Japan has moved to save the yen again, and Bitcoin traders may pay the price

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Japan reportedly stepped into the currency market with roughly $35 billion of yen buying, sending the dollar down nearly 3% to 155.5.

Bank of Japan (BOJ) money-market data imply that size is accurate. Once the Ministry of Finance’s monthly release confirms it, this would rank as Japan’s first official yen-support action in almost two years and the second-largest on record.

The BOJ’s own April outlook projects CPI excluding fresh food at 2.5% to 3.0% in fiscal 2026, and economists expect inflation to re-accelerate as oil and yen weakness amplify import costs.

The numbers show that 95% of Japan’s crude oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, and the BOJ’s baseline scenario assumes Dubai crude will trend toward $70-$80, with no major supply disruption.

Tokyo’s political tolerance for importing inflation while the yen slides has limits, and those limits were broken this week.

USD/JPY peaked at 160.7 on April 29 before Japan’s reported $35 billion intervention drove the pair down to 155.5.

The BOJ held its policy rate at 0.75% on Apr. 28, with three board members dissenting and arguing for a 1% rate. The Fed also held its policy rate at 3.50%-3.75% on Apr. 29.

That short-rate reality of roughly 275 to 300 basis points is the mechanical reason the carry trade keeps rebuilding. Yen borrowing costs stay low by almost any global comparison, and the spread to US yields makes it attractive to put that capital to work in higher-returning assets.

Intervention without rate convergence only buys time. Reuters reported that 65% of economists in an Apr. 16 poll expect the BOJ to reach 1.0% by the end of June 2026, with further hikes penciled in through 2027.

Why the yen is everyone’s problem

BIS data from its 2025 triennial survey shows the yen accounted for 16.8% of all foreign exchange trades worldwide.

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Another BIS study on the August 2024 episode estimated yen-funded carry trades at roughly $250 billion, before that unwind, while UBS estimated the total near $500 billion, with only about halfway done at the time.

A separate BOJ paper noted that yen liabilities fund balance sheet expansion is driven by hedge funds and financial intermediaries that are long assets far removed from Japanese currency markets.

CFTC positioning data from Apr. 21 shows leveraged funds in CME yen futures held 80,220 long contracts against 148,717 short contracts, with gross shorts up over 16,000 week over week.

When the yen suddenly strengthens, those shorts need coverage, and the assets those trades were funding need to be trimmed.

Metric Bank of Japan Federal Reserve Why it matters for the carry trade
Policy rate 0.75% 3.50%–3.75% The wide gap keeps yen funding cheap and U.S. assets relatively attractive
Latest policy decision date Apr. 28, 2026 Apr. 29, 2026 Shows the rate divergence is current, not historical
Current short-rate gap Roughly 275–300 bps This spread is the core mechanical driver of yen-funded carry trades
Policy bias Three BOJ board members dissented in favor of a 1.0% rate Fed held steady Suggests Japan may be moving slowly toward tighter policy, but not fast enough yet to erase the spread
Market expectation Reuters poll: 65% of economists see BOJ at 1.0% by end-June 2026 No comparable immediate shift in the draft A BOJ hike could compress the carry spread and make short-yen positions less attractive
Carry-trade implication Low-cost funding currency Higher-yield destination market Investors can borrow cheaply in yen and seek better returns elsewhere
Article takeaway Intervention can jolt FX markets, but without rate convergence it only buys time Higher U.S. yields keep the carry incentive alive Explains why yen weakness keeps rebuilding and why a sudden yen rebound can squeeze risk assets, including Bitcoin
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BIS data also show that foreign-currency credit denominated in yen contracted by 4.9% during 2025, so the carry complex may already be somewhat smaller, which means the mechanical force of any unwind is lower.

Bitcoin’s sensitivity runs through global leverage, as the balance sheets, margin calls, and risk appetites of the same macro funds simultaneously short yen and long higher-yielding assets.

BIS’s August 2024 review found that procyclical deleveraging and margin increases amplified the shock across risk assets, and Bitcoin tanked 13% during the washout.

Bitcoin traded in the $78,000 zone on May 1, reaching an intraday high near $79,000. A sudden yen squeeze forces leveraged macro books to cut gross exposure, and traders can sell Bitcoin because it is liquid and held by leveraged books that need to raise cash fast.

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