Japanese manufacturers are slightly more optimistic despite Trump tariff worries

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  • Japanese manufacturers are slightly more optimistic despite Trump tariff worries</p>

<p>YURI KAGEYAMA July 1, 2025 at 4:15 AM</p>

<p>FILE - The headquarters of Bank of Japan (BOJ) is seen in Tokyo, on Aug. 18, 2023. (AP Photo/Shuji Kajiyama, File) ()</p>

<p>TOKYO (AP) — Business sentiment among large Japanese manufacturers has improved slightly, according to a survey by Japan's central bank released Tuesday, although worries persist over President Donald Trump's tariffs.</p>

<p>The Bank of Japan's quarterly tankan survey said an index for large manufacturers rose to plus 13 from plus 12 in March, when it marked the first dip in a year. The survey is an indicator of companies foreseeing good conditions minus those feeling pessimistic.</p>

<p>Major manufacturers include auto and electronics sectors, whose exports to the U.S. drive the Japanese economy.</p>

<p>U.S. auto tariffs are a worry for major manufacturers like Toyota Motor Corp., but some analysts note global auto sales have held up relatively well in recent months.</p>

<p>The U.S. has imposed 25% tariffs on auto imports. Japanese automakers have plants in Mexico, where Trump has announced a separate set of tariffs. The U.S. has also imposed 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum.</p>

<p>Japanese officials have been talking frequently with the Trump administration, stressing that Japan is a key U.S. ally.</p>

<p>Trump posted on his social media site Monday that Japan wasn't buying enough rice from the U.S. "They won't take our RICE, and yet they have a massive rice shortage," the president wrote, adding that a letter to Japan was coming.</p>

<p>Also on Monday, National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett told reporters at the White House that Trump "is going to finalize the frameworks we negotiated with a whole bunch of countries after the weekend."</p>

<p>The Bank of Japan, which has kept interest rates extremely low for years to encourage growth, is expected to continue to raise interest rates, but some analysts expect that to wait until next year.</p>

<p>The central bank raised its benchmark rate to 0.5% from 0.1% at the start of this year and has maintained that rate. The next Bank of Japan monetary policy board meeting is at the end of this month. The tankan findings work as important data in weighing a decision.</p>

<p>The weak yen has raised the cost of materials for Japan at a time when the U.S. dollar has been trading at around 140 yen, up considerably from about 110 yen five years ago. A weak yen is a boon for Japan's exporters by boosting the value of their earnings when converted into yen.</p>

<p>The tankan showed sentiment for large non-manufacturers fell to plus 34 from plus 35. That was better than some forecasts, which projected a deeper decline.</p>

<p>The Japanese government reported last week that the nation's unemployment rate in May stood at 2.5%, unchanged from the previous month.</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>Yuri Kageyama is on Threads: https://ift.tt/DhpSXcw>

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Japanese manufacturers are slightly more optimistic despite Trump tariff worries

<p>- Japanese manufacturers are slightly more optimistic despite Trump tariff worries</p> <p>YURI ...

Langeliers and Butler lead Athletics past Rays

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  • Langeliers and Butler lead Athletics past Rays</p>

<p>July 1, 2025 at 3:51 AM</p>

<p>1 / 5Athletics Rays BaseballAthletics' Shea Langeliers hits a three-run home run during the first inning of a baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays, Monday, June 30, 2025, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Jason Behnken)</p>

<p>TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Shea Langeliers smashed a three-run homer in his first plate appearance since coming off the injured list, and Lawrence Butler broke a ninth-inning tie with a two-run triple that lifted the Athletics over the Tampa Bay Rays 6-4 on Monday night.</p>

<p>The Athletics made two key defensive plays in the bottom of the eighth to keep it tied at 4.</p>

<p>The Rays had runners on first and second with no outs when Junior Caminero hit a hard grounder to third, but Max Muncy stepped on the bag and threw to first for a double play. Josh Lowe then singled to left field but Colby Thomas threw a dart to home plate to get Brandon Lowe.</p>

<p>Butler sent a shot to the wall in left-center field to score runners from second and third on his second triple of the season.</p>

<p>Sean Newcomb (2-4) got the final out in the eighth, and Mason Miller worked a scoreless ninth to earn his 16th save.</p>

<p>Brent Rooker had an RBI single for the Athletics, who had lost six of eight.</p>

<p>The Rays, coming off a defeat at Baltimore, had won five straight and 10 of their last 11 following a loss.</p>

<p>Pete Fairbanks (3-2) allowed three hits and two runs in the ninth.</p>

<p>Key moment</p>

<p>The first hit for the Rays came in the fourth on Caminero's two-run homer — his 21st of the season — over the center-field wall. Jonathan Aranda and Jose Caballero added RBI singles to tie it at 4.</p>

<p>Key stat</p>

<p>The Athletics, who allowed four home runs Sunday, have given up 125 longballs this season, the second-most in team history before the All-Star break.</p>

<p>Up next</p>

<p>Athletics LHP Jeffrey Springs (6-6, 4.30 ERA) starts Tuesday against his former team. RHP Shane Baz (8-3, 4.37) goes for the Rays.</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>AP MLB: https://ift.tt/yDCcFvK>

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Langeliers and Butler lead Athletics past Rays

<p>- Langeliers and Butler lead Athletics past Rays</p> <p>July 1, 2025 at 3:51 AM</p> ...

Tiny Tuvalu seeks assurance from US its citizens won't be barred

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<p>Kirsty NeedhamJuly 1, 2025 at 4:28 AM</p>

<p>By Kirsty Needham</p>

<p>SYDNEY (Reuters) -Tuvalu, a tiny Pacific nation that scientists predict will be submerged by rising seas, said it is seeking written assurance from the United States that its citizens will not be barred from entry after being apparently mistakenly included in a list of 36 countries facing visa bans.</p>

<p>An internal diplomatic cable signed by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio showed the United States, which has already barred entry for citizens from 12 countries, was considering expanding travel restrictions to the 36 countries, including three Pacific Island states, Reuters and other media reported last month.</p>

<p>Nations on the list would have 60 days to take corrective action, the cable showed.</p>

<p>The news had caused significant concern in Tuvalu, whose population of 11,000 is at risk from rising sea levels, and where a third of residents have applied to an Australian ballot for a landmark climate migration visa.</p>

<p>Tuvalu's ambassador to the United Nations, Tapugao Falefou, said he had been told by a U.S. official that Tuvalu's inclusion on the list was "an administrative and systemic error on the part of the U.S. Department of State".</p>

<p>In a statement on Tuesday, Tuvalu's government said it had not received any formal notification that it was on the list, and had also been assured by the United States embassy in Fiji it was "an error within the system".</p>

<p>"The Embassy has provided verbal assurances that there are no current restrictions on Tuvaluan nationals entering the United States, and that the matter is being reviewed with authorities in Washington," the statement from Tuvalu's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Labour and Trade said.</p>

<p>It added Tuvalu was seeking a "formal written confirmation to that effect and continues to engage the U.S. Government to ensure Tuvaluans are not unfairly affected".</p>

<p>The embassy did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.</p>

<p>A U.S. official familiar with visa policy who is not authorized to speak publicly told Reuters "no decisions have been made, and any speculation is premature".</p>

<p>"Tuvalu's public statement mischaracterizes and omits some of the valid concerns the United States has with travelers from that country," the official added.</p>

<p>The other Pacific Islands listed in the cable were Vanuatu and Tonga.</p>

<p>Tonga's government had received an official U.S. warning, and was working on a response, Tonga media reported.</p>

<p>Vanuatu's government did not respond to a request for comment.</p>

<p>(Reporting by Kirsty Needham in Sydney; Editing by Saad Sayeed)</p>

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Tiny Tuvalu seeks assurance from US its citizens won't be barred

<p>- Tiny Tuvalu seeks assurance from US its citizens won't be barred</p> <p>Kirsty NeedhamJul...

An ancient village in the Himalayas ran out of water. Then, it moved and started over

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  • An ancient village in the Himalayas ran out of water. Then, it moved and started over</p>

<p>ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL and NIRANJAN SHRESTHA July 1, 2025 at 3:37 AM</p>

<p>1 / 23Nepal Climate ChangeA dirt road through a barren mountains leads to the abandoned Samjung village in the Mustang region, 462 kilometers (288 miles) west of Kathmandu, Nepal, Thursday, April 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha)</p>

<p>SAMJUNG, Nepal (AP) — The Himalayan village of Samjung did not die in a day.</p>

<p>Perched in a wind-carved valley in Nepal's Upper Mustang, more than 13,000 feet (3,962 meters) above sea level, the Buddhist village lived by slow, deliberate rhythms — herding yaks and sheep and harvesting barley under sheer ochre cliffs honeycombed with "sky caves" — 2,000-year-old chambers used for ancestral burials, meditation and shelter.</p>

<p>Then the water dried up. Snow-capped mountains turned brown and barren as, year after year, snowfall declined. Springs and canals vanished and when it did rain, the water came all at once, flooding fields and melting away the mud homes. Families left one by one, leaving the skeletal remains of a community transformed by climate change: crumbling mud homes, cracked terraces and unkempt shrines.</p>

<p>A changing climate</p>

<p>The Hindu Kush and Himalayan mountain regions — stretching from Afghanistan to Myanmar — hold more ice than anywhere else outside the Arctic and Antarctic. Their glaciers feed major rivers that support 240 million people in the mountains — and 1.65 billion more downstream.</p>

<p>Such high-altitude areas are warming faster than lowlands. Glaciers are retreating and permafrost areas are thawing as snowfall becomes scarcer and more erratic, according to the Kathmandu-based International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development or ICMOD.</p>

<p>Kunga Gurung is among many in the high Himalayas already living through the irreversible effects of climate change.</p>

<p>"We moved because there was no water. We need water to drink and to farm. But there is none there. Three streams, and all three dried up," said Gurung, 54.</p>

<p>Climate change is quietly reshaping where people can live and work by disrupting farming, water access, and weather patterns, said Neil Adger, a professor of human geography at the University of Exeter. In places like Mustang, that's making life harder, even if people don't always say climate change is why they moved. "On the everyday basis, the changing weather patterns ... it's actually affecting the ability of people to live in particular places," Adger said.</p>

<p>Communities forced to move</p>

<p>Around the globe, extreme weather due to climate change is forcing communities to move, whether it's powerful tropical storms in The Philippines and Honduras, drought in Somalia or forest fires in California.</p>

<p>In the world's highest mountains, Samjung isn't the only community to have to start over, said Amina Maharjan, a migration specialist at ICMOD. Some villages move only short distances, but inevitably the key driver is lack of water.</p>

<p>"The water scarcity is getting chronic," she said.</p>

<p>Retreating glaciers — rivers of ice shrinking back as the world warms — are the most tangible and direct evidence of climate change. Up to 80% of the glacier volume in the Hindu Kush and Himalayas could vanish in this century if greenhouse gas emissions aren't drastically cut, a 2023 report warned.</p>

<p>It hasn't snowed in Upper Mustang for nearly three years, a dire blow for those living and farming in high-altitude villages. Snowfall traditionally sets the seasonal calendar, determining when crops of barley, buckwheat, and potatoes are planted and affecting the health of grazing livestock.</p>

<p>"It is critically important," Maharjan said.</p>

<p>For Samjung, the drought and mounting losses began around the turn of the century. Traditional mud homes built for a dry, cold mountain climate fell apart as monsoon rains grew more intense — a shift scientists link to climate change. The region's steep slopes and narrow valleys funnel water into flash floods that destroyed homes and farmland, triggering a wave of migration that began a decade ago.</p>

<p>Finding a place for a new village</p>

<p>Moving a village — even one with fewer than 100 residents like Samjung — was no simple endeavor. They needed reliable access to water and nearby communities for support during disasters. Relocating closer to winding mountain roads would allow villagers to market their crops and benefit from growing tourism. Eventually, the king of Mustang, who still owns large tracts of land in the area nearly two decades after Nepal abolished its monarchy, provided suitable land for a new village.</p>

<p>Pemba Gurung, 18, and her sister Toshi Lama Gurung, 22, don't remember much about the move from their old village. But they remember how hard it was to start over. Families spent years gathering materials to build new mud homes with bright tin roofs on the banks of the glacial Kali Gandaki river, nearly 15 kilometers (9 miles) away. They constructed shelters for livestock and canals to bring water to their homes. Only then could they move.</p>

<p>Some villagers still herd sheep and yak, but life is a bit different in New Samjung, which is close to Lo Manthang, a medieval walled city cut off from the world until 1992, when foreigners were first allowed to visit. It's a hub for pilgrims and tourists who want to trek in the high mountains and explore its ancient Buddhist culture, so some villagers work in tourism.</p>

<p>The sisters Pemba and Toshi are grateful not to have to spend hours fetching water every day. But they miss their old home.</p>

<p>"It is the place of our origin. We wish to go back. But I don't think it will ever be possible," said Toshi.</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>The ' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.</p>

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Family fears Medicaid cuts would mean rationing treatments for child

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<p>Skyler HenryJuly 1, 2025 at 2:54 AM</p>

<p>Kennedy Beaver has been going to therapy sessions at least twice a week after she was diagnosed with Noonan syndrome, a genetic condition that stunts development.</p>

<p>The 6-year-old from North Carolina is among 600,000 people in the state who could lose access to healthcare as Congress is poised to approve major cuts to Medicaid funding proposed in President Trump's so-called "big, beautiful bill," according to according to the state's Medicaid office.</p>

<p>"For her, that's short stature, poor growth, low muscle tone," her mother, Marilyn, described Kennedy's condition in an interview with CBS News. "So with that, we became eligible for something called the CAP/C waiver through Medicaid."</p>

<p>6-year-old Kennedy Beaver / Credit: CBS News</p>

<p>North Carolina's Community Alternatives Program for Children pays for most of the treatments and medications for patients younger than 20 who have significant medical needs. If the Beavers didn't have CAP/C, the family says they would be paying over $4,000 a month for treatments and medications — even with private health insurance coverage.</p>

<p>"This is our medication that, without the Medicaid coverage, would be $3,200 a month, because our primary insurance has denied us," Marilyn said. The family says they also fear that if the proposal on Capitol Hill becomes law, they may have to go back to rationing Kennedy's treatment.</p>

<p>North Carolina Medicaid Deputy Secretary Jay Ludlam says the cut that's being proposed at the federal level will "at some point affect the entire program."</p>

<p>The state's Medicaid program oversees more than 3 million people who currently receive the healthcare benefits. State officials say if federal funding falls short, the CAP/C program could be on the chopping block.</p>

<p>"When you take $700 billion out of Medicaid nationally ... there's no way to really do that without people losing coverage, without having to change the benefits and the coverage that people get," Ludlam said.</p>

<p>When asked what she would tell lawmakers in Congress if she had the opportunity to speak with them, Marilyn said they should make changes without cutting services.</p>

<p>"It's fixing the healthcare system so that everyone in the country can get a level of care that meets their needs," she said.</p>

<p>Saving money vs. saving lives</p>

<p>The true cost of the Senate spending bill</p>

<p>New Tennessee laws make it illegal to shelter undocumented immigrants</p>

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Family fears Medicaid cuts would mean rationing treatments for child

<p>- Family fears Medicaid cuts would mean rationing treatments for child</p> <p>Skyler HenryJuly ...

Kilmar Abrego Garcia's release delayed after lawyers warn of possible deportation

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<p>Melissa QuinnJuly 1, 2025 at 3:11 AM</p>

<p>Michael M. Santiago / Getty Images</p>

<p>Washington — A federal magistrate judge said Monday that Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran man who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador and then was returned to the United States to face criminal charges of human smuggling, will remain in federal custody until at least mid-July.</p>

<p>Abrego Garcia's lawyers had asked the judge Friday to delay his release, warning that the Trump administration had made conflicting statements about whether he will be deported after he is released ahead of a trial.</p>

<p>The brief order from U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara Holmes is the latest development in the case involving Abrego Garcia, whose removal to El Salvador in March emerged as a flashpoint in President Trump's immigration agenda and promise of mass deportations of immigrants in the U.S. unlawfully.</p>

<p>Abrego Garcia was indicted by a federal grand jury on two charges of human smuggling in late May, after which the government returned him to the U.S. to face federal prosecution. He has pleaded not guilty.</p>

<p>His return came weeks after a federal judge in Maryland ordered the Trump administration to facilitate Abrego Garcia's release from Salvadoran custody, which was affirmed by the Supreme Court. A U.S. immigration official had acknowledged Abrego Garcia's deportation to El Salvador was an administrative error, as he had been granted a legal status in 2019 that prevented the Department of Homeland Security from removing Abrego Garcia to his home country because of likely persecution by local gangs.</p>

<p>After Abrego Garcia was brought back to the U.S. to face the human smuggling offenses, the Justice Department requested he remain detained while awaiting trial. But Holmes earlier this month rejected that request and said he should be granted pretrial release.</p>

<p>The Justice Department appealed that decision, and a U.S. district judge set a hearing for July 16 on the request to revoke Holmes' release order.</p>

<p>But during a hearing last week to review the conditions of Abrego Garcia's release, lawyers for the Salvadoran man and the Justice Department acknowledged that he would likely be detained by the Department of Homeland Security and deported swiftly after being released from Justice Department custody, which would interfere with his criminal proceeding.</p>

<p>Holmes put off issuing her order of release, and Abrego Garcia's lawyers asked her to delay it further because of what they said are conflicting statements about whether he would be removed to a third country — one other than El Salvador — if detained by immigration authorities while awaiting trial.</p>

<p>Federal prosecutors did not oppose the request.</p>

<p>"A short delay will prevent the government from removing Mr. Abrego and allow time for the government to provide reliable information concerning its intentions," Abrego Garcia's lawyers wrote in a filing to Holmes.</p>

<p>The magistrate judge agreed to the request and said Abrego Garcia will remain in the custody of U.S. Marshals to allow for the July 16 hearing and a decision on the government's bid to revoke his release order.</p>

<p>Holmes said Abrego Garcia should be held separately from others waiting or serving sentences and given a "reasonable opportunity" to privately meet with his lawyers.</p>

<p>Saving money vs. saving lives</p>

<p>The true cost of the Senate spending bill</p>

<p>New Tennessee laws make it illegal to shelter undocumented immigrants</p>

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Kilmar Abrego Garcia's release delayed after lawyers warn of possible deportation

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