Japan’s Bond Yields Soar to 2.94% – Highest Since 1998 – Is a Major Bitcoin Crash Next?
Japan's bond market just flashed a warning signal not seen in nearly three decades. The yield on its benchmark 10-year government bond hit 2.94%, a level untouched since 1998. That number alone is enough to send shivers through traditional finance circles, but the real question rippling through digital asset desks is far more provocative: is this the trigger for a major Bitcoin crash?
The Yield Shockwave
For years, Japan stood as the bastion of ultra-low interest rates, a monetary policy experiment that flooded the globe with cheap capital. That era appears to be decisively over. The surge past 2.94% isn't just a statistic; it's a fundamental repricing of risk and return in one of the world's largest debt markets. Capital has a new, more attractive home, and it's pulling away from speculative frontiers.
Bitcoin in the Crosshairs
High yields in safe-haven assets like government bonds create a powerful gravitational pull. Why chase volatile crypto returns when you can lock in nearly 3% from a G7 nation? It's the oldest story in finance—the flight to quality—and it's playing out in real-time. This shift siphons liquidity, the very lifeblood that has fueled crypto's bull runs, and raises the cost of capital for every risky bet on the board.
The Liquidity Squeeze
Think of global liquidity as a tide. For years, the tide, pushed by near-zero rates in Japan and elsewhere, rose, lifting all boats—including Bitcoin's rocket ship. Now, that tide is receding. As money flows back into traditional, yielding assets, the excess cash that once sloshed into crypto exchanges starts to dry up. It's a brutal, mechanical process that often ignores narratives and hype.
A Test of Resilience
This is the moment that separates the dogmatic from the pragmatic. Proponents will argue Bitcoin is a sovereign, uncorrelated asset, a hedge against traditional system failure. Skeptics will see a classic speculative asset getting its wings clipped by the return of sane interest rates. The truth likely lies in the messy middle—a short-term pressure cooker that tests investor conviction.
The finance world loves a simple narrative: stocks down, bonds up, crypto craters. But sometimes the market's cynical logic is hard to argue with. When 'risk-free' starts paying a real yield, the 'risk-on' party gets a lot less crowded. Buckle up.
Japan, the world’s second-largest economy, saw its 20-year government bond yield rise to 2.947%, the highest since 1998. With debt piling up and borrowing costs climbing rapidly, Japan may be forced to bring hundreds of billions of dollars back home. If that happens, U.S. bonds, Tether, and even Bitcoin could be affected.
Experts predict the Bitcoin price could drop 5–8% if Japanese bond yields stay above 2.90%.
Japan’s Debt Trap Is Reaching Its Breaking Point
Japan carries one of the heaviest debt loads on Earth, 263% of its GDP, nearly $10.2 trillion in total.
For decades, they managed this only because interest rates were NEAR zero. But now, with inflation staying above 2% and the Bank of Japan lifting short-term rates to 0.5%, the cost of borrowing is exploding.
JUST IN
: Japan's 20-Year Bond Yield hits 2.947%, the highest level since 1998![]()
pic.twitter.com/QVmHTV399w
At these new yield levels, Japan’s interest bill could jump from $162 billion to $280 billion over the next decade. That means nearly 38% of government income WOULD go on paying interest.
No big country has ever handled debt this big without facing serious problems.
Why This Forces Japan Toward Selling U.S. Treasuries
Japan is the largest foreign holder of U.S. debt, holding over $1.13 trillion in Treasuries. But rising Japanese bond yields now make U.S. bonds unprofitable after currency risk. This means Japanese investors will start coming back home.
Economic models predict that up to $500 billion could leave global markets in the next 18 months, pushing U.S. borrowing costs higher even without a Fed rate hike.
Therefore, Japan’s growing debt problem isn’t just Japan’s problem anymore. It could impact global markets.
How Bitcoin and Tether Are at Risk?
For years, people borrowed cheap money in Japan, about $1.2 trillion, and used it to buy things like stocks, crypto, and other investments. Now, if Japan sells U.S. bonds, others may follow.
If U.S. bond prices drop, Tether, which holds a lot of Treasuries, will come under pressure. And if Tether falls, bitcoin usually falls too.
We’ve seen this before, when in July 2024, a BOJ rate hike caused an 18% Bitcoin drop to $53,000, causing nearly $3 billion in value to be wiped out from the crypto market
Even recently, when BOJ just hinted at a rate hike, Bitcoin fell from $92,000 to $83,832.
Right now, if Japanese yields remain above 2.90%, Bitcoin could MOVE down toward the $87,000 support. However, Trump’s pro-crypto stance and ETF inflows provide buffers, potentially limiting losses to 5-8%.
As of now, Bitcoin is trading near $91,728, about 8% below its earlier highs, with the total crypto market cap at $3.1 trillion.