Yoon, Japan's Kishida agreed to seek quick settlement of forced labor issue: official https://t.co/zygAHj8A1c
— Yonhap News Agency (@YonhapNews) November 16, 2022
Yoon and Kishida to continue discussions on pending issues https://t.co/ndeQBHTezo pic.twitter.com/A8q0R7GDTH
— Reuters (@Reuters) November 13, 2022
The format and characterization of that first one-on-one meeting as the ASEAN summit between Kishida and Yoon shows how difficult it is to manage bilateral ties. https://t.co/fAw1AO9kAg
— The Japan Times (@japantimes) November 13, 2022
Kishida, Yoon agree on early resolution of issue of wartime requisitioned workers https://t.co/JpvBWNIDp7
— The Japan News (@The_Japan_News) November 15, 2022
Kishida, Yoon meet discuss historical disputes, security issues: The leaders of South Korea and Japan agreed Sunday to keep up efforts to resolve their thorny historical disputes as they’re pushing to bolster security cooperation… https://t.co/D2tPOHoCyY #japannews #japantoday
— Japan Today News (@JapanToday) November 13, 2022
Kishida and Yoon aim to 'resolve' wartime issues as North Korean threat grows https://t.co/D6iqyFxUFi
— Nana Shibata (@NanaShibata_en) November 13, 2022
Boost for Japan-South Korea ties as Kishida, Yoon vow to resolve historical disputes, security issues https://t.co/VqvykCO153
— South China Morning Post (@SCMPNews) November 14, 2022
ANALYSIS: Japan and South Korea's recent leader-level summit is a step in the right direction towards repairing strained relations.
But Kishida and Yoon will have to tread carefully around several longstanding issues.@southkoreaprohttps://t.co/7RFGkIABck
— NK NEWS (@nknewsorg) November 17, 2022
The President made the remark during the 17th East Asia Summit here attended by world leaders, including US President Joe Biden, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang. https://t.co/Kh7JS2OYX6 pic.twitter.com/kCFrykz4JI
— The Philippine Star (@PhilippineStar) November 13, 2022
President Joe Biden will meet Prime Minister Fumio Kishida of Japan and South Korean President Yoon Suk-Yeol during an upcoming trip to Asia to discuss how to stem North Korea’s nuclear program, a White House official said on Wednesday. (via @Reuters)https://t.co/gLYNcQ68sT pic.twitter.com/DHD5tJ4mLP
— Sasakawa USA (@SasakawaUSA) November 14, 2022
President Biden met with Prime Minister Kishida of Japan and President Yoon of the Republic of Korea to reaffirm and strengthen our trilateral partnership. pic.twitter.com/DRSjjGbEIJ
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) November 13, 2022
I met with Prime Minister Kishida of Japan and President Yoon of the Republic of Korea. Our trilateral partnership is guided by shared values, driven by innovation, and committed to shared prosperity and security. We resolved to forging even closer links. pic.twitter.com/C1FgKLa8mL
— President Biden (@POTUS) November 13, 2022
PM Kishida, President Yoon and @POTUS affirmed their commitment to a #FreeAndOpenIndoPacific and expressed their confidence that their trilateral partnership will continue to benefit all its people. They agreed to closely cooperate in implementing their Indo-Pacific Strategies. pic.twitter.com/d8OHJXwWpv
— U.S. Asia Pacific Media Hub (@eAsiaMediaHub) November 14, 2022
Joe Biden met separately with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol before all three sat down together on the sidelines of the East Asia Summit in Cambodia.https://t.co/GoRlKZkz44
— Stars and Stripes (@starsandstripes) November 13, 2022
Biden met separately with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol before all three sat down together on the sidelines of the East Asia Summit in Cambodia.
— 6 News WOWT (@WOWT6News) November 13, 2022
Biden, Kishida, and Yoon coordinated "a joint response in the event that there would be a seventh nuclear test by the DPRK," says @JakeSullivan46. pic.twitter.com/0lXFdMASND
— William Gallo (@GalloVOA) November 13, 2022
Biden Rallies Yoon, Kishida as North Korean Missile Threat Grows https://t.co/TC7cE0j8yG
— MSN (@MSN) November 14, 2022
Fumio Kishida, Joe Biden and Yoon Suk-yeol affirmed at Phnom Penh meeting the need to strengthen deterrence against North Korea, which has been test-firing ballistic missiles recently. https://t.co/DodFShnbx1
— The Japan Times (@japantimes) November 13, 2022
#Yoon, #Biden, #Kishida agree to strengthen extended deterrence against #NorthKorea
https://t.co/Eh8U9114TO— The Korea Times (@koreatimescokr) November 14, 2022
NEW: The U.S., South Korea and Japan are pledging to strengthen information sharing around North Korean weapons tests and sanctions.
President Biden, President Yoon and Prime Minister Kishida discussed DPRK issues during a trilateral summit on Sunday.https://t.co/yG2nvznx5l
— NK NEWS (@nknewsorg) November 14, 2022
El presidente Biden se reunió con el primer ministro Kishida de Japón y el presidente Yoon de la República de Corea para reafirmar y fortalecer nuestra asociación trilateral. pic.twitter.com/R6QJNfeQUD
— USA en Español (@USAenEspanol) November 14, 2022
Le @POTUS avec le Premier ministre japonais Kishida et le président sud-coréen Yoon : « Notre partenariat trilatéral est guidé par des valeurs communes, motivé par l'innovation et engagé envers une prospérité et une sécurité partagées. Nous tisserons des liens encore + étroits. » pic.twitter.com/2vPlzzfswW
— USA en Français (@USAenFrancais) November 14, 2022
Biden is set to confront multiple challenges in his sit-down with Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeolhttps://t.co/A7hfCsmfpU
— CNN International (@cnni) November 13, 2022
President Biden showed solidarity in the face of increasingly brazen North Korean missile tests https://t.co/FS2NdlCcbb
— Bloomberg Politics (@bpolitics) November 13, 2022
Japan-U.S. Summit Meeting
On November 13, Mr. KISHIDA Fumio, Prime Minister of Japan, held a meeting with the Honorable Joseph R. Biden, Jr., President of the United States of America. https://t.co/KYHmCMEYES pic.twitter.com/rQfd9uLyHm— MOFA of Japan (@MofaJapan_en) November 14, 2022
Kishida, Biden meet to confirm strength of bilateral alliance between Japan, United Stateshttps://t.co/oXrSGWaMbF
— The Japan News (@The_Japan_News) November 13, 2022
Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and U.S. President Joe Biden agreed at a meeting on Sunday to strengthen their countries' alliance amid shared concerns over a rise in geopolitical tensions.https://t.co/4He3Rh79HN
— Economic Times (@EconomicTimes) November 13, 2022
North Korea is keeping up its barrage of weapons tests, with Japan saying missiles were shot over its northern territory and South Korea saying it detected at least two missiles shot toward its eastern waters. https://t.co/OKSUxcGeaw
— The Associated Press (@AP) November 3, 2022
BREAKING: South Korea says North Korea has fired an additional six missiles off its eastern and western coasts. https://t.co/El2JdzNPQ3
— The Associated Press (@AP) November 2, 2022
North Korea launched at least 10 missiles off its east and west coasts on Wednesday, one of which flew near South Korean waters and triggered an air-raid alert on a populated island. The South promised to “ensure that North Korea pays a price.” https://t.co/Da3uIiInhJ
— The New York Times (@nytimes) November 2, 2022
South Korean officials are growing wary of the potential impact on financial markets of North Korea’s missiles https://t.co/hvae9jUDws
— Bloomberg (@business) November 3, 2022
#breaking In the past two hours, the number of confirmed North Korean missile launches has more than doubled — to at least 23. We have never seen so many missiles fired in a single day by North Korea. South Korea issued its first air raid warning in 6 years. @PoppyHarlowCNN pic.twitter.com/PNgJPwbgtt
— Will Ripley (@willripleyCNN) November 2, 2022
Iran threatening to attack Saudi Arabia, North Korea is firing ballistic missiles, China is growling about Taiwan, Russia may go nuclear on Ukraine. President Biden spoke live to the nation tonight… to tie the attack on Paul Pelosi to January 6th and Donald Trump. Sleep well. https://t.co/Yk6FRHmpSh
— Susan Shelley (@Susan_Shelley) November 3, 2022
Blinken, Park condemn North Korea's ballistic missile launches -U.S. State Dept https://t.co/tBbuD5kdPn pic.twitter.com/pgYc4pXmBn
— Reuters (@Reuters) November 3, 2022
North Korea fires ANOTHER ballistic missile sparking panic in Japan https://t.co/q06WBQdHDq pic.twitter.com/u24tGvBzFj
— Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) November 2, 2022
North Korea: Nerve-wracking morning as Japan watches missile launches https://t.co/XsoKEgO4ht
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) November 3, 2022
North Korea threatens US with 'powerful measures' as joint drills begin https://t.co/Q07Fsea4AC
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) November 1, 2022
North Korea missile barrage triggers evacuation warnings in Japan https://t.co/cacAR6HQFt pic.twitter.com/GMNIe2A3eR
— FRANCE 24 (@FRANCE24) November 3, 2022
#BREAKING
North Korea fires 'unidentified ballistic missile', Seoul's military says pic.twitter.com/kSqBmR7RHF— AFP News Agency (@AFP) November 2, 2022
North Korea fires 7 more missiles into the sea, raising today's total to 25, or 11% of all missile launches since 1953 pic.twitter.com/Hh5J4e71ZW
— BNO News (@BNONews) November 2, 2022
Officials in South Korea and Japan said the missile may have been an intercontinental ballistic missile, which are North Korea's longest-range weapons, and are designed to carry a nuclear warhead to the other side of the planet. https://t.co/8xpsOjGSRd
— The Wire (@thewire_in) November 3, 2022
North Korea has fired a missile which flew over Japan, the second in a month to fly over the country https://t.co/9yT1DNNLUS pic.twitter.com/oaaSa6pnv4
— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) November 3, 2022
Footage from the South Korean response to North Korea's earlier missile launches, ROK warplanes launch missiles north of the sea border. pic.twitter.com/tiqKnA7SoQ
— inteldoge@masto.ai (@IntelDoge) November 2, 2022
https://twitter.com/TheInsiderPaper/status/1587946803059638273
Japan's Prime Minister Kishida Fumio called the repeated launches "outrageous" and totally unacceptable. #northkorea #missile https://t.co/0nYTn0aXOh
— NHK WORLD News (@NHKWORLD_News) November 3, 2022
Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio has told reporters that one of the missiles launched by #North #Korea on Thursday morning may have been an inter-continental ballistic #missile.https://t.co/RsoX121TGi
— NHK WORLD News (@NHKWORLD_News) November 3, 2022
【#BREAKING #NEWS】The Japan Coast Guard says #North #Korea has launched a suspected third ballistic #missile this morning. The second and third projectiles appear to have fallen. Click here to watch live for more updates.https://t.co/QbGNxw7brV pic.twitter.com/RCLmVVzcB1
— NHK WORLD News (@NHKWORLD_News) November 3, 2022
【VIDEO】The abduction of Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 80s is still an unresolved problem. Twenty years have passed since North Korea finally admitted at least some responsibility. https://t.co/G5w2d99rxi
— NHK WORLD News (@NHKWORLD_News) October 30, 2022
In a fresh escalation, North Korea fired off a spate of at least 17 missiles Wednesday, including at least one that landed near South Korean territorial waters for the first time since the division of the peninsula. https://t.co/KqAUplxICB
— The Japan Times (@japantimes) November 2, 2022
Expectations rose Wednesday for a breakthrough on a long-standing dispute over wartime labor compensation between Japan and S.Korea as Taro Aso arrived in Seoul for talks with President Yoon Suk Yeol. @japantimes @jt_takahara @jljzen https://t.co/7ajw5KhpGm
— CSIS Korea Chair (@CSISKoreaChair) November 2, 2022
#BREAKING : Ex-Japan PM Aso to visit S. Korea from Wed. over wartime labor issuehttps://t.co/41wNcYSS45 pic.twitter.com/zGNcLshTul
— Kyodo News | Japan (@kyodo_english) November 1, 2022
Aso to visit S Korea to discuss wartime labor issue: Former Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso is planning to visit South Korea for two days from Wednesday, government and ruling party sources said, as the two countries grapple… https://t.co/XnW1uGnUBF #japannews #japantoday
— Japan Today News (@JapanToday) November 1, 2022
South Korea and Japan have to repair their frayed relationship. But having that meeting now during a time of national mourning with Aso Taro of all people is NOT a good look. I get that the meeting was likely pre-planned, but they couldn't reschedule?
https://t.co/NpCeNVbdpq— John Lee (@koreanforeigner) November 3, 2022
Will Taro Aso’s past overshadow Japan and South Korea’s bid to settle wartime history? https://t.co/PDaGZfMBxT
— South China Morning Post (@SCMPNews) November 2, 2022
Monetary and Economic Studies (2022) https://t.co/mqA15cfLNS
— Bank of Japan (@Bank_of_Japan_e) November 21, 2022
CB speech: Haruhiko Kuroda (JP): The Bank of Japan's Semiannual Report on Currency and Monetary Control – https://t.co/MLa7vLuHVo
— Bank for International Settlements (@BIS_org) November 21, 2022
Japan’s meager prospects of achieving sustainable inflation is boosting the likelihood the central bank will conduct a policy review or make mechanical adjustments to its policy framework, according to a former chief economist at the Bank of Japan https://t.co/ONCKNeWiMn
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) November 20, 2022
Two Bank of Japan veterans lead the field to replace Governor Haruhiko Kuroda next spring https://t.co/j0O51zVakI
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) November 19, 2022
BOJ | STILL STAYING THE COURSE?
The Bank of Japan faces pressure to adjust its ultraloose monetary policy following October price data showing inflation significantly above its 2% target, with some market watchers predicting a tightening within a year.https://t.co/Hh0Z04vNpR
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) November 18, 2022
From the @WSJ on the cost of #Japan's currency intervention.
(For background on why this issue is of broader relevance for global economics and finance, please see this @FT article from yesterday:https://t.co/u2LjeYAlDv )#economy #markets #econtwitter #boj #bankofjapan pic.twitter.com/aLYHWyNNBW
— Mohamed A. El-Erian (@elerianm) November 1, 2022
Posted earlier
As domestic and external conditions come together, #Japan will find it harder–and more costly–to maintain yield curve control (#YCC)
How it ultimately exits this key element of its monetary policy could have effects well beyond the countryhttps://t.co/u2LjeYAlDv— Mohamed A. El-Erian (@elerianm) October 31, 2022
#Geopolitics | Despite the Bank of Japan's repeated warnings that Kishida's administration must change course, if it wants to keep the country stable, Kishida paid no heed to them and now, Japan is on the verge of recessionhttps://t.co/zT9IjRnOEi
— tfiglobal (@tfiglobal) October 30, 2022
"The Bank of #Japan stands pat despite recent inflation hikes, while the government has introduced a larger-than-expected #stimulus package. We doubt the combination of easing macro policies will be good for the economy in the long run." (@ING_Economics) https://t.co/2ZkpIWBBzX pic.twitter.com/XzjZvSs9Mj
— MTS Insights (@MTSInsights) October 28, 2022
From Breakingviews – Breakingviews: Bank of Japan fiddles while bond market burns https://t.co/EoWGzEpxnw
— Reuters (@Reuters) October 31, 2022
ICYMI – Bank of Japan USD/JPY intervention has totalled circa USD61bnhttps://t.co/CNdVHr26BA
— ForexLive (@ForexLive) October 31, 2022
The yen faces a fresh catalyst for renewed pressure this week as investors shift their focus to a hawkish Fed from the Bank of Japan's super-easy monetary policy https://t.co/X51qAlCobv
— Bloomberg (@business) October 31, 2022
The Bank of Japan sticks to ultra-low rates — the only major economy in the world keeping borrowing costs below zero https://t.co/8t3eeCeQW8
— Bloomberg Asia (@BloombergAsia) October 30, 2022
Solid wage growth, not a spiraling yen, is likely to be the trigger that drives the Bank of Japan away from its ultralow interest rates, analysts say. https://t.co/4wsk9MuRNi
— The Japan Times (@japantimes) November 1, 2022
The Bank of Japan should swap its exchange-traded fund holdings for perpetual bonds to ensure that an eventual exit from stimulus doesn’t upend equities, according to one of Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s advisers. https://t.co/KQvvQO095h
— The Japan Times (@japantimes) November 2, 2022
Sources of Changes in Current Account Balances and Market Operations (Oct.) https://t.co/V78I8t6u2F
— Bank of Japan (@Bank_of_Japan_e) November 1, 2022
Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (October 2022, full text) https://t.co/8SW9yX7HmL
— Bank of Japan (@Bank_of_Japan_e) October 31, 2022
Bank of Japan Accounts (October 31) https://t.co/YS3rpJsxxs
— Bank of Japan (@Bank_of_Japan_e) November 2, 2022
Minutes of the Monetary Policy Meeting on September 21 and 22, 2022 https://t.co/XRpRn1j28Q
— Bank of Japan (@Bank_of_Japan_e) November 1, 2022
https://twitter.com/ForwardGuidance/status/1586039706763988992
The bank of Japan recognised the slowing down of overseas economies due to global monetary tightening and other factors to be a downside risk to the Japanese economy https://t.co/ANr72zE0CG
— ZoomStocks (@ZoomStocks) November 2, 2022
Bank of Japan continues to intervene to stop the yen depreciation after more than $200bn intervention, via FT and Bloomberg pic.twitter.com/1kZZ6Ag998
— Daniel Lacalle (@dlacalle_IA) October 31, 2022
https://twitter.com/cian2me/status/1587793585902129158
https://twitter.com/_____JustMe__/status/1587801012596883458