1 UK GOVERNMENT PLEDGES FUNDING FOR MONGOLIAN CIVIC SPACE AND YOUTH VOTER EDUCATION WWW.STREAMLINEFEED.CO.KE PUBLISHED:2026/06/26      2 THE JUDICIAL ENGAGEMENT AND TRANSPARENCY (JET) PROJECT, FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN UNION HAS SUCCESSFULLY CONCLUDED WWW.EEAS.EUROPA.EU PUBLISHED:2026/06/26      3 GOVERNOR NARANTSOGT EXPECTS INFLATION RELIEF IN LATE 2026 WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2026/06/26      4 PM SEEKS WEF COOPERATION ON GREEN DEVELOPMENT, DIGITAL ECONOMY WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2026/06/26      5 PRIME MINISTER UCHRAL INVITES GLOBAL TECH COMPANIES TO INVEST IN MONGOLIA WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2026/06/26      6 PRIME MINISTERS OF MONGOLIA, SOUTH KOREA DISCUSS EXPANDING STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2026/06/26      7 REMARKS OF AMBASSADOR RICHARD L. BUANGAN  AT THE AMERICAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE IN MONGOLIA JUNE MONTHLY MEETING WWW.MN.USEMBASSY.GOV PUBLISHED:2026/06/26      8 PRIMARY MARKET FINANCING DRIVES SECURITIES GROWTH WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2026/06/25      9 SIX NATIONS DISCUSS KOREAN UNIFICATION AT MONGOLIA FORUM WWW.KDTIMES.KR PUBLISHED:2026/06/25      10 MONGOLIA'S BORTEEG COAL DEPOSIT STARTS PRODUCTION WWW.SXCOAL.COM PUBLISHED:2026/06/25      ОН ГАРСААР АЛТНЫ ХАНШ 7.7, МӨНГӨНИЙ ХАНШ 20 ХУВИАР БУУРЧЭЭ WWW.CNBC.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/06/26     ҮНДСЭН ХУУЛИЙН ЦЭЦИЙН ГИШҮҮНЭЭР Г.ЭРДЭНЭБАТ, Ж.СҮХБААТАР НАРЫГ ТОМИЛЛОО WWW.EAGLE.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/06/26     ГАЦУУРТ БОЛОН ЭРЭЭН-БААВГАЙТЫН АЛТНЫ ҮНДСЭН ОРДЫГ АШИГЛАХ ТОГТООЛЫН ТӨСӨЛ ӨРГӨН БАРИВ WWW.EAGLE.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/06/26     ТЕХНОЛОГИЙН КОМПАНИУДЫГ МОНГОЛД ХӨРӨНГӨ ОРУУЛАХЫГ УРИЛАА WWW.GOGO.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/06/26     БАЯН-ӨЛГИЙ АЙМГИЙН 12 СУМЫН НУТАГ ДЭВСГЭРТ ХАМААРАХ 319 НЭРИЙГ ӨӨРЧЛӨХ УИХ-ЫН ТОГТООЛЫГ БАТАЛЛАА WWW.GOGO.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/06/26     Г.ДАМДИННЯМ: 2029 ОНЫ НЭГДҮГЭЭР САРЫН 1-НИЙГ ХҮРТЭЛ ЗЭСИЙН АМНАТ-ЫГ ХӨНДӨХГҮЙ WWW.EGUUR.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/06/26     ИХ БРИТАНИД “ЧИНГИС ХААН: МОНГОЛЧУУД ДЭЛХИЙГ ӨӨРЧИЛСӨН НЬ” ОЛОН УЛСЫН ҮЗЭСГЭЛЭНГ НЭЭЛЭЭ WWW.MONTSAME.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/06/26     ЕРӨНХИЙ САЙД ИННОВАЦ, НОГООН ХӨГЖИЛ, ЭРЧИМ ХҮЧНИЙ САЛБАРТ ХАМТРАН АЖИЛЛАХ СОНИРХЛОО ИЛЭРХИЙЛЭВ WWW.MONTSAME.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/06/25     ЭРЧИМ ХҮЧНИЙ САЛБАРЫГ ИРГЭН БҮРТ НЭЭЛТТЭЙ БОЛГОВ WWW.ZUV.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/06/25     СОЛОНГОСЫН НЭГДЛИЙН АСУУДЛААРХ “МОНГОЛ ФОРУМ”-Д ДОЛООН ОРНЫ ЭРДЭМТЭН СУДЛААЧИД ОРОЛЦОВ WWW.MONTSAME.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/06/25    
Англи амин дэм Монгол улсад албан ёсоор бүртгэгдлээ.

Events

Name organizer Where
MBCC “Doing Business with Mongolia seminar and Christmas Receptiom” Dec 10. 2025 London UK MBCCI London UK Goodman LLC

NEWS

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Japan Inc warns of global trade contraction under Trump presidency: Reuters poll www.reuters.com

 
Corporate Japan is bracing for a rocky ride under incoming U.S. President Donald Trump, a Reuters poll showed, with well over a third of firms seeing a contraction in global trade as concerns about a rise in U.S. protectionism threaten to shatter a fragile economic recovery.
 
Fully three-quarters of Japanese companies expect no expansion in world trade, highlighting festering anxiety that Trump's fiery protectionist rhetoric during campaigning might turn into growth-sapping policies through his four-year term that begins in January.
 
Throughout the campaign that led to his upset election win, the Republican president-elect pledged to redraw trade deals to win back American jobs. He has threatened Mexico and China with punitive tariffs that some economists have warned could spark a trade war that could potentially roll back decades of liberalization.
 
The Reuters Corporate Survey, conducted Nov. 22-Dec. 2, underscored such concerns.
 
The monthly poll of 531 big and mid-size firms found 40 percent expected global trade to shrink in the medium-term, 4 percent saw full-fledged trade friction, while 32 percent saw no change. Only one quarter predicted global trade will expand under Trump.
 
That would mark a deterioration in global trade, which has expanded at a modest rate below 3 percent in recent years after bouncing from a plunge in 2009 in the wake of the global financial crisis.
 
Trump has threatened to ditch the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, between the United States, Canada and Mexico, arguing the agreement has sent U.S. manufacturing jobs to Mexico. He has also said he would withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, or TPP, an ambitious Asia-Pacific trade pact linking 12 countries including the United States and Japan.
 
In written responses, companies voiced concerns about the fate of TPP, NAFTA and Mexico, where Japanese automakers have plants, and how a waning American presence could pave the way for China to wield more influence worldwide.
 
"Reversal of free trade is a concern for our business, but what's more worrying is a weaker U.S. military presence in East Asia, which could embolden China to take control of the power vacuum in the region," wrote a manager at an electrical machinery company.
 
Trump "has declared exiting TPP and pushing bilateral trade pacts, and I'm worried about a shift in (global) trade regime towards one led by China," wrote a manager at a chemicals firm.
 
Managers answered on condition of anonymity in the survey, which was conducted for Reuters by Nikkei Research. Around 250 answered questions on the impact of a Trump presidency.
 
The uncertainty around Trump's trade policies adds to the risks for Japan's economy, which is struggling to mount a sustainable recovery amid slow global demand and sluggish domestic consumption.
 
UNPREDICTABLE
 
The survey found that three-quarters of Japanese companies saw no change in their investment stance towards U.S., while 14 percent said it would wane and the remaining 11 percent saw it growing.
 
Previous Reuters surveys taken during the election campaign had shown a majority of firms believed Trump would be bad for business in the United States, and that Japanese corporate appetite for investing in the U.S. would wane.
 
"Expectation is rising that Trump will adopt business-friendly steps such as infrastructure investment, tax cuts and deregulation," said Hidenobu Tokuda, senior economist at Mizuho Research Institute, who reviewed the survey results. "That said, companies remain cautious about what he says and does, which is all uncertain and utterly unpredictable."
 
The survey also found that companies worried both about a strong yen and a weak yen under a Trump presidency, suggesting there's no consensus on what sort of currency changes are in store.
 
The yen has nearly reversed all of this year's gains since the U.S. election - easing concerns about Japan's export-reliant economy - on expectations that Trump's proposed reflationary economic policies would push up U.S. interest rates.
 
Sixty-two percent said the dollar would move in a 100-110 yen range next year - slightly stronger than around a 111-114 yen range seen during the survey period. Just 27 percent saw it in the 110-120 yen and 2 percent said it would weaken beyond 120 yen. Eight percent saw it strengthening to the 90-100 yen range.
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Government to formalize EUR 70 million loan from IIB www.en.montsame.mn

 
Ulaanbaatar /MONTSAME/ On Wednesday, the Cabinet authorized the Minister of Finance to sign a Loan Agreement of up to EUR 70 million with the International Investment Bank. The loan term is up to seven year and has 3.89 percent interest rate.
 
The government intends to spend the loan funding for reduction of credit service costs and lengthening average period for loan repayments.
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Cabinet presenting draft resolution on risk prevention measures regarding DB www.en.montsame.mn

 
Ulaanbaatar /MONTSAME/ The Development Bank (DB) of Mongolia, since its establishment in 2011, have been operating with active assets of MNT 7.0 trillion. During the course of its operation, the bank has financed some 2,000 projects, and has liabilities of MNT 5.9 trillion.
 
The liabilities balance exceeds the amount of assets. In accordance with the Law on Development Bang of Mongolia, the liabilities must not exceed the amount of equity multiplied by 50.
 
If the Development Bank fails to observe its duty before the law, the risk of the loan payables to be recalled before the agreed date can be higher. Therefore, in order to prevent from such risks, the cabinet approved the draft parliamentary resolution on “some measures towards the Development Bank of Mongolia”, and resolved on Wednesday to immediately submit to the State Great Khural.
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Travel study reveals changing behaviour among young and old www.bbc.com

 
A major new study into how people travel around England shows a big difference between the generations.
Young people increasingly are ditching the car, whilst older people, especially women, drive more than ever.
The Independent Transport Commission (ITC) also found that people are making fewer trips than they did twenty years ago, but those trips are longer.
Men under 35 are the most likely to shun the car, whilst women over 60 are driving more than ever.
One of the authors, Dr Matthew Niblett, director of the ITC, says: "This report uncovers seismic shifts in patterns of individual travel behaviour."
Here is what they found and this is all per person per year.
Overall: The number of trips English residents are making per person has fallen by 15% between 1995 and 2014. However, the average trip distance (all modes) has increased by 10% and the average trip time by almost 15%.
Rich vs Poor: The gap between rich and poor car driver miles is still large but has been narrowing. For the richest income quintile, car driver miles have fallen by 10% between 1996 and 2014 (to about 4500 per year); however, for the poorest quintile, miles driven have risen by almost 20% (to about 1200 per year).
Young vs Old: Young men (under 35) car driver miles have almost halved between 1996 and 2014 (to about 3700 per year), while for women over-60, car driver miles have more than doubled over the same period (to about 1800 per year).
London: In London the fall in car distance travelled per person has been dramatic, falling by almost a third in outer London, and by more than half for inner London.
Rail: The one thing people are doing a lot more is catching the train, despite the fact that even allowing for inflation, fares have gone up by 25% since 1995. Average rail mileage per person has continued to rise sharply. This is due to a greater percentage of the population travelling by rail, rather than existing travellers making more or longer journeys.
Dr Niblett said: "We are seeing that the historic correlations between incomes, costs and travel are weakening. An inter-generational divide in travel behaviour is growing.
"For young adults, cars are increasingly viewed as utilitarian appliances, rather than aspirational goods. And there are also growing differences in travel patterns between rural and urban areas."
 
 
 
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Qoros, Cambridge University join hands to build solar-powered car www.chinadaily.com.cn

 
Qoros, a joint venture between Chery and Israel Corp, is to join hands with Cambridge University to build a car for its student group Eco Racing to participate in a solar-powered car race next year, said the Chinese automaker on Monday.
 
However,the automaker did not specify what technological support it would offer to the group that is to participate in the 3,000 km World Solar Challenge in Australia in October 2017.
 
Established in 2007, the group, often known as the CUER, has since been attending the biennial event that is designed to promote research on solar-powered cars.
 
It attracts teams from around the world, most of which are fielded by universities or corporations although some are fielded by high schools.
 
Besides solar cars, Qoros has worked out a two-stage electric car and hybrids program.
 
One fruit of the first stage is an electric concept car, Qoros 3 QLECTRIQ EV. Having made its premiere in April, the car can travel 350 kilometers on one charge and its battery can get 80 percent charged within an hour.
 
The automaker said the production model will start running off the assembly line in 2017.
 
The second stage will feature an electric car platform that is still under development.
 
Qoros said more innovative technology will be applied to the platform and models based on it will be unveiled starting 2020.
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Trump Win Set Off $2 Trillion Shock Rotation to Stocks From Debt www.bloomberg.com

 
Donald Trump’s election win sent a $2 trillion shock wave through global markets over the past month.
 
That’s how much equities’ global market value has jumped. And that’s about the size of the loss in worth of the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index of bonds, over the worst month for global bonds in dollar terms on record. Other assets were roiled, too: the yen plunged the most in 21 years against the dollar. It all amounted to a complete reversal of the playbooks mapped out by a bevy of analysts and investors who had anticipated a Brexit-style rush for havens in the event of a surprise Republican presidential victory.
 
Those projections did pan out -- for about eight hours, when the yen and Treasuries advanced as the vote-count momentum favored Trump. Then the great reflationary rotation trade started, as Carl Icahn started snapping up S&P 500 futures and other investors decided that the likely new U.S. leader’s promises to cut taxes, boost spending and slash regulation would revive inflation and economic growth. Oh, and potentially force more aggressive interest-rate increases from the Federal Reserve.
 
How lasting a pattern the new market dynamics will be is an open question, with more than a month to go before Trump takes office and plenty of potential roadblocks to his fiscal and regulatory proposals in a fractious U.S. Congress. For now, eyes turn toward next week’s Fed meeting to set the tone for the outlook as far as monetary policy goes.
 
“It’s astounding how big the move has been,” said James Audiss, Sydney-based senior wealth manager at Shaw and Partners Ltd., which oversees about $7.5 billion. “It’s been incredible. Now it all hinges on the Fed and the pace of those rate hikes, but for now the markets are happy to be risk-on.”
 
The dollar has jumped to a decade high relative to major peers and three major U.S. stock indexes last month reached records on the same day for the first time in more than 20 years.
 
For stocks, most developed markets have surged while several emerging ones submerged, led by Ghana and Mexico. Russia and Venezuela soared, though that was more due to OPEC’s pact driving up oil prices. Of 94 primary stock indexes tracked by Bloomberg, more than two-thirds climbed in local currency terms, with a median gain of 2 percent.
 
The greenback’s strength -- and the U.S.’s size at $24.9 trillion out of a total $66.3 trillion -- makes for a slightly cloudier picture looking at equity values. Of the 20 largest markets, comprising 90 percent of world capitalization, seven declined in dollar value, but for five of them that was all down to currency shifts, measured through Dec. 6.
 
When it comes to bonds, only Bahrain and Russia eked out gains in the Bloomberg Barclays global benchmark, while the 20 largest national debt markets all recorded losses -- led by Japan and Mexico, each down more than 8 percent.
 
The question investors now face is: With so much change already priced in a month after Trump’s victory, how much more is there to come?
 
Icahn, once considered a potential for Trump’s cabinet, says he wouldn’t be a buyer right now, while acknowledging he thought the stock rally was looking stretched some time ago.
 
“The night that they knocked it down a thousand points I went and bought stock that night, I thought that was crazy,” he said Wednesday in an interview with Scarlet Fu and Oliver Renick on “Bloomberg Markets.” “I’m not going to say run out and buy stocks today, because I think it’s run a little ahead of where it should be.”
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Honda confirms new $436 million China factory amid sales surge www.reuters.com

 
Honda Motor's (7267.T) joint venture with Dongfeng Motor Group (0489.HK) will invest roughly 3 billion yuan ($436 million) in a new factory in China, the Japanese automaker said in a statement on its website on Thursday.
 
The statement confirms a Reuters report in October that cited sources saying the automaker would build a new factory by 2019 with annual production capacity of 120,000 vehicles.
 
Honda has experienced explosive growth in China during the past two years despite an economic slowdown, luring consumers with strong new offerings in the rapidly growing sport-utility vehicle (SUV) segment. Honda sales have increased 28.3 percent year-on-year in the first 11 months of 2016, it said on Friday.
 
The Dongfeng Honda venture, one of Honda's two JVs in China, is already nearing its capacity limits at its two existing factories, targeting sales of 450,000 vehicles for 2016 against current annual capacity of 480,000.
 
The plant will have capacity to build new energy vehicles, the Chinese term for battery electric or plug-in hybrid cars, the statement said.
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Trump picks Xi's friend as ambassador to China www3.nhk.or.jp

US President-elect Donald Trump says he will nominate an old friend of China's President Xi Jinping as ambassador to the country.

Trump announced his choice of Iowa Governor Terry Branstad on Wednesday.

The 70-year-old Republican served as governor of his home state for 16 years from 1983. He was elected again in 2011 and is currently in his sixth term.

US media reports say Branstad met Xi in 1985 when he led a farm research delegation from Hebei Province to Iowa.

Xi visited Iowa again in 2012, shortly before he assumed the presidency. Branstad invited him to dinner and called him a "longtime friend."

Trump described Branstad as a great choice, saying "He knows them all" -- referring to his longstanding ties with Chinese leaders.

Trump held a direct phone conversation last week with Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen, prompting concerns over the future of US-China relations. The US and Taiwan have no official diplomatic ties.

Observers say Trump's appointment of Branstad may signal his intent to strengthen ties with China primarily in economic areas.

 
 
 
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Rio Tinto says halt of copper shipments from Oyu Tolgoi ‘a bump in the road’ www.mining.com

 
Rio Tinto chief executive Jean-Sebastian Jacques said Wednesday an ongoing border dispute with China over copper exports from Mongolia, which directly affects its massive Oyu Tolgoi mine, will be resolved quickly.
 
Referring to his previous dealings with the Mongolian government Jacques told The Telegraph he had become used to "such bumps in the road".
 
"Each time we would work with the authorities and each time it was resolved. I've no doubt it will be resolved this time," he added.
 
Rio’s CEO comments come as the company had to suspend shipments from the Mongolian mine last week, following a decision by a Chinese border town to increase transport surcharges.
Rio’s CEO comments come as the company had to suspend shipments from the Mongolian mine last week, following a decision by a Chinese border town, deep in the Gobi desert, to increase transport surcharges.
 
Analysts linked the move to a visit to Mongolia by the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader who is not recognized by Chinese authorities.
 
As a result, Canada’s Turquoise Hill Resources, which is 51% owned by Rio and owns two-thirds of Oyu Tolgoi, said last week that it had suspended cargos to the Chinese border. The company quoted a new obligation to use "one joint coal and concentrate crossing route" as the reason and said such requirement had led to "safety and security concerns as well as unreasonably long waiting times".
 
Rio Tinto approved in May a $5.3 billion expansion of Oyu Tolgoi, one of the world's largest copper mines and a key component of the company’s master plan to become less dependent on iron ore for profits and become one of the world’s biggest copper producers.
 
The planned expansion, with its nearly 200 km (125 miles) of underground tunnels that will track three times as deep as the Empire State Building is tall, will more than double the copper output from Oyu Tolgoi, which is mostly sent south to China, the world’s main metals consumer.
 
It is also expected to help Rio and Turquoise Hill get to the most valuable part of the deposit, which also contains gold and silver, and where there has been a open pit mine running since 2013.
 
First production from the extended underground area is expected by 2020, when a shortage of copper is tipped to emerge. Full ramp up, with an estimated 560,000 tonnes of copper per year, along with gold and silver by-products, is slated for 2027.
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Ikea Group plans €1bn investment in recycling companies and forests www.theguardian.com

 
 
Ikea has pledged to invest €1bn (£850m) in recycling companies and forests after netting €5.2bn from the sale of its product development and supply chain business.
 
The deal between the retailer and Inter Ikea, a group set up by Ingvar Kamprad, the founder of Ikea, which controls the brand and design trademarks behind his empire, was revealed as the furniture retailer reported a 7.4% rise in annual global sales to €35.1bn, boosted by 29% growth online to €1.4bn.
 
Net profit rose nearly 20% to €4.2bn as Ikea said it saw growth in 27 of its 28 markets, with China one of the fastest growing. Last week Ikea said sales in the UK were up 8.9% year on year to £1.7bn for the 12 months to the end of August.
 
The company, which has 340 stores, 22 pick-up and order points and 41 shopping centres around the world, said it would pay a dividend of €840m to its owner, the Stichting Ingka Foundation, a Netherlands-based trust, in the next year. Ikea did not pay a dividend last year.
 
The group’s 163,600 staff will also share €443m in bonuses and loyalty payments including a £1,200 loyalty bonus paid into the pension pot of British staff who have worked for the company for five years or longer.
 
Ikea Group’s cash pile was boosted by nearly 40% to €23.1bn by the €5.2bn deal with Inter Ikea.
 
The company said: “Our strong financial position enables us to continue investments in co-workers, our stores, digital technology, the distribution network, as well as shopping centres and renewable energy.”
 
Ikea opened its first new store in the UK in seven years in 2016 – in Reading – and is currently planning outlets in Sheffield, Greenwich and Exeter. It also plans to open its first store in India – in Hyderabad – next year and is also planning a move into Serbia.
 
As part of a series of sustainability pledges, Ikea said it would also be investing €1bn in buying forests as well as companies active in recycling, renewable energy development and biomaterials. It already owns 74,700 hectares of forest in Romania and the Baltic countries and has phased out the use of polystyrene packaging in favour of recyclable alternatives, except for around kitchen appliances.
 
The investment comes on top of €600m pledged last year for investment in renewable energy as Ikea works towards energy independence by 2020.
 
By the end of this year, the company has committed to own and operate 327 wind turbines and to install 730,000 solar panels on its buildings worldwide. It produced the equivalent to 71% of energy used in its operations.
 
But the latest deal with Inter Ikea is likely to prompt further scrutiny of Ikea’s already controversial tax structure.
 
Under a complex international structure partly designed to save taxes, the furniture retailer pays Inter Ikea, the Liechtenstein-based group set up by Kamprad to secure the long-term future of his business, an annual franchise fee worth 3% of sales. Inter Ikea now controls the group’s manufacturing facilities, its product design, advertising and distribution network so that Ikea Group is purely focused on stores.
 
The deal comes as a raft of changes designed to block multinationals from aggressive tax structures come into force. Many companies are unwinding complex corporate arrangements that have saved them large amounts of tax for many years.
 
Research commissioned by the Green/EFA group in the European parliament claims to show that Ikea “structured itself to dodge €1bn in taxes over the last six years using onshore European tax havens”.
 
Ikea has said it was “fully committed to manage its operations in a responsible and sustainable way and we pay our taxes in full compliance with national and international tax rules and regulations”.
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