The dominance of TSMC, Samsung, and SK Hynix has created a lopsided market, with these three firms now representing nearly one-third of the MSCI Asia Pacific ex-Japan Index. This concentration mirrors the 'Magnificent Seven' phenomenon in the United States, yet it has unfolded with greater intensity in Asia. Portfolio managers are now caught in a cycle of forced selling; as these stocks continue to climb, they exceed internal risk mandates, compelling funds to divest even when company fundamentals remain strong.
Asian Markets Struggle as AI Giants Force Active Fund Sell-offs
Sam Konrad, an investment manager at Jupiter Asset Management, finds himself in a paradox: his portfolio’s success in Taiwan and South Korea has become a liability. As AI-driven rallies push chipmakers to record highs, strict concentration limits are forcing him to dump his best-performing assets to maintain portfolio balance.
This structural distortion makes it increasingly difficult for active managers to beat benchmarks that are effectively tethered to only a few names. At the country level, the disparity is stark: while the broader regional index has risen 27% year-to-date, excluding the tech-heavy markets of Korea and Taiwan, the index is actually down 4%. Consequently, capital is fleeing active management in favor of passive vehicles at an unprecedented rate, with $510 billion flowing into passive funds over the last five years, contrasted by $269 billion in outflows from active managers. To navigate this, stock pickers are shifting down the supply chain, targeting mid-sized firms like ASMPT and Grand Process Technology to avoid the risks associated with the industry’s top-heavy giants.



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