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Japan signs first $2.2 billion loan under $550 billion US investment pledge

By Thomson Reuters May 1, 2026 | 2:29 AM

TOKYO, May 1 (Reuters) – Japan has signed a $2.2 billion loan agreement for the first batch of ​projects under its $550 billion U.S. ‌investment pledge, kicking off financing tied to a trade deal that cut U.S. tariffs on Japanese imports to 15%.

State-owned Japan ‌Bank ​for International Cooperation ⁠said on Friday it ⁠would provide about a third of the $2.2 billion financing, with the rest provided by commercial banks.

Sources familiar ​with the matter said the commercial bank portion will be ⁠provided by Mitsubishi UFJ ⁠Financial Group, Sumitomo Mitsui ​Financial Group, and Mizuho Financial Group, and ​will be guaranteed by state-owned Nippon ‌Export and Investment Insurance (NEXI).

The first three projects, with a combined value of $36 billion, include an oil export ⁠facility in Texas, an industrial diamond plant in Georgia, and a natural gas-fired power ⁠plant ‌in Ohio.

Under the arrangement ⁠with the U.S., available free ​cash ‌flows from investments will ​be split ⁠evenly between the two countries until a specific allocation is reached, after which 90% will go to the U.S.

(Reporting by Makiko Yamazaki. Editing by ​Mark Potter)