DiscoverChain ReactionFollow the Money: How Taiwan's Banks Are Redrawing Asia's Financial Map
Follow the Money: How Taiwan's Banks Are Redrawing Asia's Financial Map

Follow the Money: How Taiwan's Banks Are Redrawing Asia's Financial Map

Update: 2025-09-30
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When the financial infrastructure shifts, everything changes. Taiwan's Cathay United Bank is quietly redrawing the map of Asian finance, following a dramatic pivot away from China. Once directing 84% of overseas investment to mainland China, Taiwan now sends just 11% there—a structural transformation that speaks volumes about where global trade is heading.

This shift isn't happening in isolation. Across the Pacific, Danish energy pioneer Ørsted finds its Revolution Wind Project—80% complete with 45 turbines already installed—abruptly halted by U.S. regulators citing vague "national security interests." The move comes despite a decade of approvals from the Pentagon, FAA, and other agencies, raising questions about whether this represents genuine security concerns or calculated disruption of the renewable energy sector. Read Orsted-Offshore Wind and the Politics of Disruption

Meanwhile, the Trump administration faces a significant legal challenge as the U.S. Appeals Court ruled most of its tariffs illegal in a 7-4 decision. The judges determined that Trump's use of the Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose tariffs represents an overreach of executive power, as the Constitution grants taxation authority to Congress, not the President. With the ruling suspended until October 14th, a Supreme Court showdown looms.

These developments reveal a global economy in transition, where institutional rules are being rewritten. Even seemingly minor regulations like de minimis thresholds—which allow low-value goods to enter countries without duties—are undergoing dramatic revision as governments recognize how e-commerce has transformed what was once a convenience into a major fiscal leakage worth billions.

For businesses navigating this landscape, the message is clear: institutional agility is essential. Whether it's banks following investment flows into emerging markets, energy companies battling regulatory whiplash, or exporters adapting to changing customs rules, those who understand these shifting systems gain competitive advantage.

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About Tony Hines and the Chain Reaction Podcast – All About Supply Chain Advantage
I have been researching and writing about supply chains for over 25 years. I wrote my first book on supply chain strategies in the early 2000s. The latest edition is published in 2024 available from Routledge, Amazon and all good book stores. Each week we have special episodes on particular topics relating to supply chains. We have a weekly news round up every Saturday at 12 noon...

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Follow the Money: How Taiwan's Banks Are Redrawing Asia's Financial Map

Follow the Money: How Taiwan's Banks Are Redrawing Asia's Financial Map

Tony Hines