Japan, Trump
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On any list of central bankers dying to get off this crazy thing called 2025, Japan’s Kazuo Ueda deserves a spot at the very top.
Japan’s intelligence agency has warned that the cult leader’s second son is leading operations of successor group
TOKYO, July 21 (Reuters) - Japan's ruling coalition lost control of the upper house in an election on Sunday, further weakening Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's grip on power even as he vowed to remain party leader, citing a looming tariff deadline with the United States.
President Trump will get to decide where to invest Japanese money and the United States will keep 90 percent of the profits, the White House said.
Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba faces a tough test in an upper house election this month as his minority government struggles after its major defeat in last year’s snap election.
Japan's shaky minority government is poised for another setback in an upper house vote on Sunday, an outcome that could jolt investor confidence in the world's fourth-largest economy and complicate tariff talks with the United States.
Experts want to determine whether human eggs, sperm created from induced pluripotent stem cells, embryonic stem cells function normally - Anadolu Ajansı
ABC News' Britt Clennett reports on the impacts of the parliamentary election and tariff negotiations with the U.S.
Japanese government bonds tumbled, sending benchmark yields to near 17-year highs, as traders priced in increased political risks and a hazy outlook for the central bank's policy normalisation path.