
The next crypto crash may not start in crypto at all.
That is the argument crypto strategist Ted put forward in an interesting post today, pointing to a silent liquidity crisis unfolding in Japan’s bond market as a potential trigger for the next major sell-off in digital assets.
The timing is not hypothetical. Japan’s 30-year government bond yield has climbed to 3.79% as of March 30, up 1.27 points from a year ago. The 40-year yield has risen to 4.03%, up 1.23 points over the same period. The 10-year yield is hovering close to its highest levels since 1999 at around 2.36%, with the yen having breached the critical 160 per dollar level – a threshold that historically triggers intervention pressure on the Bank of Japan.
These are alarming live readings from the world’s fourth-largest economy actively dismantling decades of near-zero interest rate policy.
The connection runs through what markets call the yen carry trade. For years, investors borrowed cheaply in Japanese yen and deployed those funds into higher-returning assets globally – US equities, emerging market bonds, and increasingly, crypto.
“Crypto depends heavily on this global flow of easy money,” Ted wrote. “When liquidity tightens, people reduce risk and sell volatile assets like crypto.”
When Japanese yields rise, borrowing in yen becomes more expensive. The trade reverses. Investors pull capital back, global liquidity tightens, and crypto – as the most volatile and liquid risk asset – is typically sold first. Altcoins fall harder than Bitcoin for the same reason.
BIS data points to hundreds of billions of dollars in yen-denominated loans to non-banks outside Japan. Morgan Stanley estimated outstanding yen carry positions at roughly $500 billion as of December 2025.
In case you’re thinking this is just a theoretical risk, there’s some bad news.
In August 2024, a BOJ rate hike triggered a carry trade unwind that sent Bitcoin and Ethereum down up to 20%. In December 2025, another hike to 0.75% moved Bitcoin from $91,000 to $88,500 within hours of the announcement.
The Bank of Japan is widely expected to raise rates to 1% at its April 28 meeting, which would mark the highest level since the mid-1990s.
Ted also acknowledges the other side. If yields spike hard enough to destabilize markets, the BOJ historically intervenes – buying bonds and injecting liquidity. When that happens, risk assets including crypto tend to recover sharply.
“More liquidity pushes crypto up, less liquidity pushes it down,” he wrote. “Rising Japanese yields equal tightening liquidity equal short-term pressure on crypto. But if central banks react, it can later become fuel for the next bull run.”
The April BOJ meeting is now one of the most important macro events on the crypto calendar.
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