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#BOJRateHikesBackontheTable
JPMorgan’s expectation that the Bank of Japan could raise rates twice in 2025, eventually pushing policy rates toward 1.25% by the end of 2026, is a major shift in the global macro landscape. For decades, Japan’s ultra-loose monetary policy made the yen one of the cheapest funding currencies in the world. That cheap liquidity didn’t stay confined to Japan it flowed into global markets, supporting equities, bonds, and increasingly high-beta assets like crypto. As Japan gradually normalizes policy, the implications extend well beyond domestic markets.
Rising Japanese rates directly affect yen liquidity, which has quietly been an important pillar of global risk-taking. Many institutional investors and macro funds have historically borrowed yen at low cost and deployed that capital into higher-yielding assets elsewhere. This dynamic, known as the yen carry trade, has helped sustain leverage and risk appetite across global markets. If borrowing in yen becomes more expensive, or if expectations of further tightening accelerate, those positions may begin to unwind forcing investors to reduce exposure to risk assets, including crypto.
For crypto markets, this matters because liquidity is often more important than narratives. A shift in yen funding conditions could reduce the availability of cheap leverage, particularly at the margins where speculative activity tends to concentrate. If carry trades unwind meaningfully, it could lead to tighter global liquidity, increased volatility, and periodic risk-off moves that pressure Bitcoin and altcoins alike. Historically, sudden shifts in funding costs have tended to trigger sharp but fast-moving drawdowns, especially in assets that rely heavily on momentum and leverage.
That said, the situation is not entirely one-directional. Even as rates rise, the yen’s exchange rate behavior will be critical. If the yen remains structurally weak, carry trades may persist despite higher nominal rates, as investors continue to see value in borrowing yen relative to other currencies. In this scenario, liquidity may not drain aggressively, and risk assets including crypto could remain supported, albeit with higher volatility and less tolerance for excess leverage.
The real risk emerges if rate hikes coincide with yen appreciation. A strengthening yen increases the cost of servicing yen-denominated liabilities, accelerating forced deleveraging. In such moments, global risk assets tend to sell off together as positions are unwound to repay funding. For crypto, this could translate into sharp downside moves driven less by fundamentals and more by macro-driven liquidity compression.
From an allocation perspective, this raises an important question: are crypto markets still partially dependent on global carry liquidity, or have they matured enough to absorb these shocks? While Bitcoin has increasingly attracted longer-term capital, short-term price action remains highly sensitive to changes in global funding conditions. A gradual BOJ tightening may be manageable, but a faster-than-expected shift could reintroduce the risk of a broader carry unwind.
In short, yen liquidity still matters. If Japan’s rate normalization continues smoothly and the yen stays weak, crypto may simply experience higher volatility without a structural breakdown. But if rising rates begin to reverse decades-long funding dynamics, a yen carry trade unwind could once again become a meaningful macro headwind for crypto risk allocation. Monitoring BOJ policy signals, USD/JPY trends, and global liquidity conditions will be essential for understanding how this macro shift feeds into Bitcoin and the broader digital asset market.