Japan’s PM Takaichi shifts tone to calm markets as rising yields test fiscal credibility
PM Sanae Takaichi is attempting to calm markets after unveiling a $137bn stimulus plan that raised concerns about fiscal sustainability. Japan faces rising long-end bond yields, a weak yen, and doubts about who will absorb sharply increasing JGB supply.
I've summarised a long piece via Reuters. And also taken issue with a key conclusion (see below).
What Triggered Market Anxiety
In a Nov. 17 meeting, Finance Minister Katayama showed Takaichi a chart of aggressive selling in long-term JGBs.
The warning: rising yields threaten funding of her stimulus agenda and risk a “Truss shock”-style loss of confidence.
Japan’s debt burden is the highest in the developed world; BOJ and insurer demand for JGBs is waning.
How Takaichi is Responding
Softening tone on BOJ tightening; less resistance to rate hikes.
Promising to limit extra borrowing and reduce wasteful spending.
Publicly dismissing the possibility of a UK-style gilt meltdown.
Government stresses fiscal sustainability and market monitoring.
Market Reactions
10-year JGB yields hit highest since 2007; up 25.5bp in four weeks, shaking global bond markets.
Some investors are shorting the yen and betting against long-dated JGBs amid fears of overstretched policy.
Yen has fallen ~5% since Takaichi took office.
Structural Challenges
Takaichi inherited Abenomics-style policy bias toward large stimulus.
Inflation near 3% and record debt levels contrast with her expansionary stance.
Net JGB supply expected to jump ¥11 trillion in 2026, raising the question: “Who will buy these bonds?”
Foreign demand is unreliable; domestic banks & insurers have reduced buying appetite.
Investor Views
Some see yen weakness as the “path of least resistance.”
Others argue stronger yen possible if the economy reflates.
JGB buying interest remains constrained until Tokyo provides clearer issuance guidance.
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I don't know about the “Who will buy these bonds?” worry. Yesterday's 30-yr JGB auction went off without a hitch, demand surged!