The MSCI Emerging Markets index used to be a story about India - now it's mostly a story about one chip company in Taiwan.
TSMC closed up 6.6% in Taipei on Thursday and pulled emerging market stocks higher for a third straight day, with Alibaba joining the rally as US-China trade talks fueled hopes for stronger AI demand.
Taiwan And Korea Now Make Up Nearly 40% Of The Benchmark
Investors who buy the MSCI EM benchmark think they're getting broad exposure to the developing world. They're actually getting a big bet on Taiwan and South Korea making the silicon that powers every AI model in production.
Taiwan Semiconductor's weight in the benchmark now sits at 14.2%, while India - once the index's growth darling - slipped to 11.94%. That gap of 227 basis points didn't exist a year ago.
Taiwan as a whole now makes up nearly 25% of the index, lifted by a 40% rally in TSMC shares and a Taiex that keeps hitting records.
Why? AI demand isn't just lifting US chip stocks. It's reshaping what an "emerging markets" portfolio actually owns.
We break down the moves quietly reshaping global indexes every weekday in Market Briefs - in five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you join.
TSMC's $52 Billion Capex Plan Keeps Pulling Demand Forward
TSMC plans to spend between $52 billion and $56 billion on new capacity this year - roughly the size of the annual revenue of every other big foundry combined.
The company makes the chips that Nvidia, Apple, and AMD design, which means when AI spending goes up, TSMC's order book goes up with it.
Korean memory makers are riding the same wave, with the Kospi surging more than 80% this year as Samsung and SK Hynix supply the high-bandwidth memory that sits next to every AI chip.
India's Weight Slipped As Taiwan Compounded
India's slide isn't really about a bad year, it's about a different one. Taiwan kept stacking AI-driven gains while Indian stocks gave back some of their earlier highs.
A weaker rupee made the relative shift mechanical, and the gap widened on its own as the rebalances rolled through.
Investors who bought emerging markets to get exposure to India's young population and growing middle class are now mostly paying for chip factories on an island 100 miles from China.
What To Watch
The MSCI EM index isn't the only benchmark the AI chip trade is quietly swallowing - the S&P 500's weighting in semiconductors also hit a record this year.
The bigger question for investors: how much of a "diversified" portfolio is now really just one trade in a wrapper?
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