Taiwan has reached a historic export milestone, with outbound shipments soaring to a record US$61.8 billion in October, marking a 49.7% year-on-year increase.
It’s the first time in history that the island’s monthly exports have crossed the US$60 billion threshold, signaling how deeply the AI revolution is reshaping global trade flows.
Officials attributed the massive jump to explosive demand for AI servers, high-performance chips, and advanced computing components. The global push to deploy AI infrastructure, from data centers to cloud platforms, has turned Taiwan’s tech industry into the backbone of the world’s digital economy.
At the same time, imports also hit a new high, rising 14.6% to US$39.2 billion, while Taiwan’s trade surplus expanded to US$22.6 billion, reflecting strong manufacturing momentum and robust overseas orders.
October’s export spike was powered largely by the electronics sector, which continues to dominate Taiwan’s economy. Electronic components surged 27.7%, while semiconductor shipments rose 29.2%, fueled by the global race to scale AI capabilities.
Meanwhile, ICT and audiovisual products, including graphics cards and AI servers, saw an astounding 86.9% jump, underscoring the explosive demand for data infrastructure. Together, these tech-related exports accounted for roughly three-quarters of Taiwan’s total shipments.
Legacy sectors such as transport equipment and basic metals showed only modest movement, transport fell 2.4%, while metals edged up 1.7%, a clear indication that Taiwan’s growth engine is now powered by next-generation technology rather than traditional manufacturing.
The U.S. remains a key destination for Taiwan’s tech exports, with shipments to the United States skyrocketing 144.3% to US$21.1 billion in October. Much of this demand is tied to the buildout of AI data centers and next-generation server farms, many of which are powered by Nvidia’s high-end GPUs.
Analysts expect the upcoming Nvidia Blackwell architecture (GB200 and GB300 platforms) to further lift Taiwan’s server-related revenues by nearly 48% in 2025, before growth moderates in 2026.
Front-loading of orders, where companies accelerate shipments ahead of potential U.S. tariffs, has also contributed to the strong near-term figures. However, this trend may lead to order adjustments in late 2025 and early 2026, slightly tempering growth momentum.
The AI boom is not just benefiting chipmakers, it’s energizing the entire supply ecosystem, from semiconductor tool vendors to factory automation specialists.
In the first nine months of the year, imports of capital equipment rose 55.5% to US$76.9 billion, a sign that Taiwanese manufacturers are expanding capacity to meet growing global demand.
This surge is also creating new opportunities for logistics, trade compliance, and fintech providers, as firms scramble to handle increased shipping volumes and working capital requirements. With global AI hardware orders continuing to grow, service providers linked to cross-border trade and digital payments are positioning themselves for long-term gains.
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