Tap to Trade in Gate Square, Win up to 50 GT & Merch!
Click the trading widget in Gate Square content, complete a transaction, and take home 50 GT, Position Experience Vouchers, or exclusive Spring Festival merchandise.
Click the registration link to join
https://www.gate.com/questionnaire/7401
Enter Gate Square daily and click any trading pair or trading card within the content to complete a transaction. The top 10 users by trading volume will win GT, Gate merchandise boxes, position experience vouchers, and more.
The top prize: 50 GT.
![Spring Festival merchandise](https://exampl
Bank of Japan's rate hike triggers a global financial domino effect — how will the domino effect unfold
The recent interest rate hike decision by the Bank of Japan is triggering a series of global financial chain reactions. This is not just a domestic monetary policy adjustment but a critical moment affecting the global financial system. The first substantial increase in interest rates in thirty years is pulling on the “pin” that could trigger systemic risk.
When the Bank of Japan raises its policy interest rate, the seemingly simple numerical change conceals underlying structural risks. Japan’s government debt has reached approximately $10 trillion, and in the context of rising interest rates, debt servicing costs will increase exponentially. Higher yields mean that future government fiscal pressures will surge, squeezing Japan’s economic growth potential. From a fiscal sustainability perspective, Japan faces three options: sovereign default, debt restructuring, or inflationary pressures. These are mathematical dilemmas that no modern economy can avoid.
Japanese Asset Outflows and the Global Liquidity Vacuum
Japan has accumulated a massive amount of foreign investments over the years, including over $1 trillion in U.S. Treasuries and several hundred billion dollars in global stocks and bonds. These investments made sense in an era when domestic interest rates were near zero—domestic returns were extremely low, making foreign investments a necessity. But when Japan’s yields rise domestically, the situation fundamentally changes.
Japanese investors face a new arithmetic problem: domestic bonds now offer real yields, while U.S. Treasuries, after considering exchange rate risks, have effectively negative returns. This disparity is enough to trigger capital reflows. Even a few hundred billion dollars reallocating back to Japan can create a liquidity gap in the global markets. This gap is not mild—it is systemic.
Risk Cascades Triggered by Arbitrage Liquidation
The real ticking time bomb lies in yen arbitrage trading. Over the past decade, global investors borrowed yen at extremely low costs and allocated funds into global risk assets—stocks, cryptocurrencies, emerging market bonds. This market exceeds $1 trillion and relies on the assumption that the yen remains a “cheap currency.”
As the Bank of Japan continues to raise interest rates, the yen appreciates, and the economics of arbitrage trading vanish. More importantly, when the yen appreciates beyond a certain point, investors with yen-denominated loans face margin calls. Forced liquidations will lead to:
In simple terms, everything will be sold simultaneously. This is not a risk that diversification can solve—it’s a systemic shockwave.
Federal Reserve Policy Space and Rising Global Financing Costs
Meanwhile, U.S. Treasury yields are under pressure. When Japan massively reduces its holdings of U.S. Treasuries, the U.S. government’s borrowing costs will rise accordingly. This makes borrowing more expensive for the U.S. government, directly threatening fiscal sustainability. The narrowing yield spread between the U.S. and Japan weakens the interest rate advantage that previously supported the dollar.
Central Bank Dilemmas
The Bank of Japan is caught in a difficult dilemma. Continuing to raise rates could further exacerbate the liquidation of arbitrage trades, but halting rate hikes would fail to address domestic inflation pressures. Simple monetary expansion is also not feasible—amidst rising inflation, continued large-scale money printing would only weaken the yen, increase import costs, and push domestic prices higher.
This impasse reveals a fundamental reality: when a country’s financial system has long relied on extreme easing policies, a sudden normalization process will inevitably shake the entire ecosystem. Japan will not bear these shocks alone—the global financial markets are deeply interconnected, and every decision by the Bank of Japan is pulling on the pin connecting risk assets worldwide. The next move, whether to hike rates or hold steady, could trigger unpredictable market chain reactions.