The Bank of Japan just made a move that hasn't been seen in three decades. On December 19, 2025, the BOJ raised its key interest rate to 0.75%, marking the highest level since 1995. The central bank's reasoning? Sustained wage-price momentum and underlying inflation that's been sitting comfortably above the 2% target for months. The tone wasn't particularly hawkish, but the message was clear: Japan's economy is finally showing signs that justify higher rates.
Market Reaction: A Quick Yen Slide, Then Reality Sets In
The yen initially weakened, dropping to 156 per USD, but the selloff was short-lived. Markets had already priced in the rate hike, so the currency quickly lost its downward momentum. The real action happened in Japan's bond market, where the 10-year yield jumped to 2%, the highest level in nine years. What makes this particularly interesting is that it occurred while Japan's economy was actually contracting, down 0.6% quarter-over-quarter and 2.3% on an annualized basis. Not exactly the backdrop you'd expect for surging yields.
What Foreign Bond Investors Should Be Watching
If you're a foreign investor holding Japanese fixed-income assets, whether that's government bonds, corporate debt, or other securities, the next few weeks and months matter. Here's how different instruments are being affected:
Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs): The policy rate hike pushed the 10-year JGB yield to 2.015%, the highest since 1999. With Japan having removed Yield Curve Control in 2024 and the prospect of additional rate hikes looming in 2026, investors could be looking at continued upward pressure on yields. That's good news if you're buying new bonds, less great if you're holding existing ones watching their prices decline.
Corporate Bonds: Corporate bond yields are essentially JGBs plus credit spreads, so higher JGB yields translate directly to higher corporate yields and lower bond prices. The BOJ scaling back its bond purchases is creating weaker demand at auctions, which introduces liquidity concerns. On the positive side, corporate credit stability remains strong thanks to elevated profit levels across Japanese companies.
Other Debt Securities: Municipal bonds, financial institution bonds, asset-backed securities, mortgage-backed securities, commercial paper, bank loans, and floating-rate notes are all feeling the impact. Municipalities face higher issuance costs. Bank bonds mean higher mortgage and loan costs for borrowers. ABS and MBS are driving up loan costs. Commercial paper markets are seeing tighter liquidity but higher short-term yields. Floating-rate notes are becoming more attractive to investors, though they now come with heftier coupons.
Looking Ahead to 2026
BOJ Governor Ueda Kazuo has signaled a slow, cautious approach to monetary policy normalization. Future rate hikes will need to be justified by sustained wage growth and economic conditions that support tightening. Since the current benchmark rate still sits below Japan's neutral rate, another hike in 2026 or through a multi-year approach remains on the table.
The Outlook Across Time Horizons
Short-term: The yen could weaken or mildly strengthen against the dollar. What actually happened? In the four days following the hike, the yen strengthened from 157.65 to 155.74 against the greenback.
Medium-term: With the U.S. dollar facing potential rate cuts in 2026, the yen is positioned to maintain its strength relative to the dollar.
Long-term: Governor Ueda has made it clear the BOJ is eyeing further rate hikes in 2026. This signals higher, sustained JGB yields and increased volatility in Japan's bond market. For investors, that means higher yen funding costs, potential erosion of returns, and a less attractive environment for carry trades that have long been a staple strategy in Japanese markets.




