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But he laments the fact that Yukinobu — and other women artists from Japan — are not given more prominence beyond occasional inclusion in broad group shows. But she never signed her paintings, according to Kanō tradition, as Kanō Yukinobu. The Denver Art Museum alone has 13 imitations of Yukinobu paintings, and only one authentic work. A peony in the collection of MFA Boston (not on view), which holds several Yukinobu paintings. “There’s a core group of female scholars who are pursuing this (the study of Japanese women artists),” he explained.
Persons: Kiyohara Yukinobu, , , Einor Cervone, Yukinobu, Benzaiten, Paul Berry, , ” Berry, Kanō Tan’yū, Kusumi Morikage, Berry, Cervone, Yang Guifei, Tang, Xuanzong, it’s, Kiyohara, consort Yang Guifei, ” Cervone, Boston Berry, he’s, don’t, Picasso, I’m, It’s Organizations: CNN, Denver Art Museum, Tokyo National Museum, Miho Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Boston, Suntory Museum of Art, Women’s University Locations: Japan, Kyoto, New York, , Tokyo, Shibuya, East Asia
In 2022 she acquired a free abandoned house on Shikoku, the smallest of Japan's four main islands. She doesn't think it's smart for foreigners to jump into homeownership in the Japanese countryside. I had made assumptions after watching HGTV-inspired YouTube videos about abandoned houses in Japan, but it's not necessarily realistic. I personally don't think that it's a good idea for foreign people to jump into homeownership in the Japanese countryside right away. For someone like me who's only lived in large cities in America, to go to the Japanese countryside is an even bigger cultural shift.
Persons: Bethany, Bitsii, Nakamura, I'm, Maigo Mika, Bethany Nakamura, Banks, would've, It's, there's, homeownership, it's Organizations: Service, HGTV Locations: Japan, Shikoku, Wall, Silicon, America, New York
Cheesie's love for Japan was evident even before her big move to Tokyo — the Malaysian had traveled to Japan at least 56 times and covered all 47 prefectures. The 39-year-old blogger's love for Japan was evident even before her big move to Tokyo — the Malaysian had traveled to Japan at least 56 times and covered all 47 prefectures. Cheesie Blogger"I love Japan very much and very [intensely]. Cheesie's love for Japan goes beyond its delicious food and the more tangible aspects of its rich culture. "These are the small things or gestures that I find really fascinating, and it makes appreciating things a lot easier in life," Cheesie said.
Persons: Cheesie, it's Organizations: Malaysian, Malaysia, CNBC, Okinawa — Locations: Japan, Tokyo, Dewa Sanzan, Yamagata Prefecture, Singapore, Malaysia, Osaka, Okinawa
Among the stocks screened by CNBC Pro, the 98-year-old firm offered the highest dividend yield at 3.3%. Dividend yield is calculated as the dividend per share divided by the share price. The dividend yield can go up if the share price drops, and conversely, the yield can drop if the share price goes up. The stock has risen 340% in price returns, which strips out dividend payments, over the past 15 years. If the stock price also appreciates, the total return for the investor (capital gains plus dividends) would be even higher.
Persons: Japan — Organizations: CNBC Pro, Atrion Corporation, Kerry Group Locations: Brussels, Africa, Japan
Why are people not getting married anymore?
  + stars: | 2023-07-19 | by ( Idil Karsit | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Almost 90% of the world's population now live in countries with falling marriage rates. One major factor is the changing economy," said Brad Wilcox, director of the National Marriage Project at University of Virginia. "Governments all over the world are worried because of economic implications," said Leng Leng Thang of National University of Singapore. The decline in marriage rates is turning into a demographic crisis for Japan — which is the world's third-largest economy and home to the world's oldest population. Watch the video above to learn what causes increasing number of couples around the world to opt out of marriage.
Persons: Brad Wilcox, Leng Leng Thang, Ye Liu Organizations: University of Virginia, National University of Singapore, King's College Locations: U.S, Asia, Japan, China, King's College London
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWe remain very constructive on Japan — 'it's not too late,' says asset management firmVikas Pershad of M&G investments, says that for Japan, it's "still relatively early in a long-term equity appreciation cycle."
Persons: Vikas Pershad Locations: Japan
Ryan Crouse moved to Tokyo for college. After living in a dorm, he moved into a micro-apartment in Tokyo's Taishido neighborhood. The 172-square-foot space cost him $450 a month and had a lofted bed, living area, kitchen, and tiny bathroom. In May 2022, Crouse moved to Tokyo. Then, he spent a year in a 172-square-foot apartment in Tokyo's Taishido neighborhood before moving into a bigger space.
Persons: Ryan Crouse, Crouse, YouTubers Organizations: Service Locations: Tokyo, Tokyo's Taishido, Wall, Silicon, Japan, New York, Temple
While abortion is legal in the US territory of Guam, it can be almost impossible to get. There are no doctors left on the island to perform abortions, so patients rely on telemedicine. If a pregnant person can't use abortion pills, their next best option is an 8-hour flight to Hawaii. Just two doctors are licensed and willing to provide care in Guam, though they are both based in Hawaii, The Times reported. On the island, anti-abortion sentiment persists among citizens, many of whom are Catholic, and within the local government, The Times reported.
Persons: , Republican Douglas Moylan, Moylan, Lou Leon Guerrero, Guerrero, Guam's Organizations: Service, New York Times, The Times, Republican, Times, Democratic Gov, Associated Press Locations: Guam, Hawaii, Guam —, Japan, Guamanians, United States, Guam's
From hawkish pauses to rate hikes and dovish tones, the world's biggest central banks last week struck very different tones on monetary policy. The European Central Bank on Thursday hiked rates and surprised markets with a worsening inflation outlook, which led investors to price in even more rate increases in the euro zone. This followed a Federal Reserve meeting where the central bank decided to pause rate hikes. Just days before that, China's central bank lowered its key medium-term lending rates to stimulate the economy. In Japan, where inflation is above target, the central bank has left its ultra-loose policy unchanged.
Persons: Carsten Brzeski, , Erik Nielsen, UniCredit Organizations: European Central Bank, Reserve, ING Germany, CNBC, ECB, Bank of England Locations: Japan, Europe, Asia
Citing reasons for his optimism, he said Asia is expected to deliver healthier growth rates while the West lags behind. Asia inflation 'not as intense'"We're definitely expecting growth in these two economies to be constrained by the fact that they have had this significant inflation problem," Ahya said in reference to the U.S. and Europe. The U.S. inflation rate has been holding well above the Fed's 2% annual target. Chetan Ahya Chief Asia Economist at Morgan StanleyChina's consumption 'on track'Another driver of Asia's growth is China's projected recovery in the second half of the year. "We're expecting China's recovery to broaden out in second half of this year," Ahya said.
Persons: Kazuhiro Nogi, Morgan Stanley, Chetan Ahya, Ahya, We're Organizations: Mount Fuji, Afp, Getty, Federal Reserve, Asia, Nurphoto, People's Bank of China Locations: U.S, Europe, Asia, India, Indonesia, Japan, Central, China, Jakarta
Grocery prices in Europe have been on the rise. Britain — where food inflation has reached 45-year highs — is discussing a similar move. In comparison, U.S. food prices rose 7.7% in April from a year earlier, 8.2% in Japan and 9.1% in Canada. Such controls could actually make food inflation worse by increasing demand from shoppers but discouraging new supply, he said. "The current food price shock does not warrant such intervention," Shearing said.
Persons: , Furio Truzzi, Borey, Helen Barnard, Anna Sjovorr, hasn't, that's, Neil Shearing, Shearing, SWG pollsters, Carlo Compellini, Marie Antoinette, Roberto Dipiazza Organizations: Service, Shoppers, European Union, Trussell, European Central Bank, U.S . Federal, Capital Economics Locations: Europe, Rome, U.S, Japan, Ukraine, Paris, Britain, Hungary, Croatia, Spain, United Kingdom, London, Canada, Trieste, Italian
Franck Bohbot Bohbot's book features shots from over a dozen arcades, which he described as each having their own "very different vibe." Franck Bohbot Bohbot said his project was intended to "document arcade culture and the escapism it provides." Franck Bohbot Most of Bohbot's shots were captured in 2019, before the pandemic brought his project to a temporary halt. Franck Bohbot Bohbot documented not only the games but also the crowds that the arcades attracted. Franck Bohbot Bohbot said the book serves as a love letter to L.A., which he called "a complicated city that often feels like it's hiding parts of itself."
Persons: Franck Bohbot’s, , Bohbot, ” Bohbot, Franck Bohbot's, Franck Bohbot Bohbot's, Franck Bohbot, Franck Bohbot Bohbot, , California’s, Japan —, Kong, seeped, , we’ve, Franck Bohbot “, Organizations: CNN, Dave, Buster's, Amusement Corporation, East Hollywood, New York City Mayor Fiorello La Guardia, Chicago Coin’s, New York Times, America’s, Atari, Setanta Books Locations: Los Angeles, California, Calimesa , California, North Hollywood, Hollywood, Santa Monica , California, L.A, East, New York, Japan, Chicago
HIROSHIMA, Japan — President Biden and other leaders of the world’s major industrial democracies rallied around Ukraine on Sunday with vows of resolute support and promises of further weapons shipments even as Russian forces claimed to have seized full control of a bitterly contested city. Mr. Biden and his counterparts figuratively and, in some cases, literally wrapped their arms around President Volodomyr Zelensky of Ukraine, who made an audacious journey halfway around the world from his ravaged homeland to Hiroshima, Japan, to solicit aid for the first time in person from the Group of 7 powers at their annual summit. “Together with the entire G7, we have Ukraine’s back, and I promise we’re not going anywhere,” Mr. Biden told Mr. Zelensky while announcing another $375 million in artillery, ammunition and other arms for Ukraine. At a later news conference, Mr. Biden voiced defiance of President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia. “I once more shared and assured President Zelensky, together with all G7 members and our allies and partners around the world, that we will not waver,” he said.
Mr. Zelensky, American and British officials say, seems to sense that when he shows up in person, he can both break through American resistance to sending more powerful weapons and pressure nations like India and Brazil that have stayed on the sidelines. Even before he arrived, Mr. Zelensky had won a significant victory. Mr. Biden met with the other leaders of the so-called Quad — Australia, India and Japan — on Saturday night. Mr. Zelensky will also meet with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida of Japan on Sunday, the Kyodo News agency reported. The G7 leaders have already pledged at the summit to toughen punishments on Moscow and redouble efforts to choke off funding for its war.
“Quantitative tightening,” or QT, by top central banks will suck $2 trillion in liquidity out of the financial system over the next two years, according to a recent analysis by Fitch Ratings. Investors and banks calibrate their strategies to the amount of money in the financial system, he noted. Then, central banks started withdrawing liquidity from the financial system. Even worse, many banks have large holes on their balance sheets because central banks have simultaneously jacked up interest rates. While government debt levels have skyrocketed in recent years, the cost of servicing that debt has been tamped down by the willingness of central banks to buy large chunks of it.
For Biden, Crisis at Home Complicates Diplomacy Abroad
  + stars: | 2023-05-17 | by ( Peter Baker | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
HIROSHIMA, Japan — President Biden leaves for Japan on Wednesday for a meeting of the leaders of seven major industrial democracies who get together each year to try to keep the world economy stable. But as it turns out, the major potential threat to global economic stability this year is the United States. It will fall to Mr. Biden to reassure his counterparts that he will find a way to avoid that, but they understand it is not solely in his control. The showdown with Republicans over raising the federal debt ceiling has already upended the president’s international diplomacy by forcing a last-minute cancellation of two stops he had planned to make after Japan: Papua New Guinea and Australia. Rather than being the unchallenged commander of the most powerful superpower striding across the world stage, Mr. Biden will be an embattled leader forced to rush home to avert a catastrophe of America’s own making.
The Forces Behind South Korea’s and Japan’s Thaw
  + stars: | 2023-05-07 | by ( Choe Sang-Hun | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
For years, the forces driving South Korea and Japan apart, deeply rooted in bitter history, had seemed too strong to overcome despite repeated efforts and the urging of their mutual ally, the United States. South Koreans say Japan never properly apologized or atoned for its brutal colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula from 1910 to 1945. To the Japanese, South Korea has often been an untrustworthy neighbor that has broken several promises, including treaty agreements that were designed to salve historical wounds. But the advent of two new administrations in the neighboring countries — President Yoon Suk Yeol in South Korea, and Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in Japan — has led to a rapid thawing of relations. In April, South Korea restored Japan’s status as a preferred trading partner, prompting Tokyo to start the process of restoring the same status for South Korea.
Watch planes take off in Japan — from an onsen
  + stars: | 2023-04-28 | by ( Emi Jozuka | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +4 min
Opened last December, the Hotel Villa Fontaine Premier & Grand Haneda Airport has 1,717 rooms and is directly connected to Haneda International Airport Terminal 3. Tokyo has also announced plans to receive up to 60 million overseas visitors to the country by 2030. And as inbound tourism recovers, Haneda – which has been crowned the world’s most punctual mega-airport – hopes to ride that wave. Developers want to expand those routes to greater swathes of Japan as part of broader plans to help revitalize the country’s regions, according to Katsuyuki Tou, general manager of the Haneda Airport Garden. Tou explained that visitors to the multipurpose complex can already get a taste of what Japan offers.
Tech stocks were in bear territory for much of last year, but have been a bright spot so far in 2023 despite the uncertainty. Ben Rogoff, a portfolio manager at Polar Capital with 25 years of investing experience, has a strategy for mitigating risk when investing in growth stocks such as tech. A call option is a contract to buy a stock at a certain price at a set time in the future. The option value increases if the stock price rises above that set price. Other markets for tech Rogoff said although the U.S. is the dominant market for technology, he's also looking elsewhere.
Opinion | Wonking Out: Is the American Economy Awesome?
  + stars: | 2023-04-21 | by ( Paul Krugman | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Before I get to the numbers, let’s do what some of my colleagues call the “walking-around test.” I love data — data is a friend of mine — but it’s always a good idea to check data against what you seem to see in real life. I imagine that a number of my American readers have visited European nations or Japan recently; some, like me, have visited them repeatedly over the years. Did they feel as if they’ve fallen farther behind the U.S. than they were, say, 15 or 20 years ago? Thanks to a combination of higher birthrates and higher immigration, America’s population, especially its working-age population — usually (if awkwardly) defined in international statistics as people between 15 and 64 — has grown much faster than that of many advanced-country rivals. If you look at growth per working-age adult, the United States is still ahead, but the disparity — especially with Japan — is much less:
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesAsia's economic growth will outpace both the U.S. and Europe this year, led by strong domestic demand, according to Morgan Stanley. "The big argument that we've been making ... for Asia, including Japan, to outperform versus U.S. and Europe — is the fact that there is domestic demand strength," Chetan Ahya, chief Asia economist, told CNBC's "Street Signs Asia" on Monday. It's going through a rebound like quite nicely because of reopening, but also for fiscal and monetary policy being supportive." Three other large Asian economies — India, Indonesia and Japan — are also showing robust domestic demand, added the economist. The agency pointed out last week that Asia's domestic demand has so far remained strong despite monetary tightening.
Here's a list of fruits, vegetables, spices, and drinks that experts say can lead to a longer life. Others, like biotech entrepreneur Bryan Johnson, methodically prepare smoothies with compounds like creatine, spermidine, collagen peptides, and consume copious amounts of vegetables. Still, those like Johnson aren't abiding by fastidious nutrition plans simply to stay healthy — they're aiming to live longer. Breaking it down to the cellular levelVinjamoori said that it can also be helpful to think about eating for longevity from the cellular level. Insider set out to figure exactly which foods would optimize those processes, and ultimately, help you live longer.
Two more people have been arrested for property damage over a "sushi terrorism" video in Japan. Videos of customers licking bottles or eating directly from communal dishes went viral earlier this year. Police said the men told them they posted the video to social media because they thought it was funny, the AP reported. The trend gained popularity earlier this year as videos were posted under the hashtag "#寿司テロ," or "sushi terror." Pranksters licked soy sauce bottles and added wasabi to items on the conveyor belt at popular restaurants in Japan — then posted videos or pictures.
Its CO2 emissions, including its value chain, are estimated to be as much as 110 megatons. To address this, Panasonic unveiled its "Panasonic GREEN IMPACT" initiative in January 2022. This aims for a reduction impact of "around 1% (approximately 300 million tons)" of current total global CO2 emissions by 2050. Panasonic has clearly defined them in Panasonic GREEN IMPACT," said Shimono. ***Avoided Emissions refers to CO2 emissions cut using a company's products or technologies.
Nanette Abuhoff Jacobson believes that Wall Street remains too optimistic about the banking crisis. Jacobson says that the crisis could contaminate other sectors and aggravate a looming recession. On the surface, it seems like the most immediate repercussions of the recent banking crisis have been dealt with. But Nanette Abuhoff Jacobson, global investment strategist at Hartford Funds, which has $124.1 billion in assets under management, believes that Wall Street hasn't fully accounted for the potential consequences of the banking crisis. For fixed income, Jacobson believes that the intermediate part of the yield curve offers good opportunities for investors.
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