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The Next Global Crisis May Start in Tokyo, Not Wall Street

Bank of Japan’s looming policy shift threatens to unwind trillions in carry trades, risking a bond and equity market shock worldwide.

Unlike the 2008 crisis born from reckless banks, the next global financial storm could be triggered by the world’s most trusted assets government bonds. At the center lies the Bank of Japan (BOJ), the last major central bank still clinging to near-zero interest rates.

For decades, Japan has fueled global liquidity through ultra-cheap borrowing, powering the yen carry trade where investors borrow yen at near 0% and invest abroad for higher returns. Estimates suggest that direct and institutional yen-based bets now exceed $20 trillion, spanning U.S. Treasuries, European bonds, tech stocks, and even crypto. But the system is cracking. Inflation in Japan has crossed 3%, wages are rising, and pressure is mounting on the BOJ to tighten policy. Even modest rate hikes have rattled markets last year’s adjustment sparked double-digit losses in the Nikkei and a historic spike in Wall Street’s VIX. The risk now is a sudden, violent unwinding. If the BOJ raises rates meaningfully, carry traders will be forced to dump global assets to repay yen loans. A rapid yen surge would compound losses, triggering forced selling across bonds, equities, and emerging markets.

The consequences could be severe: U.S. Treasury markets, already struggling with record $1.5 trillion deficits, could see foreign demand evaporate. European bond markets face similar stress, with France and the UK already flashing bailout warnings. Unlike 2008, this time governments themselves are the weak link, as soaring debts limit their ability to backstop markets. With trade wars driving inflation higher, central banks have little room to maneuver. The IMF, meanwhile, lacks the firepower to rescue multiple sovereigns at once. The assumption that government bonds are “risk-free” is being tested. And if Japan’s liquidity tap finally runs dry, the world could face not a banking crisis, but a sovereign debt and currency crisis one far harder to contain.

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