Japan has made it a habit of coming back to the spotlight every now and then, but mostly for the wrong reasons. The reason is that Japan’s economy is struggling with some underlying problems.
It’s debt remains large and its growth modest.
Then, in a single trading session, long-dated government bond yields jumped by more than a quarter of a percentage point, and the 40-year yield crossed 4% for the first time since that bond existed.
This has rattled markets, domestic insurers sold aggressively, and global yields moved higher within hours. For investors who had stopped paying attention to Japan, it was a jolt.
And just like that, the market began pricing Japan again.
How did Japan get here?
Japan’s public debt has been extreme for years. Gross government debt sits near 240-250% of GDP, far above the US or Europe. That alone is not new. What is new is the environment around it.
For most of the past decade, the Bank of Japan kept long-term borrowing costs artificially low through heavy bond purchases and yield caps.
The result was stability, as ten-year yields hovered near zero, ultra-long bonds traded in narrow ranges, and debt service costs stayed manageable despite the scale of borrowing.
But this system has been loosening since 2024. The central bank has reduced its market footprint and allowed yields to move more freely.
At the same time, inflation has returned, and nominal growth has picked up, pushing yields higher even without policy tightening.
Then came politics. The government announced a large fiscal package and a two-year suspension of the food sales tax, a move estimated to cost around ¥5 trillion ($32 billion) per year.
The prime minister framed a snap election as a mandate for broader policy change.
Officials insisted the measures would not require new borrowing, but provided few specifics.
Markets did not wait for clarification. They priced the risk.
Why did the bond market react so violently?
The speed of the move surprised many observers, but the mechanics are straightforward once the structure of the market is understood.
Ultra-long bonds do not trade on central bank rate expectations. They trade on supply, demand, and long-term credibility.
When investors expect more issuance, or even the possibility of it, yields adjust quickly.
Demand has also changed. Though Japanese life insurers and pension funds once absorbed most new issuance, it seems that this is starting to change.
In December, insurers sold a record amount of long-dated bonds. When yields began to rise in January, there was no stable buyer stepping in.
Source: Bloomberg
Foreign investors now dominate marginal trading in Japanese government bonds.
They account for a majority of cash market activity and are active in leveraged strategies tied to global rates and the yen.
But these investors are fast to exit when price moves turn against them. When yields jumped, leverage was cut, positions were unwound, and liquidity vanished.
A weak auction of 20-year bonds acted as confirmation rather than a cause. By the time it cleared, the market had already lost confidence in the long end.
Why the BOJ did not stop it
In past episodes of stress, investors assumed the central bank would intervene quickly. This time, it did not.
That restraint was deliberate. After years of distorting the bond market, the Bank of Japan has been trying to restore some degree of price discovery.
Officials have repeated that emergency tools remain available, but those tools are meant for dysfunction, not for every uncomfortable repricing.
From a policy perspective, stepping in too early would have undermined the message that Japan is returning to a more normal market framework. From a market perspective, the absence of immediate intervention changed behavior.
Traders no longer assumed there was a guaranteed buyer below them.
Once that assumption broke, yields moved to levels private investors were willing to hold. For 40-year bonds, that level turned out to be above 4%.
Source: Bloomberg
Why Japan’s move hit global markets
Japan’s bond market is not isolated. It sits at the center of several global mechanisms.
First, Japan anchors global duration. When its long-term yields rise sharply, relative-value trades force selling in other sovereign markets. On the day Japanese yields surged, US 30-year Treasury yields rose toward 4.9%. European bonds moved as well.
Second, the yen remains a funding currency. Rising Japanese yields and a weaker yen strain carry trades that rely on low-cost yen borrowing. As those trades unwind, pressure spreads to equities, credit, and emerging markets.
The cross-asset nature of the recent move confirms this.
Third, Japan has long been viewed as a source of stability. When that perception cracks, investors reassess how much risk they are carrying elsewhere. The result is not a Japan-only sell-off, but a broader tightening of financial conditions.
What investors should actually take from this
Japan’s situation is often framed in extremes. Either it is said to be immune to market pressure, or on the verge of collapse. Neither view fits the evidence.
The recent bond market shock did not indicate default risk. Japan’s debt remains largely domestically held, and the government retains significant fiscal capacity. What changed was pricing, not solvency.
The real lesson is simpler and more important. Japan is no longer insulated from market discipline. Long-term rates can move quickly.
Fiscal signals now matter. Foreign capital sets prices at the margin. Volatility that was once absorbed by policy now passes through to markets.
For years, investors could ignore Japan because nothing happened there. That era has ended.
Japan has become relevant again, not because it is about to fail, but because its repricing feeds directly into global rates and risk appetite.
Markets rarely warn gently when a long-standing assumption stops holding. In January, Japan’s bond market did not whisper. It spoke loudly, and global investors heard it.
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