Japan's Bond Crisis Escalates: 10-Year Yield Breaches Key Threshold to 2008 High

Market Watcher
15 Jul

The Japanese government bond crisis has intensified as the benchmark 10-year yield surged to 1.595%, hitting its highest level since 2008. Unlike ultra-long-term bonds, movements in 10-year yields exert more immediate impacts on the real economy. This volatility coincides with Japan's Upper House elections, sparking fears that the ruling coalition's potential defeat could trigger fiscal policy shifts. Opposition parties' campaign pledges of cash handouts, consumption tax cuts, and education subsidies threaten to widen budget deficits, potentially unleashing "bond vigilante" sell-offs reminiscent of Britain's "Truss moment."

Political uncertainty and fiscal concerns have tightened market nerves, with the core 10-year yield piercing through critical warning levels. On Tuesday, July 15, Japan's 10-year government bond yield climbed 2.5 basis points to 1.595%. Concurrently, 20-year yields jumped 3.5 basis points to 2.64% while 30-year yields rose 4 basis points to 3.195% – both setting new peaks since 1999. Yields on bonds maturing in 20 years or longer have already surged at least 20 basis points this month.

Analysts warn that a ruling coalition loss in the July 20 election could accelerate debt sell-offs, echoing the 2022 UK crisis where former Prime Minister Liz Truss resigned following bond market chaos triggered by unfunded tax cuts. Yuichi Kodama, economist at Meiji Yasuda Research Institute, emphasized the 10-year yield's critical role as the benchmark for fixed mortgage rates: "Higher borrowing costs for businesses and households will inevitably constrain economic activity."

While BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda downplays the economic impact of ultra-long yield spikes, market participants note his vigilant stance. Takahiro Otsuka, senior fixed-income strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities, observed: "The 10-year surge stems from instability in ultra-long bonds amid demand concerns and evaporating liquidity. There's no guarantee yields will stabilize around 1.6%."

Election dynamics are amplifying fiscal anxieties. Polls indicate the ruling Liberal Democratic Party coalition risks losing its majority. Opposition promises of populist measures could undermine fiscal discipline, warns SMBC Nikko Securities strategist Ataru Okumura: "A coalition defeat might trigger accelerated foreign selling of ultra-long bonds, particularly on heightened expectations of consumption tax reductions." Koichi Sugisaki of Morgan Stanley MUFG Securities concurs, noting fiscal uncertainty is exacerbating market turbulence.

This sell-off reflects global patterns as investors question governments' spending sustainability. Long-dated sovereign bonds worldwide are retreating, with Japan's 20-year-plus yields climbing in lockstep with international peers. Despite Governor Ueda's reassurances about limited economic spillovers, Kodama notes the central bank's cautious approach: "He's deliberately avoiding explicit commentary that might signal intervention thresholds."

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