惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

B
Blog RSS Feed
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
T
Threatpost
C
Cisco Blogs
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
AI
AI
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
T
Tor Project blog
Latest news
Latest news
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
D
Docker
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
博客园 - 聂微东
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
Vercel News
Vercel News
S
Securelist
爱范儿
爱范儿
J
Java Code Geeks
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
S
Schneier on Security
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
F
Fortinet All Blogs
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
D
DataBreaches.Net
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
K
Kaspersky official blog
美团技术团队
博客园 - 叶小钗
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
量子位
博客园_首页
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
S
Secure Thoughts
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
腾讯CDC
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
雷峰网
雷峰网
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
P
Privacy International News Feed
S
Security Affairs

Forbes - Policy

Tax Breaks: The Tax Law Is Having A Constitutional Moment Edition Anxiety Over Social Security Benefits Grows As Funding Cliff Looms Trump Backs Off On E.U. Auto Tariffs But Risks Remain For Buyers, Ports Goal Of Zero Tolerance Of Sexual Abuse In Prison Vs Reality: GAO Report Here’s Where Jobs are Growing And Shrinking In Today’s Economy Scams Are Booming. The Latest Numbers, And How To Protect Yourself What To Know About Trump’s Latest Tariffs Being Struck Down Social Media Age Minimums: Bad For Kids, Parents, And Governments Best Places To Retire In 2026: 25 Surprisingly Affordable U.S. Spots Sorry, Spirit Airlines—Government Has No Business Owning Businesses Supreme Court Says Nonprofits Can Challenge Government Requests For Donor Information Quality Time Is A Copout. Politicians Are Trying To Make It Dangerous Why President Trump Should Bring Home Political Prisoners From China Why You Shouldn’t Trust AI With Your U.S. Immigration Future Germany Wants Cheaper Drugs—And Americans To Pay The Difference Why Gold’s Safe-Haven Trade Is Breaking Down During War Citadel Considers NYC Exit Amid Ken Griffin– Zohran Mamdani Tax Clash U.S. Trade Deficit Falls To Lowest Level Since First Quarter Of 2020 Russian Dissident Art Is Back On View In New York (Not Moscow) Union Pacific’s Acquisition Of Norfolk Southern Is About Life & Death World Cup Tipping Practices Could Undercut ‘No Tax On Tips’ Break Your Heart Depends On The World Around It Planning For The End Of The Oil Age Can You Sue A Drug Company For Not Inventing Faster? The Fed As Inflation Fighter Is Rooted In Phillips Curve Mysticism Seven Ways Social Security Benefits Are Unfair KPMG Cuts Jobs As Advisory Demand Slows And Federal Audit Work Winds Down Democrats And Republicans Near Discharge Petition For Ukraine Aid Record $125 Million Gift To Case Western Boosts Humanities In AI Age Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Reduces Export Controls To Blind Projections Taxpayers Fighting The IRS Over Pandemic Era Tax Credit Get A New Option Kevin Warsh Must Turn The Fed Upside Down When He Replaces Jerome Powell Virginia Showed Washington How To Cut Regulations. Now Its Reforms Are At Risk. The Trump Administration Is Shifting Federal Policy On Cannabis And Psychedelics Treasury To Require More Reporting And Paperwork From Tax-Exempts The Sphere Is A Visual Rebuttal Of Live Nation’s Critics The Quickest Way To End The Iran War Is To Resume Hostilities Orban’s Populism Followed The Info Wars Script We See Everywhere Over A Million Road Crash Deaths Annually Prompt $350 Million Investment Plug-In Power Signals An Energy Future Very Different From The Present Using AI To Find Hidden Geothermal Power Aren’t We Making Too Big Of A Deal About The Fed’s Balance Sheet? Fed Meeting Tracker 2026: How Interest Rate Shifts Shape Investor Strategy Trump Fired The Entire National Science Board. Here's Why That Matters Surprise: You May Be Owed An IRS Refund For Payments Made During The Pandemic Why The Trump Administration Shouldn’t Bail Out Spirit Airlines U.S. Soybean Exports In 2026 Show 27% Increase After Abysmal 2025 AI Takes The Stand: The New Frontier In White-Collar Evidence IRS Enforcement Takes Another Big Hit As Budget Request Shrinks Immigration Reality Check: Enforcement Has Its Limits Blackberry’s Demise Reminds Us Of The Dangers Of Export Controls Democrats Didn’t Discover The Insurance Crisis. They Created It Why Aren’t Republicans Making Tax Cuts A Huge Issue? Canada Responsible For Record 61% Of U.S. Oil Imports. Why It Matters. Section 127 Plans: A Tax-Smart Way To Pay For Education Or Student Loans A Nonprofit Alaskan Cruise Line Turns Tourism Into A Conservation Blueprint Warming Oceans, A Hot Year And ‘Elite’ Beliefs Obamacare Crushed Choice. This Reform Helps Restore It The Problem With Kevin Warsh Isn’t His Wealth, It’s His Wealth How HHS’s Administration For Children And Families Is Cutting Red Tape Fewer Returns, Bigger Refunds: What IRS Data Says About The 2026 Tax Season Reed Hastings’ Netflix Exit Calls For A Warner Bros. Discovery Rethink U.S. Midterm Inflation Tops Price Increases In Western Europe Making Employer Health Plans More Flexible and Transparent The Overwhelming Absurdity Of The Jury Verdict Against Live Nation Mamdani’s Municipal Grocery Stores Risk Making NYC’s Affordability Problem Worse As Gas Tops $4 Per Gallon, Congress Considers Lowering The Gas Tax Export Controls On China Will Hurt U.S. National Security, And U.S. AI Orban And Putin Will Try To Sabotage Magyar’s Victory In Hungary Elections Mailing A Last Minute Tax Return? Warning: The Postmark Rules Have Changed Illinois Merchants Accept Chaos In Return For Microscopic “Savings” The Real Risk For Leaders Isn’t Washington—It’s Overreacting Trump Hates Offshore Wind. Republicans Don’t Private Credit Similarly Couldn’t Care Less About The Federal Reserve 3 Things We Crave Make U.S. Air Cargo More Valuable Than Ocean Ocean IRS Issues New ‘No Tax On Tips’ Rules—Here’s Who Qualifies AI And Less Immigration Work Will Shift IRS Criminal Enforcement Shielding The Identity Of Child Victims: A Checklist For Federal Prosecutors Meet The Self-Made American Who Founded Forbes Topsy-Turvy Trade: Top U.S. Deficit With 3 Countries In Last 4 Months A New York Tax That Could Literally Cost The Lives Of Smokers Running Out Of Time Before Tax Day? An Extension Might Be Your Best Move Without Ticketmaster, There Are Much Fewer Concerts To Attend 11 Common Tax Filing Mistakes And How To Avoid Them Inflation Without Money Creation Lowering Healthcare Costs Without A Disastrous Government-Run Model Gold Set Monthly Record And Became Top U.S. Export, Latest Data Shows When The Boardroom Wakes Up To Climate Risk In Health Care IRS Expands Business Tax Account To Include More Kinds Of Entities Politicians Easily Forget That Miracles Aren’t Free Environmental Disaster Is Looming Thanks To ‘Renewable’ Energy Sources Can Trump End Birthright Citizenship? Supreme Court To Weigh In Moving To Crack Down On Microplastics What Canada’s Euthanasia Surge Reveals About Single-Payer Health Care The Strait Of Hormuz Couldn’t Care Less About The Federal Reserve How My Widowed 77-Year-Old Mom Lost Social Security Benefits For Five Months A Billionaire’s Pitch To Cut Power Bills Collides With California’s Real Costs Republicans Must Laser Focus On Passing Kudlow’s Economic Plan At 60 Feet Below The Surface, I Saw Why Ocean Health Is Human Health Elizabeth Warren’s Bold Plan To Tax The Ultra-Wealthy Sparks Debate
How Japan’s Bond Market Affects Your Portfolio and Global Markets | June 2026 Edition
Robert Daugherty · 2026-04-25 · via Forbes - Policy
  1. Why May the Bank of Japan Raise Interest Rates in 2026?
  2. The “Yen Carry Trade” Unwind
  3. How Japanese Government Bonds Drive U.S. Treasury Yields
  4. The Impact On Global Markets
  5. How This Impacts Your Portfolio
  6. Strategies For This New Normal
  7. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
10,000 yen bills for how Japan’s bond market affects your portfolio and global markets.

A stack and laid out 10,000 yen bills and a chart of the exchange rate. Japan's bond market is changing, which has implications globally.

Getty

For decades, the Japan bond market has quietly served as one of the most important anchors of global interest rates. While U.S. investors often focus on the Federal Reserve, the reality is that Japanese capital, especially through its massive government bond market, has played a central role in shaping yields, liquidity and risk-taking across the world.

That anchor is now shifting. After years of ultra-low and even negative interest rates, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) has begun moving toward normalization. For investors outside Japan, this is not an academic development. It has real implications for stock valuations, bond yields, currencies and ultimately the performance of your portfolio.

Why May the Bank of Japan Raise Interest Rates in 2026?

For much of the past three decades, Japan has been synonymous with low inflation and even lower interest rates. The BOJ maintained a policy of negative rates and yield curve control (YCC), effectively capping long-term Japanese government bond (JGB) yields to stimulate growth and prevent deflation. That era is ending.

Rising domestic inflation driven by wage growth, supply chain normalization and a weaker yen has forced policymakers to reconsider. Japan is now experiencing sustained inflation above its long-standing 2% target, something that would have been unthinkable a few years ago. As a result, the BOJ has begun loosening its grip on the bond market, allowing yields to rise and signaling a broader shift toward normalization.

Globally, this matters because Japan is one of the largest holders of foreign assets, particularly U.S. Treasuries. If Japanese yields rise, domestic investors, banks, insurers and pension funds have less incentive to invest abroad. That potential repatriation of capital could ripple across global markets, tightening financial conditions far beyond Japan’s borders.

The “Yen Carry Trade” Unwind

To understand the broader implications, you need to understand the “yen carry trade,” one of the most important and underappreciated drivers of global liquidity. For years, investors borrowed cheaply in yen (thanks to near-zero rates) and invested in higher-yielding assets elsewhere, such as U.S. bonds, emerging market debt, equities, and even private markets. This created a powerful flow of capital out of Japan and into global risk assets. But this trade only works when Japanese rates remain low.

As the BOJ allows yields to rise, the economics of the carry trade begin to break down. Borrowing costs increase, and the risk of yen appreciation grows. Investors who have built leveraged positions funded in yen may be forced to unwind those trades selling global assets to repay yen-denominated liabilities.

This unwind can be disruptive. It can create volatility in equities, widen credit spreads and pressure emerging markets that have relied heavily on foreign capital inflows. For retail investors, this may show up as sudden drawdowns in portfolios that otherwise appear well diversified.

How Japanese Government Bonds Drive U.S. Treasury Yields

Japanese government bonds do not exist in isolation. They are deeply interconnected with U.S. Treasury markets. Japan is one of the largest foreign holders of U.S. Treasuries. When Japanese yields are suppressed, investors seek higher returns abroad, supporting demand for U.S. bonds and helping keep yields relatively low. But as JGB yields rise, that dynamic shifts.

Japanese institutions may begin reallocating capital back home, reducing demand for Treasuries. This can put upward pressure on U.S. yields, even if domestic economic conditions remain stable.

In other words, U.S. interest rates are not solely determined by the Federal Reserve. They are influenced by global capital flows, with Japan playing a central role.

For investors evaluating bonds versus bond funds, this shift is critical. Rising yields may offer better income opportunities, but they also introduce price volatility, particularly for longer-duration assets.

The Impact On Global Markets

The normalization of Japan’s bond market is not just a local story, it is a global macro shift.

Higher Japanese yields could lead to tighter global liquidity, especially if capital flows reverse. This environment tends to challenge high-growth equities, which rely on low discount rates to justify elevated valuations. Technology stocks, in particular, may face headwinds as global rates drift higher.

Emerging markets are also vulnerable. Many have benefited from years of abundant global liquidity and low borrowing costs. If Japanese capital retreats and the yen strengthens, these markets could face currency pressure, higher financing costs and reduced investment inflows.

At the same time, volatility may increase across asset classes. Markets that have grown accustomed to a stable, low-rate environment may need to adjust to a world where one of the largest providers of cheap capital is stepping back.

How This Impacts Your Portfolio

For individual investors, the implications are both direct and indirect. First, rising global interest rates can pressure equity valuations. Growth stocks, particularly those with earnings far in the future, are most sensitive to changes in discount rates. If Japanese normalization contributes to higher global yields, these stocks may underperform relative to value-oriented sectors with more immediate cash flows.

Second, fixed income allocations may behave differently than they have in recent years. While higher yields improve long-term return prospects, they can also lead to short-term losses as bond prices adjust. Understanding the distinction between high yield bonds and higher-quality fixed income becomes increasingly important in this environment.

Third, currency movements matter. A strengthening yen often associated with carry trade unwinds can create ripple effects across global markets. Multinational companies, commodities and emerging market assets may all be affected by shifts in currency dynamics.

Finally, diversification itself may evolve. Traditional correlations between stocks and bonds can change when global liquidity conditions shift. Investors should be prepared for periods where both asset classes experience volatility simultaneously.

Strategies For This New Normal

Adapting to this environment does not require radical changes but it does require thoughtful adjustments. First, prioritize quality. Companies with strong balance sheets, consistent cash flows and pricing power are better positioned to navigate higher-rate environments. These businesses tend to be less sensitive to shifts in global liquidity and more resilient during periods of volatility.

Second, revisit fixed income allocations. With yields rising, bonds are once again offering meaningful income. However, duration risk remains a key consideration. Investors may benefit from a more balanced approach that includes shorter-duration securities alongside selective exposure to longer-term opportunities.

Third, maintain true diversification. This includes geographic diversification, but also exposure across asset classes and sectors. In a world where global capital flows are shifting, diversification is not just about reducing risk it is about maintaining optionality.

Japan’s bond market is no longer a passive backdrop it is an active force reshaping global finance. As the Bank of Japan moves away from ultra-low rates, the effects will be felt across currencies, equities and fixed income markets worldwide. For investors, the key is not to react impulsively, but to understand the underlying dynamics and position portfolios accordingly.

The era of “free money” may be ending. What comes next will reward discipline, diversification and a clear understanding of how global markets truly work.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)