Bullet continued. Earlier today, at a bilateral meeting, Takaichi leveraged her association with former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to bolster her relationship with Trump. Taikachi pledged to increase defence spending, saying Japan is “ready to contribute even more proactively to peace and stability of the region,” addressing a longstanding Trump grievance.
- Bloomberg notes, “Trump said the US and Japan were looking to boost their joint shipbuilding capacity as his Commerce Secretary, Howard Lutnick, signed a memorandum of understanding with Japanese officials.”
- The agreement on rare earths, which follows similar deals with Australia, Malaysia, and Thailand, come as the Trump administration seeks to formalise an alternative rare earth supply chain to reduce reliance on China ahead of a key meeting between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping on the margins on Thursday.
- Reuters notes, “While dominated by China, the U.S. and Myanmar control 12% and 8% of global rare earth extraction, according to Eurasia Group, and Malaysia and Vietnam cover another 4% and 1% of processing, respectively.”
- Earlier, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent noted in a readout of a meeting with Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama that he was “glad to hear the Minister’s perspective on Japanese fiscal measures" and "expressed his eagerness to learn more as the full package is worked out so as to better understand the potential impact.”
- Katayama told reporters he had “no direct talks about direction of monetary policy,” and noted there has been “no change to US-Japan joint statement on forex,” per Reuters.