Crypto faces fresh macro pressure as Japan, U.S. yields spike – Here’s why!

The crypto market could be approaching a major inflection point as fresh macroeconomic signals tied to rising inflation and economic uncertainty in Japan and the United States emerge.

The market has already absorbed billions in Capital Outflows driven by the U.S.-China tariff war and geopolitical tensions involving the U.S., Iran, and Israel. These new macro developments threaten to weigh risk assets down even further.

Japan and U.S. bond yields hit multi-decade highs

Economic uncertainty is building simultaneously in Japan and the U.S., with the 10-Year Bond Yields of both countries hitting fresh highs.

Bond Yields represent the return investors earn from holding government debt. They typically reflect expectations around economic activity, inflation, and liquidity conditions.

At press time, Japan’s 10-Year Bond Yield had reached 2.83%, a level unseen in over 20 years. Meanwhile, the U.S. 10-Year Yield climbed to 4.68%, its highest level since August 2007.

Japan 10 years bond yield vs total crypto market capitalization.Source: TradingViewHistorical data charting the relationship between Japan’s Bond Yield and the crypto market showed a consistent pattern. Rising Bond Yields preceded declining Bitcoin [BTC] performance, while falling Bond Yields accompanied recoveries.

That correlation played out in January 2026 and again in March 2026.

The Correlation between the two has now deepened to -0.14, its steepest negative reading yet. This suggested that a continued rise in Bond Yields could add further pressure to the market.

Zoomex Managing Director Fernando Lillo offered context on how this cycle differs from prior ones.

“In prior market cycles, rising sovereign yields typically triggered aggressive deleveraging across digital assets, as crypto was trading as a high-beta liquidity proxy. However, this time, despite Treasury yields rising and Bitcoin pulling back from $82,000 toward the $77,000 area, implied and expected volatility have not been rising unusually,” Lillo said.

Why are investors turning defensive?

The risk this divergence poses is directly linked to tightening financial conditions.

Rising Bond Yields signaled that the economy was under stress and that inflation may be accelerating. That shift pushed investors away from risk assets and toward government bonds.

Inflation data from both countries supported this concern.

Inflation in Japan rose from 1.3% to 1.5% between March and April 2026. U.S. inflation climbed from 3.2% to 3.4% over the same period.

Both marked a 20-basis-point increase.

On top of that, the broader geopolitical backdrop also shaped market conditions.

The U.S.-Iran ceasefire agreement triggered a $333.05 billion Capital Inflow into the crypto market between the 8th of April and the 10th of May. Approximately $165 billion entered more recently.

Rate hike expectations compound the risk

AMBCrypto had reported that Bitcoin faces heightened risk due to its growing exposure to institutional investors.

That report warned that Bitcoin risks a steeper decline given the absence of any clear signal of macro easing, with market expectations increasingly tilting toward a rate hike.

Adding that markets were pricing in a 73.6% probability of a rate hike, suggesting that further tightening remains the more likely scenario and that the conditions bearing down on risk assets are far from resolved.


Final Summary

  • Japan’s 10-Year Bond Yield reached 2.83%, while the U.S. 10-Year Yield climbed to 4.68%.
  • The crypto market’s Correlation with Bond Yields weakened further to -0.14, signaling rising downside pressure.
BTC0.31%
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