Higher domestic yields change the “repatriation math.” Investors can now earn competitive returns at home without taking on currency risk or the costs of hedging foreign investments.
Research from TD Economics notes that Japan’s transition to a “materially positive‑rate environment” is already reducing outward investment from Japanese institutions.
Currency movements are another key driver.
The yen has remained weak, hovering near the 160‑per‑dollar level during parts of 2026 — a level that raises concerns about imported inflation.
A weaker yen increases the cost of imports, particularly energy. Because Japan relies heavily on imported fuel, higher oil prices amplify inflation pressure. When energy prices surge, investors anticipate that the BOJ may need to tighten policy further to contain inflation.
That expectation makes long‑duration foreign bonds riskier: if global yields rise further, bond prices fall. Investors therefore become more cautious about holding large portfolios of overseas debt.
Geopolitical tensions and energy‑price volatility have reinforced those inflation fears. Global bond markets have sold off partly on concerns that rising energy costs could push inflation higher and lead central banks to keep interest rates elevated.
Underlying all of this is a broader policy shift by the BOJ.
After years of negative interest rates and yield‑curve control, Japan is gradually normalizing monetary policy. Markets have increasingly priced in the possibility of further rate increases, reflecting a clear break from the policies that defined the previous decade.
This change matters globally because Japanese institutions have long been among the largest buyers of foreign sovereign bonds.
As domestic yields rise and monetary policy normalizes, Japanese investors no longer need to send as much capital abroad. The result is a structural shift in global bond demand.
The impact extends well beyond Japan.
Japan has historically been one of the biggest foreign holders of U.S. Treasuries. When Japanese investors reduce purchases or sell existing holdings, the Treasury market loses a major source of steady demand.
That does not necessarily trigger a sudden crisis, but it can push long‑term Treasury yields higher if other investors demand greater returns to absorb new issuance.
The same dynamic can affect U.K. gilts. Japanese institutions have traditionally been large buyers of long‑dated foreign sovereign bonds. If those flows slow or reverse, yields in other developed markets may rise in tandem.
At home, higher yields improve investment returns for savers but also raise the government’s borrowing costs. Japan already carries one of the world’s largest public‑debt burdens, so rising yields increase fiscal pressure over time.
The shift in Japanese capital flows is now part of a broader discussion among policymakers.
Officials say rising yields in Japan, the United States, and Britain are increasingly influencing each other, creating reinforcing volatility across major markets.
Against that backdrop, global bond turbulence and inflation risks — including those linked to energy prices — have become key topics for G7 finance ministers meeting in Paris, where leaders are seeking ways to address global economic imbalances and financial instability.
Japan’s policy normalization marks the end of an era in which ultra‑low Japanese rates pushed vast amounts of capital into global bond markets.
As that environment changes, the consequences ripple outward:
Even gradual repatriation of Japanese capital can shift global financial conditions, because Japan’s savings pool has long been one of the quiet stabilizers of international bond markets.
For investors and policymakers alike, the key question now is how quickly that adjustment unfolds — and how the world’s largest economies adapt to a bond market no longer anchored by ultra‑low Japanese rates.
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