making future-proofing all the more critical to ensure organizational sustainability.

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Organizations are responding by seeking open, scalable architectures that grow with their needs while avoiding vendor lock-in. The integration of modern private clouds leverages disaggregated infrastructure, giving organizations the power to scale compute, storage, and networking independently while avoiding the risks and costs of being locked into restrictive cycles, supporting faster innovation, less complexity, and greater business value.

The path is not without obstacles. The top three challenges in cloud journeys cited by respondents were the integration of existing infrastructure, maintaining cybersecurity and compliance, and managing complex hybrid or multi-cloud environments.

Industry Voices

Dell Technologies executives were unambiguous about what the findings signal for enterprise strategy. “Organizations are telling us that continuous modernization isn’t just an IT directive, it’s a business necessity,” said Sumash Singh, Managing Director, South Asia and Emerging Markets at Dell Technologies. “With the rise of multi-hybrid cloud and new demands from AI, companies want the freedom to choose, evolve, and innovate, backed by flexible, open architectures.”

The Road Ahead

The IDC findings arrive at an inflection point for technology investment across Asia Pacific. The move toward multi-hybrid models is helping businesses align workloads with cost and performance needs more effectively. By distributing workloads across different environments, enterprises can optimize spending while ensuring that critical applications receive the resources they need, a balance between cost and performance that is becoming a key part of modern cloud strategy.

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For technology leaders, the message is clear: the question is no longer whether to modernize, but how quickly infrastructure can be transformed to meet the twin demands of AI readiness and operational resilience. In the Asia Pacific, that transformation is already well underway.

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GR books multiple contracts, Brightstar reaches FID

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GR books multiple contracts, Brightstar reaches FID

Tony Patrizi-led GR Engineering Services has secured multiple EPC contracts, with one of these enacted courtesy of Brightstar Resources’ Goldfields Hub reaching FID.

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Sunday Times best places to work list 2026: 22 South West companies named

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Business Live

All the businesses included are headquartered in the West Country

The team at Goughs Solicitors which is headquartered in Wiltshire

The team at Goughs Solicitors which is headquartered in Wiltshire(Image: Goughs)

A South West brewery group, law firm and free range egg producer have been named among the best places to work in the UK. The annual rankings are compiled by the Sunday Times and its research partner – employee experience platform WorkL – and recognise the country’s top employers.

There were 22 South West companies included for 2026, with businesses across a range of industries such as hospitality, technology, legal, financial services and education.

The list – now in its fourth year – highlights the best small, medium, big and very big organisations for workplace culture – from those with hybrid working policies and career development opportunities to unique initiatives that support staff.

Inclusion is determined by an independent survey that covers six aspects of employee engagement, such as wellbeing, empowerment and job satisfaction, and is voted for by a company’s staff.

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West Country pub operator and brewer Butcombe was recognised for the second year running. The Wrington-based group – formerly known as Liberation – said its inclusion reflected “the environment we have worked hard to create”.

Jonathan Lawson, chief executive of Butcombe Group, said: “At the heart of our success is the dedication and collaboration shown by our people every day, whether they are welcoming guests, creating memorable moments, or supporting one another behind the scenes.

“In what continues to be a challenging environment for the hospitality sector, their commitment to delivering exceptional experiences for our customers continues to make a real difference.”

Wiltshire-based law firm Goughs Solicitors, which employs some 130 staff across seven offices, was included for the third year in a row.

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“We are incredibly proud to receive this recognition from The Sunday Times,” said Matthew Drew, managing partner at Goughs Solicitors. “To be acknowledged consistently in this way is a real reflection of the firm’s culture and the values that guide us.

“As our people are at the centre of everything we do, we strive to creating a workplace where colleagues feel valued, supported, and empowered to achieve their full potential, both professionally and personally.”

Elsewhere, Cheltenham-based business transformation firm Commercial also made the list. The company employs nearly 300 people and generates an annual turnover of around £98m.

Recent employee-focused developments include the refurbishment of its headquarters, with workspaces tailored to support neurodiverse staff. It also has a multi-faith room and dedicated spaces for employees with children or dogs.

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Commercial: Back row: Dean Chester, Katie Lund, Jay Colling, Zaneta Rydzewska, Larrisa Castro. Front Row:  Guy Ward, Craig Baldwin, Jenny Hodgson (People & Culture Director), Simone Hindmarch (Co-Founder and MD), Craig Tomes, Jordan Thomas

Commercial: Back row: Dean Chester, Katie Lund, Jay Colling, Zaneta Rydzewska, Larrisa Castro. Front Row: Guy Ward, Craig Baldwin, Jenny Hodgson (People & Culture Director), Simone Hindmarch (Co-Founder and MD), Craig Tomes, Jordan Thomas(Image: Copyright © 2026 Fred van Leeuwen)

Simone Hindmarch, co-founder and managing director of Commercial, said the recognition was “especially meaningful” because it reflected the culture the business had worked to build over more than three decades.

“This means a huge amount to us because it’s based on what our people think and feel about working at Commercial. Right from the start, we wanted to create a company where people genuinely wanted to come to work, felt connected to the business and each other, and knew their voice mattered,” she said. “To have that recognised in this way is incredibly special.”

In other parts of the South West, Cornwall-based egg producer St Ewe Free Range Eggs also made the list, along with Swindon marketing agency Mole Digital and Exeter construction group Coreus.

Zoe Thomas, editor of The Sunday Times Best Places to Work, added: “In an evolving world of work Britain’s leading employers are helping staff forge careers that count today – and in the future. In turn, the Best Places to Work have the resilience to weather the current economic storms baked in, thanks to engaged workers who go above and beyond with a smile.

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“Our winning employers span sizes and sectors – from tiny charities and specialist law firms, to multinational fast-food chains and utility giants, and everywhere in between. The thread joining them is the belief that a happy workforce is a stepping stone to better performance, faster growth, and bigger profits.”

The South West companies on the Sunday Times best places to work list 2026

In alphabetical order…

  1. Awdry Law, Legal Services, Devizes, Wiltshire
  2. Butcombe Group, Hospitality, Bristol
  3. Commercial, Business and Management Services, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire
  4. Compass CHC, Legal Services, Barnstaple, Devon
  5. Coreus Group, Construction and Building Materials, Exeter
  6. Family Adventures Group, Education and Research, Weston-super-Mare, Somerset
  7. Goughs Solicitors, Legal Services, Melksham, Wiltshire
  8. Hall & Woodhouse, Hospitality, Blandford St Mary, Dorset
  9. InterWorks, Technology, Christchurch, Dorset
  10. iplicit, Technology, Bournemouth
  11. Joint Operations, Health and Social Care, Royal Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire
  12. Mole Digital, Marketing and Advertising, Swindon
  13. Oculus Legal Group, Business and Management Services, Bristol
  14. Paragon Skills, Education and Research, Bournemouth
  15. Parmenion, Financial Services, Bristol
  16. Rappor, Construction and Building Materials, Cheltenham
  17. Shaping Lives, Education and Research, Bournemouth
  18. St Ewe Free Range Eggs, Manufacturing of Consumer Goods, Truro, Cornwall
  19. Taxi Studio, Architecture & Design, Bristol
  20. The Cinnamon Trust, Non-Profit Organisations and Charities, Hayle, Cornwall
  21. Xpedite, Defence, Bath
  22. Zestec Renewable Energy, Energy and Utilities, Bournemouth
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