Oriental Union Chemical Corp (1710) — Net Asset Quality Index
Oriental Union Chemical Corp (1710) has a Net Asset Quality Index of 35.4% as of December 2025. This metric measures the proportion of total assets financed by shareholders' equity — total assets of NT$32.35 Billion minus total liabilities of NT$20.89 Billion yields net assets of NT$11.46 Billion. A higher index indicates a stronger, lower-leverage balance sheet. Check 1710 cash and liquid asset ratio to evaluate the company's liquid asset resilience ratio.
Quality Index
Net Assets
Total Assets
Total Liabilities
Oriental Union Chemical Corp Net Asset Quality Index Over Time (2000–2025)
This chart shows how Oriental Union Chemical Corp's Net Asset Quality Index has evolved across 26 annual periods from 2000 to 2025. As of December 2025, the index stands at 35.4%, representing net assets of NT$11.46 Billion against total assets of NT$32.35 Billion TWD. See Oriental Union Chemical Corp (1710) working capital ratio to evaluate short-term liquidity relative to the company's equity base.
Annual Net Asset Quality Index for Oriental Union Chemical Corp (2000–2025)
The table below presents the year-by-year Net Asset Quality Index for Oriental Union Chemical Corp from 2000 to 2025, covering 26 annual filings. Each row shows total assets, total liabilities, net assets, the quality index percentage, and the change in percentage points compared to the prior year. For market capitalisation and the full company profile, see Oriental Union Chemical Corp (1710) market capitalisation.
| Year | Quality Index | Net Assets (TWD) | Total Assets | Total Liabilities | Change (pp) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 35.4% | NT$11.46 Billion | NT$32.35 Billion | NT$20.89 Billion | ▼ -7.1 pp |
| 2024 | 42.5% | NT$13.35 Billion | NT$31.44 Billion | NT$18.08 Billion | ▼ -1.1 pp |
| 2023 | 43.6% | NT$14.39 Billion | NT$33.01 Billion | NT$18.62 Billion | ▲ +2.6 pp |
| 2022 | 40.9% | NT$14.29 Billion | NT$34.91 Billion | NT$20.61 Billion | ▼ -6.2 pp |
| 2021 | 47.1% | NT$15.92 Billion | NT$33.78 Billion | NT$17.86 Billion | ▲ +3.4 pp |
| 2020 | 43.7% | NT$14.91 Billion | NT$34.10 Billion | NT$19.19 Billion | ▼ -1.6 pp |
| 2019 | 45.4% | NT$16.72 Billion | NT$36.86 Billion | NT$20.14 Billion | ▼ -5.7 pp |
| 2018 | 51.1% | NT$18.59 Billion | NT$36.40 Billion | NT$17.81 Billion | ▲ +1.3 pp |
| 2017 | 49.8% | NT$17.90 Billion | NT$35.95 Billion | NT$18.05 Billion | ▲ +4.3 pp |
| 2016 | 45.5% | NT$15.96 Billion | NT$35.08 Billion | NT$19.12 Billion | ▼ -1.2 pp |
| 2015 | 46.7% | NT$17.82 Billion | NT$38.15 Billion | NT$20.33 Billion | ▼ -8.9 pp |
| 2014 | 55.6% | NT$19.65 Billion | NT$35.32 Billion | NT$15.67 Billion | ▼ -15.9 pp |
| 2013 | 71.5% | NT$17.16 Billion | NT$23.99 Billion | NT$6.83 Billion | ▼ -2.8 pp |
| 2012 | 74.3% | NT$15.73 Billion | NT$21.16 Billion | NT$5.43 Billion | ▼ -1.0 pp |
| 2011 | 75.3% | NT$16.31 Billion | NT$21.67 Billion | NT$5.35 Billion | ▼ -7.0 pp |
| 2010 | 82.3% | NT$14.53 Billion | NT$17.66 Billion | NT$3.12 Billion | ▼ -5.1 pp |
| 2009 | 87.4% | NT$14.79 Billion | NT$16.92 Billion | NT$2.13 Billion | ▲ +0.0 pp |
| 2008 | 87.3% | NT$13.05 Billion | NT$14.94 Billion | NT$1.89 Billion | ▲ +3.8 pp |
| 2007 | 83.6% | NT$13.67 Billion | NT$16.35 Billion | NT$2.69 Billion | ▼ -4.4 pp |
| 2006 | 88.0% | NT$12.52 Billion | NT$14.23 Billion | NT$1.71 Billion | ▼ -1.5 pp |
| 2005 | 89.4% | NT$12.18 Billion | NT$13.63 Billion | NT$1.44 Billion | ▲ +3.3 pp |
| 2004 | 86.1% | NT$9.93 Billion | NT$11.52 Billion | NT$1.60 Billion | ▲ +6.7 pp |
| 2003 | 79.4% | NT$8.24 Billion | NT$10.37 Billion | NT$2.13 Billion | ▲ +6.6 pp |
| 2002 | 72.8% | NT$6.39 Billion | NT$8.78 Billion | NT$2.38 Billion | ▲ +4.5 pp |
| 2001 | 68.3% | NT$5.72 Billion | NT$8.38 Billion | NT$2.66 Billion | ▲ +2.3 pp |
| 2000 | 66.0% | NT$5.43 Billion | NT$8.22 Billion | NT$2.79 Billion | — |