
The Bank of Japan is set to raise interest rates from 0.50% to 0.75% at its December 18-19 meeting, a move that would push Japanese borrowing costs to their highest level in 30 years. This has reignited concerns about the yen carry trade, a strategy that has quietly underpinned global risk appetite for decades.
Bitcoin has historically responded poorly to BOJ tightening, with each of the last three hikes coinciding with 20-30% drawdowns.
With BTC currently trading around $85,500 (as of 16 December 2025, 12pm SGT), already down 32% from its October high of $126,210, the question is whether this fourth hike follows the same script or whether the setup has materially changed.
The short answer: the hike is coming, but this time the market is prepared. Speculator positioning has flipped, bond yields have already priced in...
Deeper Insights Ahead

The Bank of Japan is set to raise interest rates from 0.50% to 0.75% at its December 18-19 meeting, a move that would push Japanese borrowing costs to their highest level in 30 years. This has reignited concerns about the yen carry trade, a strategy that has quietly underpinned global risk appetite for decades.
Bitcoin has historically responded poorly to BOJ tightening, with each of the last three hikes coinciding with 20-30% drawdowns.
With BTC currently trading around $85,500 (as of 16 December 2025, 12pm SGT), already down 32% from its October high of $126,210, the question is whether this fourth hike follows the same script or whether the setup has materially changed.
The short answer: the hike is coming, but this time the market is prepared. Speculator positioning has flipped, bond yields have already priced in the move, and Bitcoin has absorbed significant downside.
The real risk may lie elsewhere entirely.
Current Market Snapshot
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Bitcoin Price | ~$85,500 |
| BTC Drawdown from ATH | -32% (from $126,210) |
| BOJ Policy Rate (Current) | 0.50% |
| Expected Rate Post-Hike | 0.75% (highest since 1995) |
| Rate Hike Probability | 98% (Polymarket) / 90% (OIS swaps) |
| Japan 10Y JGB Yield | ~1.95% (highest since 2007) |
| Japan 2Y JGB Yield | ~1.02% (highest since 2008) |
| USD/JPY | ~154-155 |
| US Fed Funds Rate | 3.75% |
| US-Japan Rate Spread | 300 basis points |
The Carry Trade Mechanism: Why Crypto Is Downstream
For nearly three decades, Japan has functioned as the world’s cheapest funding source. With interest rates pinned at zero or negative for most of this period, global investors borrowed yen to deploy capital into higher-yielding assets elsewhere.
This strategy, known as the carry trade, became one of the most persistent arbitrage mechanisms in modern finance.
The mechanics are straightforward: borrow yen at near-zero rates, convert to dollars, and invest in assets offering superior returns. US Treasuries, tech equities, and increasingly, cryptocurrencies have all benefited from this liquidity.
The exact scale of yen-funded positions is inherently difficult to measure, but cross-border yen borrowing grew by approximately $742 billion between 2021 and early 2024, with total outstanding positions estimated around $1 trillion at their peak. Conservative estimates place the core leveraged carry trade at roughly $500 billion, with broader yen-funded exposure running into the low trillions.
This trade works until it doesn’t.
When the yen strengthens or Japanese rates rise, the economics invert. Suddenly, investors must unwind positions to repay yen loans that have become more expensive. This process can become violent, as margin calls trigger forced liquidations across asset classes.
| Date | Action | BTC Decline | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| March 2024 | First hike in 17 years | ~23% | BTC at $72k pre-hike |
| July 2024 | Second hike to 0.25% | ~26% | Bottomed $50k on Aug 5 |
| January 2025 | Third hike to 0.50% | ~31% | BTC at $108k pre-hike |
| December 2025 | Expected hike to 0.75% | Already -32% | Pre-positioned this cycle |
The August 2024 episode is instructive. Following the July hike, Bitcoin dropped from $65,000 to $50,000 in 48 hours as leveraged positions were liquidated. Over $600 million in crypto liquidations occurred as the carry trade unwound. Yet within months, Bitcoin recovered to $108,000 as the system absorbed the shock and repositioned.
The pattern across all three episodes is consistent: sharp liquidation cascade, stabilization within days or weeks, then recovery once forced selling exhausts itself.
These were not regime shifts but finite mechanical adjustments.
Scale and Perspective: A Funding Squeeze, Not a Crisis
Japan’s role in global markets is outsized. Its institutions are the largest foreign holders of US government debt, with approximately $1.1 trillion in Treasury holdings. When Japanese capital moves, global markets feel it.
Estimates suggest that roughly $500 billion has exited global markets over the past 18 months as yen-funded investors repatriated capital. With Japanese yields now at multi-year highs, potentially another $500 billion or more in carry trades could unwind through 2026 as this process continues.
However, perspective matters. Even a $400-500 billion reduction in carry trade positions amounts to roughly 0.5-0.6% of the approximately $70 trillion global equity market by capitalization. This is enough to move prices meaningfully in the short run, as the 20-30% crypto swings demonstrate, but it represents a finite adjustment rather than an endless drain.
The critical distinction: this is likely a funding squeeze, not a credit crisis.
We are seeing forced selling and volatility, not a solvency meltdown. Once yen loans are paid down and positions trimmed, there is no cascading collapse of underlying assets. It is a swift repricing of risk to a new liquidity regime, not a structural impairment.
Why This Time May Be Different
The December 2025 hike enters a market that has already prepared for impact. Several structural factors distinguish this episode from prior shocks.
According to Zaheer, Founder of Split Research, “The carry trade probably doesn’t have the same shock-and-awe impact it did last year or earlier this year. Traders and market participants have already adjusted their parameters to a new normal.
This drawdown isn’t just about another BOJ hike. It reflects broader weakness across global risk assets, with crypto once again doing what it does best in stress scenarios: becoming the first source of liquidity when markets de-risk.”
Speculator Positioning Has Flipped
CFTC data reveals a fundamental shift in market positioning. Speculators are now net long yen, with approximately 79,500 contracts on the long side.
This represents a complete reversal from mid-2024, when traders were heavily net short. Morgan Stanley data indicates net short yen positions among leveraged funds have declined 40% since November.
The implication is significant: violent carry trade unwinds occur when crowded short positions get squeezed. Traders who are short yen must buy it back to cover, which strengthens the yen further, triggering more margin calls in a reflexive spiral.
That crowded-short setup does not currently exist. With speculators already positioned for yen strength, the reflexive feedback loop that drove August 2024’s violence is largely absent.
Bond Markets Have Already Priced the Hike
Japanese government bond yields tell the story. The 10-year JGB has risen to approximately 1.95%, its highest since 2007. The 2-year yield touched 1.02% in early December, also a multi-year high. These yields sit roughly 120 basis points above the expected post-hike policy rate of 0.75%, indicating that markets have already adjusted to the tightening trajectory.
Polymarket assigns a 98% probability to the December hike. A Bloomberg survey of 50 analysts found unanimous expectation of an increase.
The surprise factor that amplified prior selloffs is largely absent this time.
Bitcoin Has Already Absorbed Significant Pain
Unlike previous BOJ hikes that caught an overextended market, Bitcoin enters December already down 32% from its October all-time high. Exchange inflows have increased ahead of the decision, signaling proactive de-risking rather than post-announcement panic. Funding rates have turned unstable, with leverage unwinding in advance.
Crypto markets have already absorbed significant liquidation pressure in recent weeks ($640 million in early December and $1 billion in late November) as carry trade concerns built ahead of the BOJ decision. It is more than likely that much of the weak-handed positioning has already been flushed from the system.
The Rate Differential Remains Wide
Even at 0.75%, Japanese rates remain the lowest among major developed economies. The US Fed funds rate sits at 3.75%, maintaining a 300 basis point spread. This differential remains wide enough to favor dollar assets and discourage mass unwinding of carry positions.
The BOJ will remain the most dovish major central bank by a significant margin. The attractiveness of yen-funded carry trades has diminished but has not collapsed.
Prior Unwinding Has Reduced Marginal Risk
The violent deleveraging of August 2024 cleared significant speculative excess from the system. JPMorgan’s quantitative strategists estimated at the time that approximately 75% of global carry trades had been unwound during that rout.
A note of epistemic caution: such precise figures should be taken with appropriate skepticism. Carry trade positioning is inherently difficult to measure. There is no central registry of yen-funded positions, and estimates rely on proxy data like cross-border lending flows and futures positioning. FX strategists have cautioned that claims of “50% or 75% unwound” are educated approximations, not verified accounting.
What we can say with more confidence: the most leveraged, most vulnerable positions were likely flushed during 2024’s volatility. The “top layer” of speculative carry bets appears largely gone.
What remains is more structural and longer-term, unwinding gradually rather than violently. This reduces, though does not eliminate, the risk of another cascade.
The Fiscal Dominance Constraint
The tension between Japanese monetary and fiscal policy creates an unusual dynamic that could ultimately cap how aggressive BOJ tightening can become.
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has pushed through a ¥21.3 trillion ($136 billion) stimulus package, the largest since the COVID pandemic. The supplementary budget of ¥18.3 trillion passed the Lower House on December 11. Her government has dropped Japan’s budget-balancing goal entirely, signaling a commitment to large-scale fiscal expansion.
Takaichi has historically opposed BOJ rate hikes, famously calling them “stupid” during her campaign. While she has softened her rhetoric since taking office, her government’s fiscal trajectory creates structural constraints on monetary policy. Japan’s debt-to-GDP ratio stands at approximately 255%, second only to Lebanon and Sudan globally. Annual debt servicing costs are already substantial and rise mechanically with each rate increase.
This creates a credible ceiling on tightening. As MacroHive’s analysis frames it: “Under PM Takaichi, a big fiscal expansion and tax cuts arrive while inflation hovers near 3% and the BOJ keeps rates too low. With high debt and rising inflation expectations, investors question BOJ credibility, JGB yields steepen, and Japan starts to look more like a fiscal crisis story than a safe haven.”
If JGB yields spike too sharply, the BOJ may be forced to intervene in bond markets to prevent disorderly conditions, effectively constraining further tightening.
The path of least resistance is gradual normalization rather than aggressive rate increases. For risk assets including crypto, this fiscal dominance dynamic provides a backstop: the BOJ cannot “break” the system without triggering a crisis the government cannot tolerate.
The Real Risk May Lie Elsewhere
Recent analysis from CoinDesk argues that the dominant narrative may be misplaced. The primary risk is not a sudden yen surge unwinding carry trades, but rather Japanese tightening sustaining elevated US Treasury yields.
If Japanese institutions repatriate capital or reduce UST purchases to fund domestic needs, it adds upward pressure on US yields precisely as the Federal Reserve attempts to ease conditions. This creates a secondary transmission mechanism that operates independently of pure carry trade dynamics.
The Fed cut rates by 25 basis points last week but signaled only one additional cut in 2026, a more hawkish stance than markets expected. If BOJ tightening anchors US yields higher, it could counter the intended effects of Fed easing. Persistently elevated borrowing costs weigh on risk asset valuations across the board, creating a headwind that extends well beyond the immediate carry trade impact.
This reframe matters for how investors should position.
The acute risk of a sudden yen squeeze may be lower than in prior episodes. The chronic risk of sustained elevated yields may be higher. The former produces violent but short-lived drawdowns. The latter produces grinding underperformance over quarters.
Forward Outlook
The BOJ’s December 18-19 meeting will almost certainly deliver a 25 basis point hike.
The question is not whether this occurs but how markets respond given the substantial pre-positioning that has already taken place.
Consensus points to the next rate hike arriving in mid-2026, with the policy rate potentially reaching 1.0% by September. Reuters polling shows this as the median economist expectation. One of Takaichi’s advisers has even suggested the BOJ hold at 0.75% until 2027.
The BOJ’s neutral rate estimate spans 1.0% to 2.5%, a wide range reflecting genuine uncertainty about Japan’s sustainable policy level.
Factors supporting a muted response:
- Speculator positioning already net long yen, eliminating the crowded-short squeeze dynamic
- JGB yields already 120bps above expected policy rate, reflecting priced-in tightening
- BTC already down 32% with significant leverage cleared through recent liquidations
- Most vulnerable carry trade positions likely flushed during 2024 volatility
- Next hike not expected until mid-2026, providing time for markets to adjust
Factors supporting further downside:
- BOJ tightening sustaining elevated US Treasury yields, countering Fed easing
- Residual leverage in the system: analysts estimate a 15% BTC drop would trigger ~$4 billion in forced liquidations
- Japanese institutional repatriation adding persistent pressure to global bond markets
- Fed’s hawkish 2026 projections (only one cut expected) limiting liquidity relief
- Any hawkish surprise from BOJ guidance could trigger positioning unwinds
In Sum
The yen carry trade unwind represents a significant macro factor for crypto markets, but the December 2025 BOJ hike enters a fundamentally different environment than previous episodes. Markets have pre-positioned defensively, and speculator positioning has flipped from short to long yen.
The key insight is that Bitcoin’s sensitivity to BOJ policy is not a crypto-specific vulnerability but a downstream consequence of global funding mechanics.
The historical pattern of 20-30% BTC declines following BOJ hikes is well-documented, but the conditions that produced those moves have materially changed. The carry trade is not disappearing, but it is being managed rather than shocked.
The larger risk may not be a sudden yen surge but rather Japanese tightening anchoring global yields higher, creating persistent headwinds for risk assets through a different channel entirely.
The coming weeks will test whether the pre-positioning has been sufficient or whether another liquidation cascade awaits. Historical precedent suggests caution.
Current positioning suggests resilience. The resolution will depend on whether markets interpret the hike as a well-telegraphed adjustment within a still-accommodative framework, or whether any hawkish surprise in BOJ guidance triggers a reassessment.
As always, if the facts change, the thesis must adapt accordingly.
