Japan’s latest bond market rupture exposes a multi-trillion-dollar fault line for global investors, warns the CEO of one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory organizations.

 

 

The violent repricing of Japanese government bonds over the last few days has detonated a structural risk that global markets have not confronted in decades, with more than $7 trillion in sovereign debt at the centre of a regime shift that threatens to reprice capital worldwide.

 

Nigel Green, CEO of deVere Group, says the collapse in Japanese bond prices marks the end of an era in which Tokyo anchored global interest rates and supplied cheap liquidity to the world.

 

“Japan has been the world’s financial shock absorber for a generation, and that role has abruptly ended.

 

“The repricing of Japanese debt is a systemic event, not a local story, and investors need to treat it as such.”

 

Yields on ultra-long Japanese bonds have surged above levels once considered implausible, with 40-year yields breaking through the 4 percent threshold for the first time since their introduction and 30-year yields approaching 4 percent.

 

These moves come after the Bank of Japan began normalizing policy and political leaders signalled aggressive fiscal expansion, igniting concerns about debt sustainability and inflation persistence.

 

“The bond market is signalling a credibility test for fiscal policy,” says the deVere CEO.

 

“Investors are demanding a risk premium that Japan has avoided for decades, and that shift rewires global capital flows.”

 

Japan’s public debt stands at roughly 250% of GDP, one of the highest ratios in the world, while inflation has exceeded the central bank’s 2 percent target for multiple consecutive years.

 

Political plans for large-scale spending and tax relief have intensified fears that borrowing will escalate further.

 

“Japan has relied on domestic savings and central bank intervention to suppress yields. Both pillars are eroding, and markets are enforcing discipline in real time,” Nigel Green adds.

 

The significance for global markets lies in the scale and positioning of Japanese capital.

 

Domestic investors have trillions deployed overseas in equities, bonds and alternative assets, supported by decades of ultra-low rates that enabled the yen carry trade.

 

“If Japanese yields stay elevated, capital will be repatriated on a massive scale,” says Nigel Green. “Trillions of dollars could rotate back into domestic assets, draining liquidity from global equities, credit and emerging markets.”

 

The carry trade has been a dominant feature of global finance, with investors borrowing in yen to buy higher-yielding assets abroad. A reversal would tighten financial conditions globally, pushing up borrowing costs and compressing valuations across asset classes.

 

“The carry trade has been a silent engine for risk assets,” he notes. “A sustained unwind would hit stocks, high-yield credit and even digital assets simultaneously.”

 

Recent market dynamics underline the feedback loop. Foreign investors now account for a large share of Japanese bond trading activity, increasing volatility and the risk of sudden capital flight. Japan’s central bank has also tapered bond purchases, leaving private markets to absorb record issuance.

 

“This is a transition from policy-engineered stability to market-driven volatility,” says Nigel Green. “When policy support retreats, price discovery can be brutal.”

 

The global spillover is already visible. Rising Japanese yields have pushed up US and European yields, tightening financial conditions at a time when geopolitical and political uncertainty is elevated.

 

Analysts estimate that even small idiosyncratic shocks in Japan can transmit directly into global rate markets.

 

“Japan has been the gravitational centre of global rates,” says Nigel Green. “When that centre shifts, everything else moves.”

 

Currency markets are also vulnerable. A stronger yen driven by higher domestic yields would amplify capital repatriation, while intervention attempts to stabilise the currency underscore the political sensitivity of inflation and living costs in Japan.

 

“Currency volatility will be the transmission mechanism,” he explains. “A sharp yen move could accelerate the repricing across global portfolios.”

 

The structural backdrop is a demographic and fiscal challenge that constrains Japan’s policy options.

 

An ageing population, high debt servicing costs and rising inflation create a narrow corridor for policymakers, while markets are increasingly sceptical of gradualism.

 

Nigel Green concludes: “It’s a secular reset of Japan’s role in global finance.”

 

Investors will likely need to face higher global yields, meaning lower equity multiples, tighter credit conditions and increased dispersion across markets.

 

Japan’s bond market was considered the most predictable corner of global finance. Its sudden volatility proves that regime shifts arrive without warning, and they can reshape markets for decades.





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