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India’s fifth spot in global market cap list under threat as Taiwan closes in

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By Bharath Rajeswaran and Vivek Kumar ‌M

May 26 (Reuters) - India's position as the fifth-largest global market by capitalisation is under ​threat as Taiwan closes in on the South Asian nation's spot, powered largely by the rapid rise of chip-making major Taiwan Semiconductor ⁠Manufacturing Co.

India's equity market, low on AI-investment opportunities and plagued with weak annual earnings growth, is one of the worst-performing global markets this year, with the Nifty 50 and BSE Sensex down about 8.5% and 10.8%, ​respectively.

The aggregate market capitalisation of stocks listed on the Taiwan stock exchange and OTC exchange stood at $4.89 trillion on Tuesday, just shy ‌of the market value of India's NSE-listed companies at $4.92 trillion, according to exchange data.

The United States, China, Japan, and Hong Kong occupy the top four spots.

"India has moved from being the darling of emerging markets to the runt ⁠of the litter among Asia's Big Four," global fund-flow and investment trends tracker Copley Fund ⁠Research said in its May report.

Average weights in funds tracked by Copley now stand at 9.94%, the first time India has dipped below 10% since January 2021, and a far cry from the highs of 17.47% back in August 2024, the report said.

"The Indian market does not offer direct equivalents to AI trade and companies ‌such as TSMC, Nvidia or large-scale AI infrastructure businesses," said Manish Bhandari, CEO and Portfolio Manager at Vallum ⁠Capital.

TSMC shares have surged over 44% so far in 2026, helping push Taiwan's ‌benchmark index 50.3% higher this year. The chip stock now accounts for ​about 42% of the benchmark by market value.

Geopolitical risk is another accelerator of foreign outflows, Bhandari said, citing oil-price volatility and India's dependence on imported energy, the India-Pakistan tensions, U.S. tariff uncertainty as well as ‌risks from erratic monsoons.

Foreign portfolio investors have offloaded domestic stocks worth $24.18 billion in ​2026 so far, surpassing 2025's record annual sales. ⁠In contrast, foreign inflows into Taiwan stood at about $25 billion this year so far.

The ‌fall in India's market cap is reflected in the decline ⁠in its share in the MSCI Global Standard index, which fell to 12.3% from a peak of 21% in September 2024, further curbing inflows as passive funds tracking the index limit their exposure to the South Asian ​nation's stocks.

"India is a diversified economy ‌but Taiwan is concentrated on certain companies. These companies are attracting foreign flows at this time," Tuhin Kanta Pandey, ⁠chief of the markets regulator Securities and Exchange Board ​of India (SEBI), said on Tuesday.

(Reporting by Bharath Rajeswaran and Vivek Kumar M in Bengaluru, Additional reporting by ​Faith Hung in Taipei; Editing by Janane Venkatraman)

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