Rising yields on Japanese government bonds are driving institutional investors to shed risk assets including Bitcoin (BTC), with roughly ¥390 Trillion (approximately $2.6 Trillion) in bond holdings now exposed to heavy unrealized losses that could force further liquidation across global markets.
Japanese Bond Losses
According to a new analysis from XWIN Research Japan published on CryptoQuant, persistent inflation, expectations of policy normalization and fiscal expansion concerns have pushed JGB yields higher. Bond prices have fallen in response, leaving domestic banks sitting on significant paper losses.
The math is stark. Even a 1% rise in yields could send tens of trillions of yen worth of holdings into negative territory.
That kind of strain forces institutional investors to rebalance, and risk assets — Bitcoin included — become the first targets of those adjustments.
Japan maintains one of the world's largest external investment portfolios, so any liquidity withdrawal sends ripple effects through global markets. Historical patterns support this link: low-rate environments tend to lift Bitcoin, while rising rates typically weigh on the largest digital asset.
Also Read: Bitcoin Decentralization Faces A Problem: Mining Power Tied To Just Three Nations
Stablecoin Sidelined Capital
XWIN Research Japan also flagged a notable disconnect in stablecoin markets. Total stablecoin supply has surged toward record levels, which normally signals capital ready to deploy. But that liquidity is not flowing into risk assets.
Exchange data reinforces the picture.
Roughly $9.6B left the Bitcoin market in early 2026, with capital rotating into stablecoins instead. The research group described the current environment as one where liquidity exists but remains on the sidelines, held back by macroeconomic headwinds.
Read Next: XRP Ledger Hits Record 4.49M Transactions Amid Price Decline






