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Japan's Surging Bond Yields Revive Yen Carry Trade Worries

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Japan's 30-year bond yields hit an all-time high of 3.52%, jumping 48 basis points since November. The move is raising questions about whether last year's carry trade chaos could repeat itself and shake global markets once again.

Japan's bond market is flashing warning signs that have investors wondering if we're about to see a repeat of last year's market turbulence. The country's 30-year treasury yields hit a record 3.52% on Tuesday night, marking a 48-basis-point surge since November. For a country that spent decades as the world's anchor of ultra-low rates, this is kind of a big deal.

Why Japan's Fiscal Picture Keeps Getting Messier

Remember when Japan was synonymous with negative interest rates and rock-bottom yields? Those days are fading fast. The spike in yields comes as Japan's fiscal situation deteriorates at an impressive clip. Lawmakers approved a record ¥122.3 trillion budget last month (that's $785 billion) for the fiscal year starting April 2026, driven by hefty increases in social welfare and defense spending.

And that's on top of a ¥21.3 trillion economic stimulus package (about $140 billion) greenlit by the government under new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. When you're adding stimulus packages on top of record budgets, bond markets tend to notice.

The Yen Tells a Different Story Than Yields

Here's where it gets interesting. Economist Robin Brooks points out that despite the sharp climb in yields, they're "still way below where they would be if markets were able to freely set them." The Bank of Japan continues buying up longer-term bonds, effectively putting a lid on how high yields can go.

So where's the real risk showing up? In the currency. Brooks argues that "the rising risk of a debt crisis" is being priced into the Japanese Yen, which keeps sliding lower. His take: "the currency, not yields, is what to watch when it comes to gauging Japan's fiscal risk."

The numbers back this up. The yen has dropped over 34% against the dollar over the past five years, and it's fallen 6.6% in just the last six months during a period when the dollar itself was under pressure. That's not exactly a vote of confidence.

The Carry Trade That Broke Markets

Japan's extended period of rock-bottom rates fueled one of the world's largest carry trades. The strategy was straightforward: borrow cheaply in yen, invest in higher-yielding assets elsewhere, pocket the difference.

This all came crashing down in 2024 when the Bank of Japan finally ended its negative short-term rates, raising them for the first time in 17 years. The sudden unwinding of a carry trade that had been running for nearly two decades sent global markets into a tailspin as hedge funds scrambled to cover positions, draining liquidity from markets worldwide.

Should Investors Worry This Time?

With Japanese bond yields hitting fresh records, investors are understandably nervous. When BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda merely hinted at potential rate hikes last month, it was enough to pressure U.S. equities, Bitcoin Bitcoin (BTC), and U.S. Treasuries.

But not everyone's sounding the alarm. Bob Elliott, Chief Investment Officer at Unlimited, dismissed carry trade concerns in his newsletter earlier last month, arguing that market exposure to Japan's monetary policy shifts has shrunk considerably since the 2008 financial crisis.

Adarsh Sinha, global head of G10 Rates and FX strategy at BofA Securities, agrees. According to data on yen-denominated bond issuance by foreign companies, "there's no sign right now of an excessive yen carry trade buildup," he said.

The question now is whether rising yields and a weakening yen will stay a Japan-specific issue, or whether the ripple effects will once again reach across global markets. Based on last year's experience, investors have good reason to keep watching.

Japan's Surging Bond Yields Revive Yen Carry Trade Worries

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Japan's 30-year bond yields hit an all-time high of 3.52%, jumping 48 basis points since November. The move is raising questions about whether last year's carry trade chaos could repeat itself and shake global markets once again.

Japan's bond market is flashing warning signs that have investors wondering if we're about to see a repeat of last year's market turbulence. The country's 30-year treasury yields hit a record 3.52% on Tuesday night, marking a 48-basis-point surge since November. For a country that spent decades as the world's anchor of ultra-low rates, this is kind of a big deal.

Why Japan's Fiscal Picture Keeps Getting Messier

Remember when Japan was synonymous with negative interest rates and rock-bottom yields? Those days are fading fast. The spike in yields comes as Japan's fiscal situation deteriorates at an impressive clip. Lawmakers approved a record ¥122.3 trillion budget last month (that's $785 billion) for the fiscal year starting April 2026, driven by hefty increases in social welfare and defense spending.

And that's on top of a ¥21.3 trillion economic stimulus package (about $140 billion) greenlit by the government under new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. When you're adding stimulus packages on top of record budgets, bond markets tend to notice.

The Yen Tells a Different Story Than Yields

Here's where it gets interesting. Economist Robin Brooks points out that despite the sharp climb in yields, they're "still way below where they would be if markets were able to freely set them." The Bank of Japan continues buying up longer-term bonds, effectively putting a lid on how high yields can go.

So where's the real risk showing up? In the currency. Brooks argues that "the rising risk of a debt crisis" is being priced into the Japanese Yen, which keeps sliding lower. His take: "the currency, not yields, is what to watch when it comes to gauging Japan's fiscal risk."

The numbers back this up. The yen has dropped over 34% against the dollar over the past five years, and it's fallen 6.6% in just the last six months during a period when the dollar itself was under pressure. That's not exactly a vote of confidence.

The Carry Trade That Broke Markets

Japan's extended period of rock-bottom rates fueled one of the world's largest carry trades. The strategy was straightforward: borrow cheaply in yen, invest in higher-yielding assets elsewhere, pocket the difference.

This all came crashing down in 2024 when the Bank of Japan finally ended its negative short-term rates, raising them for the first time in 17 years. The sudden unwinding of a carry trade that had been running for nearly two decades sent global markets into a tailspin as hedge funds scrambled to cover positions, draining liquidity from markets worldwide.

Should Investors Worry This Time?

With Japanese bond yields hitting fresh records, investors are understandably nervous. When BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda merely hinted at potential rate hikes last month, it was enough to pressure U.S. equities, Bitcoin Bitcoin (BTC), and U.S. Treasuries.

But not everyone's sounding the alarm. Bob Elliott, Chief Investment Officer at Unlimited, dismissed carry trade concerns in his newsletter earlier last month, arguing that market exposure to Japan's monetary policy shifts has shrunk considerably since the 2008 financial crisis.

Adarsh Sinha, global head of G10 Rates and FX strategy at BofA Securities, agrees. According to data on yen-denominated bond issuance by foreign companies, "there's no sign right now of an excessive yen carry trade buildup," he said.

The question now is whether rising yields and a weakening yen will stay a Japan-specific issue, or whether the ripple effects will once again reach across global markets. Based on last year's experience, investors have good reason to keep watching.