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Global markets may be underestimating a potential macro shift unfolding in Japan. According to JPMorgan, the Bank of Japan is expected to raise interest rates twice in 2025, with policy rates potentially reaching around 1.25% by the end of 2026. If realized, this would represent one of the most meaningful transitions in Japanese monetary policy in decades, marking a clear departure from the era of ultra-loose conditions and negative real rates.
For global risk assets, this is not a localized event. Japan sits at the center of one of the most important liquidity channels in modern financial markets.
Why the Yen Matters to Global Risk Assets
For years, the Japanese yen has served as the backbone of global carry trades. Investors borrowed cheaply in yen and redeployed that capital into higher-yielding assets worldwide, including equities, emerging markets, high-beta tech, and increasingly, cryptocurrencies.
This persistent flow of cheap yen liquidity has quietly supported global risk appetite. A structural change in BOJ policy challenges that foundation. Rising Japanese yields reduce the attractiveness of borrowing in yen, while a strengthening currency increases the cost of maintaining leveraged positions.
The result is not necessarily a collapse, but a tightening of global liquidity conditions.
The Risk of a Yen Carry Trade Unwind
If BOJ rate hikes materialize and Japanese bond yields continue to rise, the incentive structure behind the yen carry trade weakens. A stronger yen combined with higher funding costs can trigger partial or accelerated unwinds of leveraged positions.
Historically, these unwind phases tend to create short-term stress across risk markets. Equities, high-beta assets, and leveraged positions often experience volatility as capital is repatriated or repositioned. Importantly, this pressure is typically cyclical and adjustment-driven, not systemic, but it can reshape market behavior for extended periods.
What This Means for Crypto Markets
For crypto, the implications are nuanced and increasingly macro-driven.
First, short-term volatility may increase as global liquidity tightens and risk exposure is recalibrated. Crypto, particularly Bitcoin, has become more sensitive to macro liquidity conditions as institutional participation grows.
Second, speculative flows may face pressure. Assets dependent on leverage, momentum, and sentiment are likely to feel the impact first, especially during periods of global de-risking.
Third, crypto markets may trade less on isolated narratives and more on macro alignment. Liquidity conditions, yield differentials, and global capital flows are becoming dominant drivers, particularly for Bitcoin and large-cap assets.
That said, this does not invalidate the long-term crypto thesis.
The Bigger Picture: Liquidity Cycles vs Structural Adoption
Bitcoin continues to behave as a global liquidity barometer. During periods of tightening, it reacts like a high-beta macro asset. During periods of expansion, it captures upside disproportionately. This dual nature is now a feature, not a flaw.
Crucially, short-term macro headwinds do not negate long-term structural adoption. Institutional integration, ETF access, improved market infrastructure, and expanding use cases continue to progress independently of temporary liquidity cycles.
If anything, macro-driven volatility often creates clearer differentiation between assets with structural value and those driven purely by excess liquidity.
Implications for Crypto Risk Allocation (2025–2026)
A potential yen liquidity shift reinforces several strategic considerations:
Risk allocation must become more selective, favoring assets with liquidity depth, institutional participation, and real demand.
Leverage-dependent and purely speculative segments may underperform during adjustment phases.
Bitcoin’s role as a macro-sensitive asset strengthens, increasing its relevance in portfolio construction during both tightening and easing cycles.
Capital rotation, rather than capital exit, is likely to define this phase.
Final Thought
A yen carry trade unwind, if it unfolds, would not signal the end of the crypto cycle. Instead, it would mark another step in crypto’s evolution from a narrative-driven market to a liquidity-aware, macro-integrated asset class.
The key question is not whether volatility emerges, but how capital reallocates in response.
Will macro tightening separate durable crypto assets from speculative excess?
And how should crypto risk exposure be positioned as global liquidity dynamics evolve into 2026