The US-Japan 10-year government bond yield spread recently dropped to 2.09%, the lowest since March 2022. Here are the data points: the US 10-year yield is stuck at 4.16%, while Japan's yield has surged to 2.07%, reaching a new high since 1997.
Interestingly, according to conventional logic, a narrowing spread should strengthen the yen, but the actual situation is the opposite— the US dollar against the yen has been rising. What’s behind this? The answer points to a troubling issue for the market: Japan’s debt crisis.
Japan’s government debt-to-GDP ratio has exceeded 230%. In an environment where yields are rising sharply, debt interest costs are soaring. The market is starting to question: can Japan’s finances still hold up? The key is that the Bank of Japan is very cautious about raising interest rates, so the rise in bond yields is interpreted by the market as a warning signal— Japan’s economy is in recession, not strong growth. This has actually increased the pressure to sell Japanese bonds.
On the other hand, the Federal Reserve has been slow to cut interest rates, with cuts smaller than expected, so the actual yield spread still favors the dollar. The appeal of carry trades has not diminished. Coupled with uncertainties from forex market interventions, multiple factors are working together to offset the positive effects of the narrowing spread. The result is that the yen’s movement does not match textbook expectations.
Where should future focus be? When will the Fed actually implement rate cuts and by how much; will the Bank of Japan raise rates more quickly; can Japanese government bond auctions proceed smoothly, and how should we interpret debt data? These three variables will determine whether the exchange rate pattern can break the current deadlock.
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ZenZKPlayer
· 01-05 14:05
Japan's debt-to-GDP ratio is 230%, this is really not a small problem
Adding more to BTC was definitely the right move, the fiat currency show is becoming more and more surreal
The Federal Reserve hasn't even cut interest rates yet, the nesting doll game continues
The interest rate spread can change at any time, the textbook needs to be revised, haha
The Bank of Japan's cautious approach really, instead, it has scared the market into confusion
It seems difficult to break the exchange rate pattern, relying on the Fed's stance to make decisions
View OriginalReply0
WhaleMistaker
· 01-03 22:40
Japan's debt is 230%, this really can't be sustained.
View OriginalReply0
HashRateHustler
· 01-03 04:20
Japan's debt is so terrifying, no wonder the yen can't seem to rise no matter what.
View OriginalReply0
GhostInTheChain
· 01-03 04:20
If Japan's debt crisis explodes, then BTC is the real safe haven.
View OriginalReply0
NftDeepBreather
· 01-03 04:19
The Japanese debt crisis is really about to burst.
View OriginalReply0
Blockchainiac
· 01-03 04:16
Japan's debt at 230%? Now that's the real risk of a financial crisis.
View OriginalReply0
DeFiChef
· 01-03 04:11
Japan's debt explosion is eye-catching; no wonder the yen is being hammered.
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SerumDegen
· 01-03 04:09
japan's 230% debt-to-gdp ratio is basically a liquidation cascade waiting to happen ngl
Reply0
GasBankrupter
· 01-03 03:59
Japan's debt has exploded; no wonder the yen is so weak.
The US-Japan 10-year government bond yield spread recently dropped to 2.09%, the lowest since March 2022. Here are the data points: the US 10-year yield is stuck at 4.16%, while Japan's yield has surged to 2.07%, reaching a new high since 1997.
Interestingly, according to conventional logic, a narrowing spread should strengthen the yen, but the actual situation is the opposite— the US dollar against the yen has been rising. What’s behind this? The answer points to a troubling issue for the market: Japan’s debt crisis.
Japan’s government debt-to-GDP ratio has exceeded 230%. In an environment where yields are rising sharply, debt interest costs are soaring. The market is starting to question: can Japan’s finances still hold up? The key is that the Bank of Japan is very cautious about raising interest rates, so the rise in bond yields is interpreted by the market as a warning signal— Japan’s economy is in recession, not strong growth. This has actually increased the pressure to sell Japanese bonds.
On the other hand, the Federal Reserve has been slow to cut interest rates, with cuts smaller than expected, so the actual yield spread still favors the dollar. The appeal of carry trades has not diminished. Coupled with uncertainties from forex market interventions, multiple factors are working together to offset the positive effects of the narrowing spread. The result is that the yen’s movement does not match textbook expectations.
Where should future focus be? When will the Fed actually implement rate cuts and by how much; will the Bank of Japan raise rates more quickly; can Japanese government bond auctions proceed smoothly, and how should we interpret debt data? These three variables will determine whether the exchange rate pattern can break the current deadlock.