A severe disruption in Japan’s government bond market is setting off alarm bells far beyond Tokyo, with analysts warning the fallout could spread across global financial systems—crypto markets included.
Yields on Japan’s 30-year bonds have spiked to 3.2%, while 40-year bonds have plunged in value, erasing over $500 billion in market cap.
Analysts describe the liquidity crunch as the worst since the 2008 crisis, fueled by the Bank of Japan’s sudden pullback from its long-standing bond-purchasing program. The BOJ still holds over half of the country’s $7.8 trillion in sovereign debt, a legacy that has now distorted the market.
With a debt-to-GDP ratio surpassing 260%, Japan’s economic foundations are under pressure. GDP contracted 0.7% in the first quarter of 2025, inflation climbed to 3.6%, and real wages continue to decline—raising concerns of stagflation.
Amid the turmoil, Bitcoin is emerging as a surprising beneficiary. The unwinding of the yen carry trade—where investors borrow cheap yen to invest abroad—is now pushing capital toward alternative assets. BTC demand has grown in Japan and the UK, where bond markets are also under strain.
Analysts note increasing capital rotation from bonds to Bitcoin, positioning the cryptocurrency as a possible hedge against sovereign risk. While short-term volatility remains a concern, Japan’s debt woes may be accelerating a longer-term shift in how institutions view digital assets.
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