Latest news with #米国関税


NHK
27-05-2025
- Business
- NHK
Akazawa set to leave for Washington to hold tariff talks
Japanese Economic Revitalization Minister Akazawa Ryosei is set to leave for Washington on Thursday for ministerial-level talks on US tariff measures. Akazawa is scheduled to meet US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Friday, local time. He said he will do his utmost to present proposals that take the US position into account and to gain their understanding. Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru said in a government meeting on Tuesday that he wants Akazawa and other officials to accelerate preparations so they can move even one step closer to a result that benefits both countries. Government sources say Japan has proposed boosting investment in the United States and reviewing regulations to make it easier to import US vehicles. But the sources say Washington still wants Tokyo to come up with proposals that would help reduce US trade deficits with Japan. Japanese officials are now considering more proposals that help bridge the gap with their counterparts. Akazawa is scheduled to attend an international conference in France next week. He may hold another round of talks with US officials if the two sides fail to narrow their differences on Friday. The Japanese government wants to hold intensive tariff talks in the hope that Ishiba will reach some kind of agreement with US President Donald Trump on the sidelines of next month's G7 summit in Canada.


NHK
14-05-2025
- Business
- NHK
Survey: Over 30% of Japan firms see profit drop for FY2025
Japanese companies' business results announcements have peaked. A survey shows about one-third of listed firms project lower profits for the current fiscal year than last year. SMBC Nikko Securities analyzed reports by 630 TOPIX-listed firms on the Tokyo Stock Exchange that had announced business results by Monday. SMBC Nikko says the combined net profit of the 630 firms came to over 34 trillion yen, or about 230 billion dollars. That's up 4.3 percent from the previous year in yen terms. For performance forecasts for fiscal 2025, the focus is on how much the impact of the US tariffs has been factored in. SMBC Nikko says about 57 percent, or 359 firms, expect a net profit increase, while 35 percent, or 224, see a decline. In particular, transport equipment sector companies, including automobiles, steel and marine transportation, project large drops. They cite higher costs and decreased trade due to the tariffs, among other factors. The analysis says 7 percent, or 44 firms, have not disclosed their projections. Many say the effects of the levies are still unclear. Yasuda Hikaru, chief equity strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities, says the impact on the real economy and corporate performance is yet to be quantified. He said: "I think we'll be able to see more specific tariff impacts when mid-term results come out in September. So upgrades or downgrades to projections are still possible." Yasuda says projections for now are not worse than expected despite the tariffs. The combined net profit forecast among the 586 firms that announced projections is 7.5 percent lower than last year's figure.