| name | tw-stock-chip |
| description | Chip-flow ("chip") analysis for Taiwan-listed stocks — tracking the three major institutions (foreign, investment trust, dealer), margin trading (financing/short-selling), TDCC shareholder concentration, and "main force" broker activity. Helps retail investors read the supply-side of a stock to time entries and exits.
|
| category | finance |
| tags | ["stock","taiwan","tw-stock","chip-analysis","institutional-investors","margin-trading"] |
| keywords | ["TDCC","foreign investor","investment trust","dealer","margin","short interest","籌碼","外資","投信","自營商","融資","融券","集保"] |
| related | ["tw-stock-fundamental","tw-stock-technical","tw-stock-quant","tw-stock-data","tw-stock-trend"] |
Taiwan Stock Chip-Flow Analysis
Chip flow answers "who's holding this stock, and are they buying or selling?" Fundamentals decide whether to buy; chip flow decides when.
When to Use This Skill
- A stock has cleared fundamentals and you need entry timing
- Saw a sharp move (up or down) and want to know who drove it
- Deciding whether to keep or trim an existing position
- Looking for stocks where a "main force" is quietly accumulating
- Avoiding stocks where retail crowds are over-extended
1. Three Lenses on Chip Flow
| Dimension | What you watch | Whose behavior |
|---|
| Institutional flow | Foreign / investment-trust / dealer net buy-sell | Large institutions |
| Margin flow | Margin (financing) and short balance | Retail (margin), hedgers / shorts (short balance) |
| Big-holder flow | TDCC shareholder concentration, % held by 1000-lot holders | True long-term holders |
Core logic: chips concentrating in "strong hands" (institutions, big holders) = bullish; concentrating in "weak hands" (retail margin) = bearish warning.
2. Reading the Three Major Institutions
Their characteristics
| Institution | Capital nature | Style | What to watch |
|---|
| Foreign | International, large | Mid-to-long term, follows fundamentals, FX, global flows | Consecutive buy/sell days, % of turnover |
| Investment Trust | Domestic mutual funds, quarter-end performance pressure | Short-to-mid term, concentrate fire on a few names | Consecutive buys, "investment-trust adopted" lists |
| Dealer | Brokers' proprietary capital | Short term, hedging-driven, often tied to warrants/options | Proprietary vs hedging — must distinguish |
Two sub-categories of "Dealer"
TWSE reports dealer net buy-sell in two columns with very different meanings:
- Dealer (proprietary) ← real directional view
- Dealer (hedging) ← delta hedge for warrants/options, no directional signal
Always read the "proprietary" line, ignore the hedging line.
Signal interpretation
| Signal | Meaning |
|---|
| All three buying | Strong bullish, but check for short-term overheating |
| Foreign buying for 5+ consecutive days | Mid-to-long term turn |
| Investment trust 3 consecutive buys | Entering "adoption" period, often lasts weeks |
| Foreign sell + trust buy | Mixed view between domestic and overseas |
| Institution buy + margin also rising | Retail piling in too — chips messy, expect a pullback |
| Institution sell but price holds | Someone is quietly catching it (big holder or main force) |
| Quarter-end window dressing | At end of Mar/Jun/Sep/Dec, trusts often push their holdings |
Estimating institutional cost
The average price during a buying streak is a rough institutional cost basis. When price breaks that cost:
- Foreign cost: usually a mid-term support
- Trust cost: usually a short-term stop
- Break + continued institutional selling → potentially a downtrend
Note: rough heuristic, not exact — use as a support-zone reference.
3. Margin Trading
Concepts
| Term | Meaning | What it implies |
|---|
| Margin | Borrowed money to buy (long) | Often retail; balance is a sentiment gauge |
| Short | Borrowed shares to sell (short) | Less retail; mostly hedging or pro shorts |
| Short-to-margin ratio | Short balance / margin balance | Higher = bears more aggressive |
| Same-day round-trip | Buy-sell intraday with no settlement | Speculation gauge |
Bullish signals
| Signal | Reading |
|---|
| Price up, margin down | Weak hands washed out — healthy advance |
| Price up, short balance up | Short squeeze setup, strong short-term momentum |
| Margin maintenance ratio rising | Retail profits accumulating |
| Short-to-margin ratio > 30% | Squeeze conditions ripe |
Bearish warnings
| Signal | Reading |
|---|
| Price up, margin also surging | Retail chasing — chips messy, pullback risk |
| Price down, margin not falling | Trapped retail not capitulating — unhealthy |
| Margin maintenance ratio < 130% | Near forced-liquidation, expect cascading sells |
| Price down, short balance plunging (squeeze ending) | Short-term rebound momentum gone |
Margin call cascade
When the index or stock drops fast:
- Maintenance ratio drops below 130% → margin firm issues a margin call
- Retail doesn't post within 2 days → forced liquidation
- Forced sells push price lower → triggers more liquidations
Stocks with margin balance > 20% of share count are vulnerable to cascades on a downturn.
4. TDCC Shareholder Concentration
Where to find it
MOPS → "TDCC Shareholder Concentration" (updated weekly, lagged one week).
What to look at
By holding-size tier:
| Tier | Usually who | Why it matters |
|---|
| ≤ 400 lots | Retail | Rising % = retail piling in, chips messy |
| 400–1,000 lots | Mid-large traders | Transitional; informational |
| ≥ 1,000 lots ("1000-lot holders") | Institutions, founders, long-term capital | Rising % = chips concentrating, bullish |
Concentration metric
Core indicator: change in % held by 1000-lot holders
- ✅ 1000-lot % rising for several weeks, retail % falling → chips concentrating in big hands; bullish
- ❌ 1000-lot % falling for several weeks, retail % rising → big holders unloading to retail; warning
Examples:
- 1000-lot % goes from 65% to 70% → big holders accumulating
- 1000-lot % goes from 70% to 60% → big holders distributing
Caveats
- TDCC data is lagged a week — read it as structural, not a real-time signal
- ETF holdings count toward big holders; ETF rebalances cause big-holder % swings — adjust for them
- Employee and director holdings also count; cross-check with the insider-holdings filing
5. Main-Force Activity and Branch Flows
Broker branches
Each brokerage's branch is one "branch". Branch flow can suggest:
- Single branch heavy buy → big trader or main force at that branch entering
- Multiple branches in sync → likely the same money operating through several branches
- Known "main-force branches" → some branches historically tied to well-known operators
Patterns
| Pattern | Meaning |
|---|
| Accumulation | Sideways price, lower volume, main-force branch buying in small chunks |
| Markup | Main-force branch buys big, volume + price rise |
| Distribution | Price chops near highs, main-force branch quietly sells, retail picks up |
| Dumping | Main-force sells heavily, sharp drop, retail margin trapped |
Limits and traps
- Branch data is public — main forces fragment orders across multiple branches to avoid detection
- "Main force" is a subjective definition; sites compute it differently
- Don't rely on branch tracking exclusively. It's a supplementary tool, not a holy grail.
6. Chip Conditions for Entry (Composite Read)
Ideal chip-flow setup before buying:
Institutional
Margin
Big-holder
Hit at least 2 of 3 dimensions, no violation in the third — chips are healthy.
7. Common Traps
1. Institutional buy ≠ guaranteed up
Institutions hedge, rebalance, and prune. A 1–2 day buy may be just rebalancing.
Look at 5-day trends, not single days.
2. Hedge-driven misreads
When foreign investors short via securities lending, they may go long on cash to hedge — creating a misleading "foreign buying" signal.
When securities-lending short balance jumps, suspect the foreign buy is hedging rather than directional.
3. Trust quarter-end window dressing
Before quarter-ends, trusts push the prices of their key holdings to inflate NAV.
Pullback often follows the close — chasing late-quarter rallies often means buying the top.
4. ETF-rebalance noise
When an ETF (0050, 0056, etc.) adjusts constituents, newly added stocks see heavy passive institutional buying — that's mechanical, not a fundamentals view.
Check whether the stock was recently added to / removed from an ETF.
5. Branch (short-term) vs TDCC (structural)
Branch flow is a short-term signal (days to weeks). TDCC concentration is structural (weeks to months).
Don't mix horizons.
6. Short cover ≠ squeeze
A real squeeze needs: high short-to-margin ratio + rising short balance + price strengthening.
"Short balance just dropped" alone may be profit-taking, not a squeeze.
8. Personal Workflow
Step 1: Start with a fundamentals shortlist
Chip-flow is a timing tool, not a screen. Use fundamentals to find names worth owning, chip-flow to time entry.
(See tw-stock-fundamental.)
Step 2: Keep a chip-flow journal
For each shortlisted name, log weekly:
- 5-day / 20-day institutional net buy-sell
- Weekly margin balance change
- 1000-lot holder % change
- Special events (ex-div, ETF rebalance, earnings)
Step 3: Wait for the chip signal
Wait until "chips concentrating + retail leaving + institutions turning buyer" partially aligns.
If it doesn't align, keep waiting. Chip-flow analysis has no "must act now" pressure.
Step 4: Scale in
Even with a clear chip signal, scale in over 2–3 tranches to spread the entry.
Single all-in is the biggest killer when the chip read is wrong.
Step 5: Monitor continuously
After entry, keep watching the chip structure. When:
- 1000-lot % starts falling
- Institutions sell consistently
- Margin balance abnormally surges
→ go to caution; decide reduce or exit by your fundamental thesis.
9. Weekly Observation Checklist
Per shortlisted stock:
10. Combining Fundamentals and Chip Flow
| Fundamentals | Chip flow | Verdict |
|---|
| Good | Good | Core holding — can add |
| Good | Bad | Watch and wait — let chips wash |
| Bad | Good | Short-term theme — small position with stop |
| Bad | Bad | Avoid entirely |
Chip-flow only = short-term trading. Fundamentals only = risks buying late in the cycle. Both is a complete decision.
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