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May 18, 2026

Crypto News | Bitcoin faces Treasury yield pressure as Japan sells nearly $30 billion of US debt Gino Matos | usagoldmines.com

Bitcoin faces renewed Treasury yield pressure after Japanese investors sold $29.6 billion of US government, agency, and local authority debt in the first quarter, the largest quarterly net sale since the second quarter of 2022.

As Bloomberg reported, the catalyst was an abrupt turnaround in Federal Reserve rate expectations when oil prices jumped, making existing Treasury positions less attractive.

Treasury TIC data put Japan’s holdings at $1.24 trillion in February 2026, making it the largest foreign holder ahead of the UK at $897.3 billion and mainland China at $693.3 billion.

A $29.6 billion quarterly sale represents roughly 2.4% of those holdings, and in a market where marginal demand moves prices, the direction of quarterly outflows is what bond desks track.

Cartoon illustration of US and Japanese government bonds arguing with Bitcoin during global market negotiations.

Why Japanese capital is heading home and what that means

Japan’s 10-year government bond yield climbed above 2.6%, its highest level since 1997, while the 30-year hit 4%, as markets priced in a Bank of Japan (BOJ) rate hike.

The BOJ also reduced its monthly JGB purchases from ¥5.7 trillion in August 2024 to ¥2.9 trillion in the first quarter of 2026, removing the ceiling that had held domestic yields near zero for years.

Pressure point Article data Transmission channel
Japan 10-year yield Above 2.6%, highest since 1997 Domestic bonds become more attractive
Japan 30-year yield 4% Long-duration capital can stay home
BOJ JGB purchases ¥5.7T → ¥2.9T/month Less central-bank suppression of yields
BOJ policy split 3 of 9 members voted for a hike Markets price further tightening
FY2026 core inflation outlook 2.8% Higher inflation supports tighter policy

When the Bank of Japan pushed Japanese yields to near zero, Japanese institutions had little choice but to look abroad for income, and US Treasuries absorbed much of that capital.

Reuters separately reported that Japanese investors continued selling foreign bonds in April, though the pace eased to a three-month low.

Mortgage rates, corporate borrowing costs, bank balance sheets, collateral markets, and emerging-market debt all key off Treasury yields. When external demand for that debt weakens, the market may need to offer higher yields to clear supply, and that tightening flows through every corner of global finance.

The OECD’s 2026 Global Debt Report projected gross borrowing across OECD countries at around $18 trillion in 2026, with net borrowing near $4 trillion, the second-highest on record.

Long-term G7 borrowing costs have surged to their highest level in more than two decades, while the 30-year US Treasury yield hit 5% in late April and the 10-year US Treasury yield climbed to 4.54% in mid-May, its highest level in 12 months.

Citigroup warned that elevated JGB volatility alone could force risk parity funds to sell as much as $130 billion in US bonds.

The Bank of Japan kept its short-term policy rate at 0.75% in April, but three of nine board members voted for a hike, and the BOJ raised its FY2026 core inflation outlook to 2.8%.

If the BOJ hikes further, domestic JGBs become even more attractive, and the repatriation logic strengthens.

That makes the link between US Treasury yields and Bitcoin the central market question: whether higher risk-free returns cap BTC upside before sovereign-debt stress strengthens its long-term case.

Why higher Treasury yields pressure Bitcoin

Treasury yields are Bitcoin’s most direct macro headwind, and when US yields rise, the risk-free rate rises with them, making cash and bonds more attractive relative to speculative assets.

A 30-year Treasury yielding 5% competes directly with every dollar allocated to Bitcoin. As of May 17, BTC traded near the $78,000 zone and had failed to close above its 200-day moving average of $82,228 on five consecutive attempts.

CME FedWatch assigned a probability of more than 44% to a Fed rate hike by December 2026, a sharp reversal from the multiple cuts markets expected at the start of 2026. April CPI came in at 3.8%, weakening the case for near-term cuts and keeping higher-for-longer policy risk alive.

If Japanese selling adds sustained upward momentum to Treasury yields, Bitcoin takes the hit through higher yields that pull capital toward bonds, a stronger dollar that compresses risk assets globally, and liquidity conditions that drove Bitcoin’s 2024-2025 rally going into reverse.

Bitcoin behaves like a high-beta liquidity asset in that environment and takes the brunt of the risk-off rotation.

The bull case for Bitcoin

If Japanese selling, climbing JGB yields, and broader G7 bond market weakness add up to a visible deterioration in foreign demand for US sovereign debt, Bitcoin’s macro narrative gets stronger.

If the largest foreign holder of Treasuries is pulling back as domestic yields improve, long-end yields globally sit at 20-year highs, and OECD governments need to borrow a combined $18 trillion in 2026, the durability of the Treasury market as the world’s risk-free anchor becomes a live debate.

Bitcoin bulls have always argued that excess sovereign debt creates the conditions for an asset outside the banking system to gain ground. The current bond-market environment supplies more evidence for that argument than any in years.

The same Japanese repatriation that tightens short-term liquidity also removes one of the pillars that suppressed global borrowing costs for decades. As that pillar weakens, the macro backdrop for Bitcoin’s “outside money” thesis builds further.

Scenario Bond-market setup Global liquidity effect Bitcoin read
Base case Japan remains a marginal seller, but flows stay orderly Yields stay pressured, not disorderly Choppy BTC, liquidity-sensitive
Bear case JGB yields rise further and Japanese selling accelerates U.S. yields rise, dollar strengthens, risk assets weaken BTC pressured as high-beta liquidity asset
Bull case Foreign demand weakness becomes a sovereign-debt confidence story Investors question Treasury market durability BTC’s “outside money” narrative strengthens
Shock case JGB volatility triggers forced bond selling by risk-parity funds Up to $130B U.S. bond-selling risk amplifies yield shock BTC sells off first, then may rebound if policy liquidity returns

Treasury yield stress compressing Bitcoin’s short-term price action and sovereign-debt weakness building Bitcoin’s longer-term macro case have coexisted across every major rate cycle where Bitcoin matured as a macro asset.

Japan still holds more Treasuries than any other foreign investor, but it has become a marginal seller in a market where $18 trillion in new sovereign supply will need buyers in 2026.

For Bitcoin, that makes Treasury yields the near-term pressure point and sovereign-debt fragility the longer-term argument.

The post Bitcoin faces Treasury yield pressure as Japan sells nearly $30 billion of US debt appeared first on CryptoSlate.

 Bitcoin faces renewed Treasury yield pressure after Japanese investors sold $29.6 billion of US government, agency, and local authority debt in the first quarter, the largest quarterly net sale since the second quarter of 2022. As Bloomberg reported, the catalyst was an abrupt turnaround in Federal Reserve rate expectations when oil prices jumped, making existing
The post Bitcoin faces Treasury yield pressure as Japan sells nearly $30 billion of US debt appeared first on CryptoSlate. Debt, Featured, Macro, Market, Price Watch, TradFi 

This articles is written by : Nermeen Nabil Khear Abdelmalak

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