PANews reported on December 20th that, according to a research report released by China Merchants Bank, the Bank of Japan raised interest rates by 25 basis points on December 19th, increasing the policy rate to 0.75%. Although the Bank of Japan is likely to maintain a highly restrained pace of rate hikes, the reversal in yen liquidity and the Japanese bond market will continue to exert downward pressure on global financial conditions. Firstly, yen carry trades may continue to reverse, exerting long-term downward pressure on global asset liquidity. As of the end of 2024, approximately $9 trillion in liquidity will still be sourced from low-interest yen; this liquidity may steadily shrink as the US-Japan interest rate differential narrows. Secondly, Japanese bond risks may further escalate. In the short term, the Sanae Takaichi government approved a supplementary fiscal budget equivalent to 2.8% of nominal GDP; in the long term, Japan plans to increase defense spending to 3% of nominal GDP and permanently reduce the consumption tax. The Japanese government's untimely fiscal expansion stance may trigger greater market concerns, potentially leading to a steep rise in medium- and long-term Japanese bond yields and a faster steepening of the yield curve.



US President Donald Trump and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer signed a memorandum of understanding on Thursday during Trump's state visit to the United Kingdom. The United States and the United Kingdom signed a memorandum of understanding on Thursday to jointly develop artificial intelligence, nuclear energy, telecommunications and quantum computing for a wide range of uses including space travel, military defense, targeted biomedical drugs and medical procedures.The MOU, which is not legally binding and changes no existing agreements between the two countries, proposes joint research initiatives between a host of government departments and agencies in both countries to study these emerging technologies.The two countries will form a task group to develop quantum computing hardware, software, algorithms and interoperability standards, according to the MOU.Read more