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The Main Lithium Carbonate Contract Fell 2.00% During The Day, Currently Trading At 155,900 Yuan/ton
[Spot Gold And Silver Continue To Decline, Gold Falls Below $4700 Support] April 2, According To Bitget Market Data, Spot Gold Broke Below $4700/oz, With A Intraday Loss Of 1.22%. Spot Silver Dropped To $73/oz, Down 2.73% Intraday
US President Trump: (In His Speech Just Now) Those Countries That Obtain Oil Through The Strait Of Hormuz Must Protect It Well; They Must Hold On To It And Cherish It
China's SSE Opened Down 7.75 Points, Or 0.2%, At 3940.8 Points On Thursday, April 2nd; The Shenzhen Component Index Opened Down 48.27 Points, Or 0.35%, At 13658.25 Points; The CSI 300 Index Opened Down 11.63 Points, Or 0.26%, At 4514.44 Points; The ChiNext Index Opened Down 17.92 Points, Or 0.55%, At 3229.6 Points; And The STAR Market 50 Index Opened Down 3.57 Points, Or 0.27%, At 1294.63 Points On Thursday, April 2nd
[Trump Ends Iran Speech, Gold Dips 0.79% Intraday, WTI Crude Up Over 4.1%] April 2nd, US President Trump Has Concluded His Speech On Iran, With Spot Gold Falling By 0.79% Intraday To $4702; WTI Crude Oil Is Up Over 4.1%, Currently At $103.44
The South Korean Won Fell Below The 1,500 Mark Against The US Dollar, Hitting A New Low Since March 2009
At The Opening Of The A-share Market, The Shanghai Composite Index Fell 0.2%, The Shenzhen Component Index Fell 0.35%, And The ChiNext Index Fell 0.55%. PCB And CPO Concepts Led The Declines, While Innovative Drug Sectors Led The Gains
According To Al Jazeera: In His Speech, U.S. President Trump Said That War With Iran Is An Investment In The Future Of American Children
The Nikkei 225 Index Gave Back Its Earlier Gains And Is Currently Down 0.4%. Japanese Government Bonds Fell, With The Yield On 30-year Japanese Government Bonds Rising 2.5 Basis Points To 3.640%
China's Central Bank: Conducted A 7-day Reverse Repo Operation Worth 5 Billion Yuan Today, With A Bid Volume Of 5 Billion Yuan And An Awarded Volume Of 5 Billion Yuan. The Operation Interest Rate Was 1.40%, Unchanged From The Previous Level
China's Central Bank (PBOC) Announced Today That It Conducted A 7-day Reverse Repurchase Operation Of 500 Million Yuan, With A Bid Amount Of 500 Million Yuan And A Winning Bid Amount Of 500 Million Yuan. The Operation Rate Was 1.40%, Unchanged From The Previous Rate
On Thursday, April 2, The Hang Seng Index Opened Down 39.54 Points, Or 0.16%, At 25,254.49; The Hang Seng Tech Index Opened Down 23.5 Points, Or 0.49%, At 4,732.95; The H-share Index Opened Down 27.46 Points, Or 0.32%, At 8,477.35; And The Red Chip Index Opened Down 5.22 Points, Or 0.12%, At 4,171.17

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Japan’s ruling party must decide on its future direction with a new leader following Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s resignation to take responsibility for July’s dismal election result.
Japan’s ruling party must decide on its future direction with a new leader following Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s resignation to take responsibility for July’s dismal election result.The Liberal Democratic Party is looking to freshen up its leadership after losing control of both houses of parliament in two humiliating national elections under Ishiba’s watch. Those dismal results showed that voters were frustrated with the LDP’s inflation countermeasures, perceived corruption within the party and the influx of foreigners visiting and working in Japan.
The new leader will need to quickly bring together a party that is increasingly divided on whether to appeal to a younger generation concerned about the growing tax burden it faces to support an aging population or to attract the right-wing voters that have deserted the LDP for the small opposition party Sanseito.Whoever succeeds Ishiba as the new leader, and most likely as prime minister, will face a challenging political landscape given the loss of the parliamentary majorities. To proceed with policy, he or she will need to secure sufficient support from the opposition. Most opposition parties have made demands for tax cuts that would put more pressure on Japan’s heavy debt load, possibly generating heightened concern among investors.
Here’s a look at the potential contenders to replace Ishiba.
Sanae Takaichi

Hard-line conservative Takaichi tops the list in many recent opinion polls asking voters who should be the next LDP leader. Takaichi, who cites former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher as a key inspiration, narrowly lost to Ishiba in a runoff in the LDP’s leadership race last year. If elected, she would become Japan’s first female prime minister. Like Thatcher, her leadership would likely swing the country toward conservatism on a political level. But on economic policy, a Takaichi-led LDP would likely move toward continued monetary easing and looser fiscal spending, a move that may unsettle investors with concerns about Japan’s fiscal status. Still, right-wingers in the LDP have been thinned out in the last two elections as voters opted for Sanseito. For some, Takaichi might also give the impression of the party reversing back toward the policies of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe rather than moving forward with something new.






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