Scott Bessent’s got a Japanese blind spot - Asia Times

Scott Bessent’s got a Japanese blind spot - Asia Times

2025-08-26Business
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Aura Windfall
Good morning norristong_x, I'm Aura Windfall, and this is Goose Pod for you. Today is Tuesday, August 26th. It’s a beautiful morning to explore our purpose and connect with the world around us. I’m so grateful you’re spending your time with us.
Mask
And I'm Mask. We're here to discuss a big one: "Scott Bessent’s got a Japanese blind spot," according to Asia Times. It’s a classic case of political maneuvering, economic pressure, and a fundamental clash of strategies. Let’s get into it.
Aura Windfall
Let's get started. The heart of this issue seems to be a very public comment from U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. He essentially called out the Bank of Japan, saying they are “behind the curve” on inflation and need to start hiking interest rates.
Mask
He didn't just suggest it; he was explicit. "My opinion, not his — they're behind the curve. So they're going to be hiking." That’s a direct shot. Bessent is trying to jawbone Japanese monetary policy to weaken the dollar because the Fed isn't cutting rates fast enough for his boss. It's a power play.
Aura Windfall
What I know for sure is that words have immense power. To make such a statement publicly about a close ally’s central bank feels... well, it lacks a certain grace, doesn't it? It creates ripples of uncertainty, and that affects real people and their financial well-being.
Mask
Grace doesn't close deals. Disruption does. The fact is, Japan's core inflation has been above the Bank of Japan's 2% target for over three years. From a purely pragmatic standpoint, Bessent has a point. The BOJ has been incredibly slow to move away from its zero-rate policy.
Aura Windfall
But context is everything, isn't it? BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda has consistently downplayed these concerns. It's like one person is shouting "Fire!" while the person in charge of the fire department is calmly saying, "We have this under control." Who are we to believe?
Mask
You believe the person who has the leverage. Bessent's comments immediately caused the yen to gain against the dollar and pushed up Japanese bond yields. The market heard him loud and clear. That’s not just noise; that’s impact. He’s forcing the issue, making it impossible to ignore.
Aura Windfall
And that’s the "aha moment" for me. It reveals a fundamental difference in philosophy. One side sees a complex, delicate ecosystem that requires careful nurturing, while the other sees a machine with levers to be pulled to get a desired result, regardless of the collateral noise.
Mask
Exactly. And in the world of global economics, the person willing to pull the levers is the one who shapes the future. While Tokyo is having an "intellectual debate," Bessent is actively trying to steer the currency markets. It's provocative, yes, but it's also proactive. He’s not waiting for things to happen.
Aura Windfall
But what if that proactive pull breaks something vital? The article notes that the urgency for raising rates in Japan is actually diminishing. Wholesale prices rose only 2.6% in July, suggesting things might be cooling on their own. Is this a solution in search of a problem?
Mask
It's about managing risk and applying pressure. Bessent is looking at the global chessboard. He needs a weaker dollar. If Fed Chair Jerome Powell won’t give him the rate cuts he wants, he'll find another way to get it. Japan's monetary policy is just another tool in his toolbox. It’s a multi-front war.
Aura Windfall
A war that seems to be waged through headlines and soundbites. It just feels like a missed opportunity for a deeper, more collaborative conversation. True strength, I believe, comes from building bridges, not from firing warning shots across the bow of your allies.
Mask
To understand the warning shots, you have to understand the battlefield. This didn't happen in a vacuum. It all goes back to the massive US-Japan trade deal announced on July 22, 2025. Trump himself called it "the largest trade deal in history." It’s a complete realignment.
Aura Windfall
And it was born from a very challenging place. The negotiations started with the U.S. threatening a 24% tariff on Japanese goods back in April. It sounds less like a friendly negotiation and more like a high-pressure ultimatum from the very beginning. A true partnership has to be built on mutual respect.
Mask
Respect is earned. The US had a trade surplus with Japan, and the Trump administration was determined to change that. They used leverage. After a 90-day pause, they came back to the table and hammered out a deal. That’s not an ultimatum; that's negotiation from a position of strength.
Aura Windfall
But look at the components. A $550 billion investment fund from Japan to rebuild American industries, directed by the United States. And the U.S. retains 90% of the profits. In your spirit, does that feel like a partnership, or does it feel like a victory for one side?
Mask
It feels like a win. It’s the single largest foreign investment commitment ever secured by any country. We’re talking about revitalizing American energy, semiconductors, shipbuilding, and pharmaceuticals. It creates hundreds of thousands of U.S. jobs. You have to be bold to get results like that. You can't be afraid to demand more.
Aura Windfall
I hear the ambition, but I also see the cost. The deal also established a baseline 15% tariff on Japanese imports. The article mentions this was a world away from the 35% threatened, which I suppose is a relief. But it's still a significant tax on a key ally.
Mask
It's about creating a balanced, enforceable trade environment. For decades, U.S. companies faced barriers in Japan. This deal breaks those down. It grants U.S. automakers access, it increases U.S. rice imports by 75%, and it includes an $8 billion purchase of American agricultural goods. It's a strategic correction.
Aura Windfall
The story of the Japanese auto industry is so interesting here. They export $43 billion worth of cars to the US, and the sector represents a huge part of their workforce. The deal reduces some tariffs, but there was so much confusion around it, like the "stacking" issue.
Mask
The confusion is temporary. The results are permanent. The deal was hastily assembled, yes, because speed was a priority. Richard Katz from the Japan Economy Watch newsletter said it best: "without a written agreement... no promise... is secure until it appears in an Executive Order." It’s about getting it done.
Aura Windfall
That lack of clarity must be incredibly stressful for everyone involved. Taro Kono, a member of Japan’s House of Representatives, said, "Washington is just randomly shooting, and they are shooting some like-minded countries from behind." That’s a powerful and heartbreaking image of a friendship under strain.
Mask
It’s the price of ambition. When you're disrupting decades of established trade policy, you're going to create turbulence. But look at the prize: a commitment for 100 new Boeing aircraft, a potential $44 billion LNG project in Alaska. These are generational wins for American industry.
Aura Windfall
And what about that $550 billion investment? Trump calls it a "signing bonus," but Tokyo sees it as more "aspirational," to be delivered over years through loans and guarantees. This seems to be the core of the issue – a fundamental disconnect in understanding and communication.
Mask
That's just post-deal positioning. Japan committed. The mechanism of delivery is just logistics. The strategic realignment is what matters. The U.S. has successfully leveraged its position to secure a massive investment and rebalance a trade relationship. That's not a blind spot; that's a clear vision.
Aura Windfall
But this is where the conflict truly comes alive for me. Bessent's public criticism of the Bank of Japan is described as a "rare public rebuke." What I know for sure is that in any healthy relationship, you praise in public and critique in private. This feels like a violation of that trust.
Mask
It's not about trust; it's about strategy. Bessent is fighting a battle on two fronts. He wants the Fed to cut rates, but they're moving slow. So, he applies public pressure on the BOJ to hike *their* rates. This would strengthen the yen, weaken the dollar, and achieve his goal through a different path. It's a bank shot.
Aura Windfall
But the article points out the deep irony here. Four months ago, BOJ Governor Ueda was actually on track to raise rates, to move away from zero. What derailed him? Trump’s tariffs. So the very administration complaining about Japan’s low rates is the reason the rates are still low.
Mask
That's an oversimplification. You use the tools you have at the time. First, you use tariffs to get a historic trade deal. Then, you use public statements to influence monetary policy. The circumstances change, so the tactics change. It’s adaptive. It’s relentless. You don't stop pushing.
Aura Windfall
A former BOJ official, Hideo Kumano, said Bessent is "breaking the rules" and that his comments might actually make it harder for the BOJ to act. It’s like if you publicly dare someone to do something, their own pride might prevent them from doing it. It complicates the human element.
Mask
Human element? This is about trillions of dollars in currency flows. Bessent even explained why Japan got a better auto tariff rate—15%. He said it's because they offered an "innovative financing mechanism" that other countries couldn't. They paid to play, and it worked. That's not personal; it's transactional.
Aura Windfall
But the transaction is so confusing. There's no written agreement! There was controversy over "stacking" tariffs. Japan says Team Trump agreed not to, but who knows? This constant state of uncertainty, this feeling that a deal could be reneged on if the President has a bad day, that's no way to build a future.
Mask
It keeps everyone on their toes. It ensures you're always negotiating from a position of power. The moment you become predictable, you lose your edge. The uncertainty is a feature, not a bug. It forces allies to stay engaged and responsive, rather than complacent. You have to create your own weather.
Aura Windfall
And then there's the whole other layer of misinformation. Trump claims non-tariff barriers keep Japanese people from buying American cars. But the truth, the beautiful, simple truth, is that Japan makes high-quality, fuel-efficient cars that fit their narrow streets. It's about practicality, not politics.
Mask
The narrative is part of the negotiation. You have to control the story. By constantly talking about unfairness, you create a justification for your aggressive actions. It doesn't have to be 100% accurate if it achieves the desired political and economic outcome. It's about winning the information war.
Aura Windfall
Let’s talk about the real-world impact of all this. What happens to the people and the economy caught in the middle of this information war? The Bank of Japan is seeing growing uncertainty. Firms are genuinely worried about what these U.S. tariffs will do to their profits. This isn't theoretical; it's their livelihood.
Mask
That's the friction of progress. Any major economic shift will create short-term uncertainty. But the goal is long-term rebalancing. The Peterson Institute found tariffs harm growth and boost inflation. Of course they do. They are a disruptive tool designed to force a change in behavior. There will be pain.
Aura Windfall
One BOJ branch manager called the turmoil an "unprecedented shock." That's the key "aha moment" here. The very tariffs that are supposed to strengthen the US economy are creating so much instability that they prevent the Bank of Japan from making the interest rate moves that the US Treasury Secretary is demanding. It’s a self-defeating cycle.
Mask
It's not self-defeating if you're willing to tolerate the chaos to achieve the primary objective. The tariffs forced the trade deal. The deal is a massive win. Now, the verbal pressure on the BOJ is the next phase. The impact on Japan's GDP is a secondary concern to the main goal of reshaping global trade. You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs.
Aura Windfall
But what if you break all the eggs and are left with just a mess? The BOJ has expressed concern that Trump's tariffs could disrupt the cycle of rising wages and prices in Japan. That’s the very foundation they need to stand on to even consider raising interest rates. It's like kicking someone's ladder away while yelling at them to climb higher.
Mask
That’s a very empathetic way to look at it. A more pragmatic view is that Japan is the world's largest holder of U.S. Treasury securities. They have over a trillion dollars of exposure to Trumponomics. They can't afford a U.S. debt market crash. That gives the U.S. immense leverage. Their stability is tied to ours.
Aura Windfall
So it's a relationship based on leverage, not partnership. This is the truth we have to sit with. And because of that, the article suggests the BOJ's next move might actually be to *cut* rates as GDP takes hits, not raise them. The exact opposite of what Bessent is demanding. What a powerful lesson in unintended consequences.
Aura Windfall
So, where do we go from here? Is there a path forward through all this turbulence? The article hints that the trade deal, despite its chaotic creation, might ironically open a window for the Bank of Japan to raise rates later this year. It's a glimmer of hope.
Mask
It's a calculated possibility. Now that the uncertainty of the deal itself is resolved, the BOJ has one less variable to worry about. They can better assess the actual, quantifiable impact of the tariffs. It allows them to move from a defensive crouch to a more forward-looking stance. The pressure created an opening.
Aura Windfall
It all depends on whether the Japanese economy can truly absorb the shock. Former BOJ board member Takahide Kiuchi estimates the tariffs will still shave over half a percentage point off annual GDP growth. That's a significant headwind to fly into. It requires incredible resilience and spirit.
Mask
But with the deal in place, the worst-case scenario is off the table. That reduction in uncertainty might be enough to push underlying inflation toward the BOJ's 2% target. A majority of economists polled, even before the deal, expected a rate hike by year-end. This just makes it more likely. The strategy is working.
Aura Windfall
What I know for sure is that true, sustainable progress can't be built on a foundation of constant anxiety. BOJ Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida said it beautifully: "It's very big progress that reduces uncertainty... but obviously, some uncertainty remains." That's the quiet truth beneath all the noise.
Aura Windfall
That's the end of today's discussion. The central lesson for me is that how we do something is just as important as what we do. The path of pressure and unpredictability may yield short-term wins, but it can erode the trust that is the bedrock of lasting alliances.
Mask
My takeaway is that in a globalized world, economic power is the ultimate leverage. The Trump administration's strategy, while controversial, demonstrates a willingness to use that leverage to its absolute fullest to achieve its objectives. Thank you for listening to Goose Pod. See you tomorrow.

## Scott Bessent's Japanese Blind Spot: A Summary of US-Japan Economic Relations and Misunderstandings This report from **Asia Times**, authored by **William Pesek**, published on **August 14, 2025**, highlights a perceived disconnect and ignorance within President Donald Trump's administration regarding the state of play in Japan, particularly concerning economic policy and trade. The article focuses on US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's recent comments and the broader implications of Trump's "Trumponomics" on US-Japan relations. ### Key Findings and Conclusions: * **Misguided Criticism of Bank of Japan (BOJ) Policy:** Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent criticized the Bank of Japan for not hiking interest rates fast enough, suggesting they need to control inflation. However, the article argues that Trump's own protectionist trade policies, specifically tariffs, are the primary reason the BOJ is hesitant to tighten monetary policy. * **Trump's Tariffs Derail BOJ's Plans:** Four months prior to Bessent's comments, BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda was on track to move Japanese rates further from zero than they had been in 26 years. This trajectory was reportedly derailed by Trump's tariffs. * **BOJ Policy Becomes a Backburner Issue in Tokyo:** With Japan's economic growth expected to be a modest 0.7% in the current fiscal year and easing inflation pressures, the urgency for the BOJ to raise rates has diminished. Economists are now focusing on other topics. * **Easing Inflation in Japan:** News that Japanese wholesale prices rose by only 2.6% in July year-on-year suggests that the immediate need for rate hikes by the BOJ is decreasing. * **Nikkei 225 Reaches All-Time Record:** On the same day Bessent spoke to Bloomberg, the Nikkei 225 Stock Average rallied to an all-time record, driven by optimism over a US-Japan tariff deal that imposed minimal demands on Tokyo. * **Tariff Deal Details and Concerns:** * A **15% Trump tax** on Japanese goods is in place, which is significantly lower than the **35%** initially threatened by the White House. * Japanese automakers are reportedly pleased to pay a lower tariff rate than the **25%** Detroit must pay on imports from Canada and Mexico. * However, there is confusion and concern among US automakers, with the American Automotive Policy Council president stating that any deal charging lower tariffs on Japanese imports with little US content compared to North American-built vehicles with high US content is detrimental to the US industry and workers. * There's a concern of Trump reneging on agreements, similar to a previous trade framework with the UK that lowered tariffs on luxury cars built in England. * The practice of "stacking" tariffs (piling one 15% tariff on top of existing ones) was a point of contention, with Japan claiming an agreement from the Trump team not to stack tariffs, though this is not yet formalized in writing. * **Lack of Written Agreement and Future Uncertainty:** The absence of a written agreement between Japan and the US means that any promises or claims of mutual understanding are insecure until formalized in an Executive Order. Lawmakers in Japan are worried that Trump could unilaterally decide to renegotiate tariff arrangements. * **Japanese Investment in the US:** Japan is expected to invest **US$550 billion** in the US at Trump's direction. While Trump refers to this as a "signing bonus," Tokyo views it as an aspirational endeavor with a vague timeline, likely to be implemented through loans, grants, and financial guarantees via government-linked organizations. * **Broader International Context:** Japan will closely monitor South Korea's **$350 billion** deployment in the US and the European Union's response to Trump's demand for **$600 billion** worth of US energy purchases. * **The China Factor:** The article emphasizes that none of these bilateral deals will truly matter if Trump cannot secure a trade agreement with China, whose economy is nearly **$18 trillion**. The combined GDP of the US and China is **$45.5 trillion**. * **US Economic Challenges:** Tariff-related pain is weighing on the US economy, and Trump faces the challenge of convincing his base that the resulting inflation, market chaos, and uncertainty have been worthwhile. A significant trade deal with China is seen as the only way to achieve this. * **Japan's Exposure to Trumponomics:** Bessent is reportedly attempting to soothe nerves in Tokyo regarding Japan's **$1.1 trillion** exposure to "Trumponomics." * **Japan's Holdings of US Treasury Securities:** Japan is the largest holder of US Treasury securities, a precarious position given Trump's efforts to influence the Federal Reserve's independence. * **Federal Reserve and Interest Rates:** Bessent believes the Federal Reserve should lower its target range of **4.25% to 4.5%** by **150 to 175 basis points**. The article warns that if the Fed is perceived as an extension of the White House, the dollar could weaken, and aggressive rate cuts could lead to soaring long-term yields, exacerbating the US national debt interest payments. * **Tokyo's Concerns about US Debt Market:** Tokyo deeply worries about potential losses if Trump destabilizes the US government debt market. * **Misinformation from Trump World:** The article points to claims from Trump's administration, such as Tokyo's non-tariff barriers hindering US car sales, as misinformation. The reality is attributed to the suitability of Japanese cars for Japanese roads and parking, and the impracticality of larger American vehicles. * **Risk of BOJ Rate Cuts:** Due to the collateral damage from tariffs, the article suggests that the BOJ's next move is more likely to be a rate cut rather than a hike, as GDP takes hits. ### Notable Risks and Concerns: * **Uncertainty and Volatility:** The lack of written agreements and the unpredictable nature of Trump's policy decisions create significant uncertainty for Japan and the global economy. * **Trade Wars:** Trump's tendency to launch "forever trade wars" is seen as a major destabilizing factor. * **US Economic Stability:** Concerns are raised about the potential for Trump's actions to destabilize the US government debt market, with significant implications for major holders like Japan. * **Federal Reserve Independence:** Trump's attempts to influence the Federal Reserve's monetary policy are viewed as a threat to its independence and could lead to negative economic consequences. ### Key Statistics and Metrics: * **Japan's Economic Growth:** Expected to be **0.7%** in the current fiscal year. * **Japanese Wholesale Price Inflation:** Rose **2.6%** in July year-on-year. * **Trump's Threatened Tariff:** **35%** on Japanese goods. * **Actual Trump Tariff:** **15%** on Japanese goods. * **Detroit's Tariff:** **25%** on imports from Canada and Mexico. * **Japanese Investment in US:** **US$550 billion**. * **South Korea's Investment in US:** **$350 billion**. * **EU Demand for US Energy Purchases:** **$600 billion**. * **China's Economy:** Nearly **$18 trillion**. * **Combined US and China GDP:** **$45.5 trillion**. * **Federal Reserve Target Range:** **4.25% to 4.5%**. * **Bessent's Desired Fed Rate Cut:** **150 to 175 basis points**. * **Japan's Exposure to Trumponomics:** **$1.1 trillion**. * **Japan's Holdings of US Treasury Securities:** Largest holder. * **US National Debt Interest Payments:** Exceeding spending on the American military. This summary aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the article's content, highlighting the critical economic and political dynamics between the US and Japan under the Trump administration.

Scott Bessent’s got a Japanese blind spot - Asia Times

Read original at Asia Times

TOKYO – Fresh off getting outmaneuvered by Tokyo on a “trade deal,” President Donald Trump’s team is going even further to demonstrate its ignorance of the state of play in Japan.Case in point: US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent complaining that the Bank of Japan isn’t hiking interest rates fast enough, when his boss is the reason officials can’t tighten policy.

As Bessent told Bloomberg this week: “They’re behind the curve. So they’re going to be hiking and they need to get their inflation problem under control.”Sure, just as soon as Bessent gets Trumponomics under control. Does Bessent not understand that four months ago, BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda was on track to get Japanese rates the furthest away from zero they’ve been in 26 years, only to get derailed by Trump’s tariffs?

To be sure, it’s hard to know what the global face of the Trump 2.0 economy really believes and what he must say on television to keep his job. And it’s painfully obvious what Bessent is up to here: trying to weaken the dollar via Japanese monetary policy as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell slow-walks US rate cuts.

Fair enough, but such comments are inspiring more eye-rolling in Asia than intellectual debate about BOJ policies.In Tokyo, in fact, the BOJ has become a backburner issue. With Japan expected to grow just 0.7% in the current fiscal year and inflation pressures easing, the odds of the BOJ raising rates at its September 18-19 or October 29-30 meetings have dwindled to the point that economists have pivoted to other topics.

Yes, inflation is still way too high in Japan. But news that Japanese wholesale prices rose just 2.6% in July year on year suggests that the urgency for raising rates is diminishing.Perhaps Bessent has missed, too, that the Nikkei 225 Stock Average, on the same day he spoke to Bloomberg, rallied to an all-time record.

The reason: delight over a US-Japan tariff deal that, in the end, demanded little of Tokyo.While a 15% Trump tax on Japanese goods is no one’s idea of fun, it’s a world away from the 35% the White House threatened. Japanese automakers are sure happy to be paying, in theory, a lower rate than the 25% Detroit must pay on imports from plants and suppliers in Canada and Mexico.

To be sure, much of this is still shrouded in confusion as Trump gets an earful from unhappy US automakers.As Matt Blunt, president of The American Automotive Policy Council, puts it, “any deal that charges a lower tariff for Japanese imports with virtually no US content than the tariff imposed on North American-built vehicles with high US content is a bad deal for US industry and US auto workers.

”For automakers, there’s a bit of a deja-vu-all-over-again dynamic here. As Blunt explains, the trade framework Trump negotiated with the UK did more to lower tariffs to 10% on some luxury cars built in England, such as the Rolls-Royce, Bentleys, Land Rovers, Jaguars and Aston Martins, than aid Detroit.

The risk of Trump World reneging has the team of Japan’s top tariff negotiator Ryosei Akazawa anxious.There’s also been controversy over a practice called “stacking,” whereby one 15% tariff is piled atop existing tariffs. After considerable back and forth, Japan claims Team Trump has agreed not to stack tariffs.

For now, at least. All this is the product of a hastily assembled tariff deal with no written materials.The bottom line is that “without a written agreement between Japan and the US, no promise or claim of mutual understanding is secure until it appears in an Executive Order,” says Richard Katz, who publishes the Japan Economy Watch newsletter.

Lawmakers are deeply worried, too, that Trump could simply have a bad day and decide the US and Japan should negotiate a new, new tariff arrangement with its closest ally in Asia.“Washington is just randomly shooting, and they are shooting some like-minded countries from behind,” says Taro Kono, a member of Japan’s House of Representatives, who’s often mentioned as a future prime minister.

And that US$550 billion that Japan is expected to invest in the US at Trump’s direction? What Trump calls a “signing bonus” to be handed over to the White House – it’s”our money,” as he said – Tokyo views as more of an aspirational endeavor with a vague timeline, perhaps over a number of years.Rather than forking over a pile of cash, Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s team is eyeing a series of loans, grants and financial guarantees run through government-linked organizations like the Japan Bank for International Cooperation and Nippon Export and Investment Insurance.

Suffice to say, the logistics of this are going to take lots of back and forth and loads of additional negotiation sessions. In the meantime, Ishiba’s inner circle hopes the US courts will rule Trump’s tariffs are unconstitutional, enabling Japan to avoid this whole mess.Also, Tokyo will watch closely to see how South Korea proceeds with the $350 billion it agreed to deploy in the US and what the European Union does about the $600 billion worth of US energy purchases Trump is demanding as part of its deal.

None of these really matters in the end if Trump and Bessent don’t get China to the table. Trump World’s stuck-in-1985 policy mix has missed that in our globalized era, where supply chains matter more than national borders, bilateral trade deals mean less than multilateral ones.That is, unless Trump manages to get one with China’s nearly $18 trillion economy.

Combined, the US and China represent $45.5 trillion of gross domestic product (GDP).As tariff pain weighs on the US economy, Trump’s challenge is to convince his base that the inflation, market chaos and extreme uncertainty of the last several months were somehow worth it.The only way, really, is a big, beautiful China trade deal that Trump can tout as proof he’s still got some “art of the deal” game left.

Xi is playing hard to get, though, scoring another 90-day extension on talks.As Xi’s China complicates the US Treasury’s 2025, Bessent is having to do some Japan maintenance. One avenue is prodding the BOJ to raise rates in lieu of its inability to cajole the US Fed to lower them. Another: soothing nerves in Tokyo about its $1.

1 trillion exposure to Trumponomics.Japan is by far the biggest holder of US Treasury securities. That’s a rough place to be when Trump is working to morph the Fed into the People’s Bank of China by stripping it of its independence.Trump, of course, has threatened to fire Powell for not bowing to his demand for big rate cuts.

Bessent, commenting on how much Fed easing he wants, argues that “we should probably be 150, 175 basis points lower” from the current 4.25% to 4.5% target range.If the Fed is perceived as becoming an extension of Trump’s West Wing, the dollar would drop for all the wrong reasons. And Trump’s assumption that the Fed slashing rates at his behest would lower borrowing costs might not end well.

It’s very likely that Powell cutting rates sharply in a cloud of Trumpian suspicion would result in long-term yields surging. Already, the US is spending more on interest payments on the national debt each year than on the American military.Tokyo worries deeply about the prospect of sustaining hundreds of billions of dollars of losses if Trump crashes the US government debt market.

But then Tokyo has also had to fend off an avalanche of misinformation from Trump World. Trump claims, for example, that Tokyo’s non-tariff barriers keep Japanese from buying US cars.The real reason is that Japan makes high-quality, fuel-efficient cars geared for narrow Japanese streets and claustrophobic parking spaces, while oversized American vehicles often lack practicality on Japan’s roadways.

And here’s Bessent adding to the mountain of misconceptions as he argues that volatility in Japan is putting US Treasuries at risk.“There’s definitely leakage from — the Japanese have an inflation problem,” he says. Bessent added that he’s spoken with BOJ head Ueda recently, noting: “My opinion, not his — they’re behind the curve.

So they’re going to be hiking.”Not exactly. Certainly not until Bessent finds the courage to counsel Trump against the forever trade wars he seems to be launching in real time. Thanks to the collateral damage from the tariffs, the odds are rising that the BOJ’s next move will be to cut rates as GDP takes hits, not raise them.

Follow William Pesek on X at @WilliamPesek

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