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#JapanBondMarketSell-Off
Japan’s bond market just sent a pretty loud signal — and it’s not something global markets can ignore.
A sharp sell-off hit JGBs, with 30Y and 40Y yields jumping more than 25 bps after talk of ending fiscal tightening and ramping up government spending. For a market that’s been ultra-stable for decades, that kind of move is a big deal.
Here’s the real question: does this stay a Japan story, or does it leak out globally?
If long-dated Japanese yields keep rising, it changes the game for global capital flows. Japanese institutions are some of the largest holders of foreign bonds. Higher yields at home could pull money back from US Treasuries and European debt, quietly pushing global rates higher.
For risk assets, the impact is mixed:
📉 Higher global yields = pressure on equities, especially high-valuation and growth names
💱 A stronger yen could unwind carry trades, which often hits risk sentiment fast
🏦 Banks may like steeper curves, but leveraged trades won’t
The bigger takeaway?
Japan has been the “anchor” keeping global yields suppressed for years. If that anchor starts lifting, even slowly, markets everywhere will feel it.
This isn’t panic territory yet — but it is a reminder that regime shifts don’t announce themselves loudly. They start with moves like this, when everyone thinks it’s “just Japan.”
Curious to hear how others are positioning around rates and risk right now.