The majority of domestic banks consider the Cabinet’s proposed new cap for interest on revolving credit unacceptable, the credit-card committee of the Bankers Association of the Republic of China said yesterday.
On Monday the Cabinet proposed capping the rates for credit cards and cash cards at 12 percentage points above the central bank’s short-term lending rate. That would put the cap at 15.5 percent currently.
A separate proposal in the legislature would cap the rate that banks can charge at 9 percent above the central bank rate, or 12.5 currently.
The current limit for interest on revolving credit is 20 percent.
“The 15.5 percent cap still doesn’t make sense to us,” Justin Lee (李懿哲), director of the association’s credit-card committee, said by telephone after a meeting with several other banks.
“The majority of bankers still find it hard to accept because a 450 basis-point cut [from 20 percent] is still very drastic and would have a hugely negative impact on banks in terms of revenue,” he said.
Lee reiterated the association’s proposal to create a risk-based system of adjustable rates similar to that of adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs).
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Lu Shiow-yen (盧秀燕) yesterday said she disagreed with the Cabinet’s proposal because the interest rates would still be too high and unfair for cardholders.
The Cabinet “shouldn’t yield to the banking sector and put the nation’s cardholders in a disadvantageous position,” she said.
Lu said she believed that Premier Liu Chao-shiuan (劉兆玄) had not settled on the proposed cap and would continue to communicate with the Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC), the legislature and the private sector, including banks and consumer protection groups.
But Lin Tung-liang (林棟樑), deputy director of the FSC’s banking bureau, said yesterday that his bureau was working to secure support for the Cabinet’s 15.5 percent ceiling.
Lin also said the commission was inclined to include the new cap in credit-card regulations under the Banking Act (銀行法) rather than amending the Civil Code.
Taiwan Ratings Corp (中華信評), the local arm of Standard & Poor’s, yesterday expressed opposition to the cap because it could force some banks to limit their extension of credit to cardholders.
The rate cut would have negative repercussions for the overall banking system, which continues to suffer from marginal profitability, Taiwan Ratings analyst Susan Chu (朱素徵) said in a press statement.
“In our view, banks are likely to immediately tighten their credit extension on credit and cash cards,” she said.
If the cap is passed, Taiwan Ratings said, some banks might act more aggressively on tightening credit, while investors could begin to question the profitability and competitiveness of the domestic banking sector.
A scenario like this is likely to “slow down market consolidation or reduce the financial flexibility of weaker banks,” Chu said in the statement.
The legislature’s proposal to set a lower cap for interest on revolving credit was sponsored by KMT Legislator Hsieh Kuo-liang (謝國樑), who said the change would ease the financial burden of credit and cash cardholders who cannot afford to pay their debts.
It passed a first reading in the legislature on Thursday.
ADVANCED: Previously, Taiwanese chip companies were restricted from building overseas fabs with technology less than two generations behind domestic factories Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), a major chip supplier to Nvidia Corp, would no longer be restricted from investing in next-generation 2-nanometer chip production in the US, the Ministry of Economic Affairs said yesterday. However, the ministry added that the world’s biggest contract chipmaker would not be making any reckless decisions, given the weight of its up to US$30 billion investment. To safeguard Taiwan’s chip technology advantages, the government has barred local chipmakers from making chips using more advanced technologies at their overseas factories, in China particularly. Chipmakers were previously only allowed to produce chips using less advanced technologies, specifically
BRAVE NEW WORLD: Nvidia believes that AI would fuel a new industrial revolution and would ‘do whatever we can’ to guide US AI policy, CEO Jensen Huang said Nvidia Corp cofounder and chief executive officer Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) on Tuesday said he is ready to meet US president-elect Donald Trump and offer his help to the incoming administration. “I’d be delighted to go see him and congratulate him, and do whatever we can to make this administration succeed,” Huang said in an interview with Bloomberg Television, adding that he has not been invited to visit Trump’s home base at Mar-a-Lago in Florida yet. As head of the world’s most valuable chipmaker, Huang has an opportunity to help steer the administration’s artificial intelligence (AI) policy at a moment of rapid change.
TARIFF SURGE: The strong performance could be attributed to the growing artificial intelligence device market and mass orders ahead of potential US tariffs, analysts said The combined revenue of companies listed on the Taiwan Stock Exchange and the Taipei Exchange for the whole of last year totaled NT$44.66 trillion (US$1.35 trillion), up 12.8 percent year-on-year and hit a record high, data compiled by investment consulting firm CMoney showed on Saturday. The result came after listed firms reported a 23.92 percent annual increase in combined revenue for last month at NT$4.1 trillion, the second-highest for the month of December on record, and posted a 15.63 percent rise in combined revenue for the December quarter at NT$12.25 billion, the highest quarterly figure ever, the data showed. Analysts attributed the
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co’s (TSMC, 台積電) quarterly sales topped estimates, reinforcing investor hopes that the torrid pace of artificial intelligence (AI) hardware spending would extend into this year. The go-to chipmaker for Nvidia Corp and Apple Inc reported a 39 percent rise in December-quarter revenue to NT$868.5 billion (US$26.35 billion), based on calculations from monthly disclosures. That compared with an average estimate of NT$854.7 billion. The strong showing from Taiwan’s largest company bolsters expectations that big tech companies from Alphabet Inc to Microsoft Corp would continue to build and upgrade datacenters at a rapid clip to propel AI development. Growth accelerated for