Amid the current crypto and Bitcoin (BTC) market consolidation above the $60,000 support level, a looming concern has emerged regarding a potential new crash. This time, experts suggest the unrest could extend beyond geopolitical tensions and oil prices, finding its roots in a deepening liquidity crisis in Japan.
Is Japan’s low-rate model under threat?
In a recent job on X (formerly Twitter), market expert Ted Pillows argued that Japan’s low-interest financial architecture makes its system particularly vulnerable when long-term interest rates rise.
The practical effect, he explained, is twofold. First, as 30-year bond yields rise, borrowing costs rise across the economy. Second, the market value of existing long-term bonds declines, leading to mark-to-market losses for institutions such as banks and pension funds.
These losses can undermine confidence, Pillows said, prompting financial institutions to hoard cash and shy away from lending and risk-taking – a process known as liquidity crunch.
Japan is important to global markets because for decades its ultra-low interest rates effectively provided cheap capital to investors around the world. Traders often borrowed yen at minimal cost and redeployed that capital into higher-yielding or riskier assets overseas.
When Japanese yields rise, these carry trades become less attractive and may even reverse as investors unwind their positions and repatriate their funds. The result is a cash drain global markets this is precisely when risk appetite is most needed.
Liquidity Shock Could Trigger New Cryptocurrency Selloff
Crypto markets are particularly sensitive to fluctuations in global liquidity, Pillows claims. Digital assets have benefited greatly in recent years from a steady flow of “easy money” that has encouraged investors to seek higher returns.
When liquidity tightens, investors generally reduce risk by selling the most volatile securities; cryptocurrencies and smaller altcoins Securities often fall the hardest because they are more speculative and less stable than major assets.
A concurrent strengthening of the Japanese yen may compound the effect by reducing dollar liquidity available internationally, thereby placing additional pressure on risk assets priced or financed in dollars.
Pillows warned that Japan does not have to be the sole cause of a market collapse for there to be consequences. Instead, rising Japanese yields may act as an accelerant to broader market moves already underway.
He noted, however, that this can go both ways: increased tensions and falling asset prices often prompt central banks to intervene.
The Bank of Japan could react by intervening lower yields— either through bond purchases or other liquidity measures — which would restore capital flows and could fuel a strong rebound in risk assets.
In other words, the same mechanisms that can precipitate a downturn can later help fuel a new crypto bull run once liquidity is restored.
Featured image from OpenArt, chart from TradingView.com
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