Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 20th March 2026, 6:31 AM
Taiwanese life insurers may face temporary fluctuations in the valuation of their Middle East investments as the ongoing conflict in the region persists, though the sector is considered well-capitalised to absorb potential shocks, according to a report by S&P Global Ratings.
Rated insurers in Taiwan hold bonds primarily linked to Israel, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates. Effie Tsai, a credit analyst at S&P, stated:
“Short-term volatility in valuations is expected for Taiwanese life insurers’ Middle East portfolios. At present, we do not expect write-off losses, assuming the conflict resolves within several weeks, in line with our base-case scenario.”
The report, titled “Insurance Brief: Taiwan Life Sector Could Handle Potential Losses On Its Middle East Holdings”, noted that scenario testing demonstrates the sector has sufficient capital buffers to manage potential impairments. However, a protracted conflict could gradually erode these buffers and increase earnings volatility.
In recent years, Taiwanese insurers have expanded their exposure to the Middle East to benefit from higher sovereign and corporate bond yields and to diversify their investment portfolios. By the end of 2025, total sector exposure reached $55 billion (NT$1.77 trillion), a substantial increase compared with $4.31 billion (NT$138 billion) exposure to Russia before the 2022 Russia–Ukraine war.
| Metric | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Total sector exposure | $55b (NT$1.77t) | Focused on Israel, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE |
| Share of invested assets | 4.1% | Highest allocation by a rated insurer: 8% |
| Bond quality | 99% highly rated | Mainly sovereign and corporate bonds |
| Exposure relative to total adjusted capital | 22.1% | Capital buffers sufficient under stress scenarios |
Preliminary stress testing by S&P indicates that even a 15% impairment in Middle East holdings would not compromise overall capital adequacy. Insurers with smaller capital reserves may face higher sensitivity to market shocks, yet the overall sector impact is projected to be modest.
S&P Global Ratings highlighted that the conflict’s duration and scope remain uncertain, and its potential effects on commodity prices, supply chains, economies, and credit markets could influence the sector. Nevertheless, Taiwanese life insurers’ capital strength and portfolio diversification provide a cushion against immediate losses, positioning them to weather short-term turbulence while maintaining financial stability.
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