Trump’s Taiwan Comments Spook Chip Stocks

Ex-president says the globe’s largest semiconductor maker should pay the U.S. for protection against China.

The Trump trade, an optimistic take on how some stocks—such as those of technology companies—would fare if former President Donald Trump re-takes the White House, reacted in a different way to the ex-president Wednesday.  

The catalyst was Trump’s remark in an interview critical of Taiwan, the world’s leading chipmaker, a statement seemingly indifferent to the threat posed to the island by China. Trump told Bloomberg Businessweek that Taiwan “should pay” the U.S. to protect it against any Chinese aggression.

Most equity market indexes fell Wednesday, in part owing to the negative comments by Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, who is leading President Joe Biden, a Democrat, in national election polls and those in key swing states.

The Nasdaq 100, for instance, fell almost 2.8%, its worst day in almost a year. Highflying chipmaker Nvidia tumbled 6.6%. The broader S&P 500 dipped 1.4%. The lone gainer was the Dow Jones Industrial Average, up 0.6%. Tech is not a major part of the Dow, and only two of its members make chips: Cisco and Intel.

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“You know, we’re no different than an insurance company. Taiwan doesn’t give us anything,” Trump said. Taiwan has captured “about 100%” of the U.S. semiconductor business, he declared.

While it is true that Taiwan has become the predominant chipmaking nation, the U.S. is fifth ranked. Computer chips were invented in the U.S., which in 1990 had 37% of the world’s semiconductor manufacturing capacity, compared with today’s 12%. The Biden administration in 2022 passed a law to boost chip production, although any improvement will take a while.

Wednesday marked the fifth consecutive day of a rotation out of tech stocks, as investors anticipate the Federal Reserve will lower interest rates. Tech is less dependent on debt than some other sectors. But all can be affected by the Trump trade.

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PBGC Issues $1.5B to Struggling Musicians’ Pension

The grant is among the largest the PBGC has made.



The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation issued a $1.5 billion grant of special financial assistance funds to the American Federation of Musicians Plan on Monday, making it among the largest single grants issued to a multiemployer plan under the SFA program.

The plan covers 49,180 participants in the entertainment industry and is based in New York City. Without the assistance, the plan was expected to become insolvent in 2034, when it would have had to cut benefits by about 50%.

According to the plan’s Form 5500 from the end of 2022, it had $1.75 billion in assets under management. It also had 18,826 active participants, 15,921 retired participants receiving benefits, 14,026 separated participants entitled to future benefits and 2,558 deceased participants with beneficiaries. The plan was 30.59% funded.

The Special Financial Assistance provision of the American Rescue Plan Act allows for PBGC aid to severely underfunded multiemployer pension plans. Grants are calculated to ensure plan solvency through 2051. The SFA Program has paid out about $61.9 billion in grants over the last two years.

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Pension funds that receive assistance must monitor the interest resulting from the grant money as separate from other sources of funding. The PBGC requires that at least two-thirds of the money it provides be invested in “high-quality fixed-income investments.” The final rule on special financial assistance, issued in July 2022, states that the other third may be invested in return-seeking investments, such as stocks and stock funds.

 

 

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