The recent statements by Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda have sparked widespread market attention. He explicitly stated that as long as the domestic economy and price trends meet the central bank's expectations, they will continue to raise interest rates. This is not just a casual remark — the market has already interpreted it as a key signal that the Bank of Japan is officially bidding farewell to the ultra-loose monetary policy era and moving toward normalization.



As the last major central bank in the world to maintain negative interest rates, Japan's shift is highly significant. Imagine this scenario: while the Federal Reserve is cutting rates and the European Central Bank is easing policy, Japan raises interest rates against the trend. What could happen? The yen might regain attractiveness. Arbitrage traders who previously borrowed in yen at low interest rates to invest in high-risk assets might suddenly find their costs rising — they could start to withdraw.

This restructuring of the global interest rate differential has already been affecting international capital flows. A strengthening yen means a flow back of arbitrage funds, which previously flowed into high-risk investments, including crypto assets. In the short term, this liquidity contraction could put pressure on assets like Bitcoin. But in the long run, Japanese households and institutional investors are seeking diversified asset allocations, which could open new growth opportunities for alternative assets.

In summary, this move by the Bank of Japan not only changes the financial environment within Japan but is also quietly reshaping the global macro landscape — and the crypto market is naturally part of this reshuffle.
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ContractBugHuntervip
· 13m ago
Arbitrage traders are about to cry; when the yen rises, crypto has to run. There's indeed short-term pressure. However, in the long run, institutional investors in Japan will diversify their allocations, so there's still a slice of the cake to be enjoyed. It all depends on whether BTC can withstand this period of liquidity contraction.
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PrivateKeyParanoiavip
· 01-05 08:53
Japan's rate hike arbitrage funds are fleeing, we really need to keep a close eye on this wave --- Another central bank is normalizing, it feels like the whole world is squeezing out liquidity --- Short-term pressure is huge, but on the other hand, could this be the prelude for institutional entry? --- The yen has strengthened, arbitrage players have to strip down, our cheap liquidity is gone --- I just want to know which asset class will be hit hardest by this liquidity contraction in the end --- I agree with the long-term multi-asset allocation perspective, but how severe will the current sell-off be? --- Wait, will Japanese household investors really allocate to crypto, or is it just institutions painting a pie? --- I respect the logic of yield spread restructuring, but I’m worried about a short-term decline exceeding expectations --- So, where is the bottom range? Is it better to buy now or continue waiting
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RektRecordervip
· 01-05 08:53
Japan's rate hike causes the yen to strengthen, arbitrage funds flow back... Damn, are we about to panic now haha --- Another prelude to the harvest, liquidity contraction is unavoidable for everyone --- Wait, is the long-term diversified allocation serious? Or are they just giving us false promises again --- Japan is starting to tighten, while the Federal Reserve is still pretending to be dovish... This price gap is no longer playable --- Really? Are arbitrage traders about to run away? Then the crypto market might face a short-term hit --- The macro landscape is being reshaped, but retail investors are just being washed out --- The yen regains attractiveness... What does this mean? Are Japanese institutions about to buy BTC? LOL
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StealthMoonvip
· 01-05 08:45
No way, is the Bank of Japan really going all out? Arbitrage funds are pulling back... Short-term pressure is indeed mounting.
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Tokenomics911vip
· 01-05 08:41
Japanese rate hike arbitrage funds are flowing back, short-term negative but in the long run Japanese institutions will allocate to crypto. We need to adapt to this reshuffle.
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GasFeeLovervip
· 01-05 08:34
Japan has started raising interest rates, and arbitrage funds are flowing back. This puts pressure on the crypto market, and it will definitely be tough in the short term.
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