On December 18, the Bank of Japan raised its benchmark rate to 0.75%, marking the highest level since 1995.
Governor Kazuo Ueda described this decision as a definitive shift away from the “ultra-accommodative” policies that have driven global risk appetite for decades.
In response to this announcement, Bitcoin remained relatively stable near $87,800, though this calmness masks a significant underlying change.
Market analysts remarked that the interest rate hike serves as a live assessment of the global funding landscape, especially the yen carry trade that has been quietly supporting leverage across various markets, from Nasdaq futures to crypto derivatives.
With this in mind, the real concern for traders approaching 2026 isn’t just about this recent hike. The risk lies in Japan potentially continuing to tighten its monetary policy while the US Federal Reserve begins to lower rates, creating a temporary disparity in dollar and yen liquidity.
Hedging-cost squeeze
The yen carry trade, which involves borrowing in low-yielding yen to invest in higher-return assets abroad, is still the primary channel through which decisions from Tokyo affect Bitcoin.
For years, this arrangement has provided a consistent, albeit murky, demand for risk assets.
Bitunix analysts noted to CryptoSlate that this dynamic is shifting due to current market conditions.
If the Fed starts to cut rates while Japan continues to raise them, the US–Japan interest-rate differential narrows, undermining the economic foundations of global leverage.
They added:
“This would create pressure for rebalancing in carry trades that depend on the yen as a funding currency, possibly prompting capital to flow back into Japanese assets and generating intermittent challenges for the US dollar and risk assets.”
However, Bitcoin analyst Fred Krueger contends that the more significant concern lies in hedging rather than lead rates. He suggested that markets often overlook the key players in the trade: Japanese life insurers.
He explained that institutions like Nippon Life are not pursuing crypto rallies; they are aligning with long-term liabilities. For two decades, this meant investing in U.S. Treasuries due to minimal yields on domestic bonds. This framework shifted when the Fed increased rates above 5%.
Krueger stated:
“When Jerome Powell raised rates past 5%, that entire structure collapsed. FX hedging costs skyrocketed and nullified any yield when converted back into yen.”
The outcome is a subtle repositioning rather than an overt liquidation.
With 10-year Japanese government bond yields rising above 2%, local bonds are now providing a feasible return without the burden of currency hedges. Hence, capital that might have previously flowed into hedged Treasuries or global credit is staying in Japan.
If this marginal capital no longer supports Wall Street, the incremental demand for risk assets, including Bitcoin, diminishes.
A warning from the US
While macroeconomic desks are analyzing bond curves, on-chain and order-book data indicate that astute U.S. traders are already reducing their exposure.
CryptoQuant data reveal that American investors sold during the BoJ’s announcement. The Coinbase Premium Gap, the difference between the USD trading pair on Coinbase and the USDT pair on Binance, fell to around -$57 during the U.S. trading session.
A negative premium points to Coinbase—dominated by U.S. institutional trading—operating at a discount compared to offshore exchanges. This trend indicates portfolio de-risking rather than buying into dips.

Concurrently, Guilherme Tavares, CEO of i3 Invest, views the interplay of increasing Japanese yields and Bitcoin’s steadfastness as a warning signal.
He remarked:
“Liquidity has been paramount recently. With long-term yields in Japan so elevated, risk assets are beginning to show increased vulnerability.”
He highlighted that the correlation between Japanese 40-year bonds and Bitcoin has significantly decreased recently, suggesting the asset is losing a key macro support.
Macro stalemate
Nonetheless, Bitcoin has yet to experience a significant decline, maintaining levels above $84,000 intraday. Timothy Misir, head of research at BRN, mentioned to CryptoSlate that this standoff represents a “macro stalemate.”
According to Misir, the conflicting signals are keeping markets steady. Notably, U.S. headline inflation has slowed to 2.7%, opening a window for the Fed to consider easing. Meanwhile, the Bank of Japan is gradually increasing rates from the zero lower bound.
He observed:
“U.S. data advocates for easing. Japan has just tightened. Crypto is caught in the middle.”
Thus, he characterized the recent market movements as “positioning stress” rather than fundamental capitulation, with traders adjusting their exposures rather than abandoning the asset class.
Long-term view
Despite the prevailing uncertainty in the market, some seasoned experts view the recent development as a pivotal moment rather than a complete shift in strategy.
Arthur Hayes, co-founder of BitMEX, argues that the BoJ remains limited by its own balance sheet and Japan’s substantial debt levels.
Even with the increase to 0.75%, he pointed out that inflation in Japan is still elevated, leaving real rates in negative territory. Hayes believes this is an intentional aspect of policy rather than a coincidence.
“Do not oppose the BoJ: negative real rates are the explicit objective,” he wrote, predicting a weaker yen over time and rising Bitcoin prices as investors seek refuge from currency devaluation.
Hayes’ bullish outlook indirectly influences fixed-income markets since Japanese insurers are unlikely to invest directly in Bitcoin.
However, if, as Krueger suggested, they retract from hedged U.S. Treasuries because of the increasing costs of currency protection, the Fed may have to absorb more supply and keep yields down.
This fresh balance-sheet expansion aimed at stabilizing sovereign debt could lead to higher Bitcoin prices.
