
By Satoshi Sugiyama and Hina Suzuki
TOKYO, July 7 (Reuters) – A shortage of critical minerals is starting to affect the broader Japanese economy, adding a sense of urgency for Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s government to find alternatives to exports that China has cut off, according to recent corporate filings.
China dominates the global market for rare earths – which are crucial in making items from electric cars to weapons – and it is using those supplies as a diplomatic cudgel.
Since Takaichi enraged Beijing with comments about defending Taiwan in November, Beijing has choked off shipments of certain key minerals to Japan.
Recent surges in the Nikkei stock index to successive records and buoyant corporate sentiment in the Bank of Japan’s Tankan survey point to an economy on an upswing. But an unprecedented increase in corporate Japan’s notices about critical minerals is flashing a warning signal for the quarters ahead.
Japan’s economy took a hit to the tune of about 0.9% of GDP in 2010 during a bout of trade restrictions by China, but the effect could be worse this time around now that rare earths have grown in importance in a variety of supply chains, said Takeshi Higashifukasawa, chief economist at Mizuho Research Institute.
“With the development of AI, rare earths are being used across a broad range of goods and throughout supply chains,” Higashifukasawa said, noting that electric vehicles have entered the fray since then. “Companies cannot afford to be optimistic.”
Chinese customs data last month showed there were no exports to Japan of terbium or dysprosium oxide from November through May and minuscule shipments of yttrium oxide since December, cutting off supplies critical to making powerful magnets.
Regular filings to the Tokyo Stock Exchange over the past decade typically had fewer than 40 mentions of rare earths per month, with most concentrated in the materials and industrial sectors. But such notices have doubled since May and are now increasingly cited as risks by consumer and electronics firms.
More than two-thirds of nearly 200 filings in May and June that mentioned rare earths said export controls were affecting their business negatively or could do so in the future.
“Should restrictions on the export of rare earths or similar measures persist for an extended period, this could affect the group’s production activities and financial performance,” watchmaker Citizen Watch said in one such warning on June 23.
In response to Reuters questions, Citizen Watch said rare earths are mainly used in motors, but they had not affected production or earnings, adding it did not currently expect to revise earnings forecasts because of rare-earth-related supply risks or China’s export controls.








