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Fantasy Finance or Real Risk? Japan-US Trade Talks Take Surreal Turn with $300 Billion Sovereign Fund Proposal


Updated: May 30, 2025 10:45

Image Source: Fibre2Fashion
Japan-US trade negotiations have veered into uncharted territory, with SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son floating a proposal for a colossal $300 billion joint sovereign wealth fund to invest in American infrastructure. This ambitious plan, which would leverage a slice of Japan’s $1.3 trillion in foreign currency reserves and potentially be leveraged up to $3 trillion—nearly 10% of US GDP—has captured headlines but raised eyebrows among policymakers and analysts alike.
 
The scheme, reminiscent of similar proposals during the 2018 trade war era, is designed to deepen economic ties as Washington’s tariffs threaten to strain the alliance. Son’s vision would see the US and Japan as fee-earning general partners, with retail and institutional investors as limited partners. The fund would back Japanese companies building critical US infrastructure, such as icebreaker ships for the Arctic, but details remain sketchy and Japan’s Finance Ministry has yet to endorse the idea.
 
Meanwhile, the real-world economic backdrop is far less fanciful. Japan has approved a $6.3 billion stimulus to shield its economy from US auto tariffs, which have already slashed profits at Toyota, Honda, and Nissan and threatened jobs across the sector. Negotiations remain tense and slow, with Japan refusing to rush a deal unless the US lifts tariffs on autos and other key exports. In a sign of escalating brinkmanship, Japan has even hinted at wielding its $1.1 trillion in US Treasury holdings as leverage—an option dubbed the “nuclear card” by analysts.
 
As talks stall and proposals grow more fantastical, the gap between diplomatic ambition and economic reality is widening, leaving both nations—and global markets—watching closely for the next twist in this high-stakes negotiation.
 
Sources: TradingView/Reuters, New York Times, Asia Financial

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