The recent surge in long‑end Japanese Government Bond (JGB) yields—with the 40‑year bond breaking above 4% for the first time since its 2007 debut—has sparked comparisons to the UK’s 2022 Gilt Crisis. The drivers in Japan, however, are different. The risk of a systemic yen-carry unwind remains limited due to a variety of forces which encourage Japanese investors to maintain their US asset exposures.
As Japan moves toward a high stakes snap election, volatility is elevated, but the structural backdrop remains far more stable than crisis narratives imply.
Recent concerns over consumption tax cuts and other fiscal spending policies in Japan led to a sharp rise in long-end JGBs last week. While the rate rise has seen some reprieve following reassuring comments from policymakers, JGB market risk still looms. This piece addresses key client questions on JGB volatility, the yen carry trade, and what to monitor as election‑related fiscal uncertainty unfolds.
The UK gilt crisis was fueled by leveraged LDI structures. When yields spiked, margin calls triggered and forced asset liquidation. By contrast, Japan is 90% domestically funded, not levered, and LDIs are not the prevailing presence in Japan that they are in the UK. Therefore, there is no forced seller risk. Japan’s market architecture is entirely different, as follows:
The structure of Japan’s investor base—stable, cash rich, and overwhelmingly domestic—contrasts sharply with the UK’s dependence on foreign capital, LDI, and rate hedging.
Japan’s macro fundamentals differentiate it from the UK in critical ways. Japan has the world’s largest net international investment position (NIIP) surplus, a persistent current-account surplus, and deep domestic savings funding the sovereign (Figure 1). While gross debt/GDP is high, net debt is materially lower, and the sovereign is funded domestically. Japan’s self funded structure helps to absorb volatility, rather than amplifying it.
Figure 1: Japan’s significant net external asset base contrasts sharply with that of the UK and US
| Country | NIIP* USD (trillions) | Status |
| Japan | 3.49 | Net Creditor |
| Germany | 3.62 | Net Creditor |
| Canada | 1.34 | Net Creditor |
| Italy | 0.35 | Net Creditor |
| UK | -0.35 | Net Debtor |
| France | -0.70 | Net Debtor |
| US | -26.54 | Net Debtor |
| China | 3.30 | Net Creditor |
Source: Bloomberg. As of December 31, 2024.
*NIIP (net international investment position), from external assets minus external liabilities, is also known as net external assets.
The recent long-end selloff is tied primarily to positioning, liquidity gaps, and election-season caution. The JGB had a weak 20-year auction on January 20, and several other long-end auctions are set ahead of the February 8 elections. In addition, insurers stepped back after extending duration ahead of the 2025 regulatory transition, creating a temporary vacuum in the long end.
Market sentiment remains risk‑averse rather than dip‑buying (“don’t try to catch a falling knife”), with election‑related fiscal noise distorting positioning. While 2025 JGB repricing largely reflected a higher term premium from firmer inflation and a higher terminal rate, the recent selloff is better attributed to an election risk premium and sentiment overshoot—as shown by the 30‑year yield already retracing over 20bps of its initial 30bps spike.1
Japan’s fixed-income ecosystem does not contain the accelerants that worsened the UK Gilt Crisis. Insurers hold long JGBs outright and Japanese banks remain flush with cash. As mentioned above, pensions are unlevered and rebalance over multiyear cycles, so forced selling is not an issue. Furthermore, Japan’s household sector is asset‑rich and low‑leverage, with financial assets close to double the level of national debt. A JGB yield spike does not trigger margin-call feedback loops, and any snowball effect is brief.
The yen carry trade, which is based on borrowing yen at low rates to invest in high-yielding foreign bonds, is heavily trafficked. The increase in JGBs has sparked concerns that this trade will unwind. However, we think a structural unwind is only a “grey swan”—not a base case. Key stabilizers include:
In short, some episodic volatility is possible, but a broad, systemic unwind is not our base case.
The forward picture comes into better focus when discounting political noise. Investors need to watch for:
The surge in super long JGB yields is a technical overshoot linked to weak auctions, fiscal-year end balance sheet mechanics, and election period fiscal noise — not a break in Japan’s funding model. Japan remains highly liquid, and historical episodes of sharp moves (the October 2025 LDP leadership race, the April 2025 Liberation Day selloff, etc.) show that yields tend to stabilize once clarity returns.
Real money investors remain cautious amid “don’t try to catch a falling knife” dynamics, but appetite to rebuild JGB exposure post 2H26 is rising as BOJ normalization nears the terminal policy rate. For foreign investors, sticky inflation, higher nominal yields (Figure 3), a structurally cheap yen, and governance-driven earnings improvements all reinforce the “Japan is Back” narrative.
Japan is Back: Japan is set to reestablish itself as a fully investable, functioning market, firmly on the radars of global investors.
For more on opportunities in Japan and other fixed income markets around the globe, see our Global Market Outlook.