Long traders, take note! This move by the Bank of Japan could have a bigger impact than you think.
The Bank of Japan plans to hold a monetary policy meeting on December 18-19, and market expectations for a rate hike have already surpassed 70%—with a high probability that rates will be raised directly from 0.5% to 0.75%. This would be the largest move in 17 years. As the world’s second-largest liquidity currency, changes in yen policy are definitely a big deal.
In the short term, the crypto space will face direct impacts:
Carry trades are about to collapse. For the past decade or so, people have been borrowing low-interest yen to invest in high-yield assets like Bitcoin—it's been a pretty smooth game. But now with rate hikes, the cost of yen borrowing rises, the yen appreciates, and the arbitrage opportunity is directly compressed. Investors will definitely prioritize selling off crypto positions—since they’re highly liquid and easy to rebalance. Last time a rate hike was merely anticipated, Bitcoin plunged over 8%, and Ethereum dropped nearly 9%. If the hike actually happens this time, the selling pressure will only be stronger.
Global liquidity is tightening. Japan is the last major central bank to exit ultra-loose monetary policy, and this move means a definitive tightening of global liquidity. As risk appetite declines, capital naturally flows to safe assets like government bonds. As Japanese bond yields rise, domestic institutions will surely repatriate overseas investments to allocate more to domestic bonds. With no new inflows and existing funds withdrawing, how can prices not be suppressed?
Valuation logic is also changing. The value of cryptocurrencies largely relies on market expectations of high future returns. Rate hikes push up the benchmark for global asset pricing, and for non-yielding assets like crypto, the discount rate increases, risk premium narrows significantly, and with the change in valuation logic, market prices are naturally pushed down.
However, in the medium to long term, the crypto space still has structural support, so a sustained plunge is unlikely. But in the short term, this shock is definitely something to be wary of.
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MEVHunterBearish
· 12-06 07:43
As soon as Japan raises interest rates, the crypto market has to kneel. It's time for the carry trade game to end.
View OriginalReply0
SchrodingersPaper
· 12-06 07:40
Oh no, it's going to drop again. My yen arbitrage order hasn't been closed yet.
View OriginalReply0
FOMOrektGuy
· 12-06 07:31
This round of rate hikes by Japan is truly a killer move. Once the carry trade collapses, we need to get out fast.
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Damn, do we have to cut losses again? They're really daring to pull the biggest move in 17 years.
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Liquidity tightening is the overall trend. I’m not optimistic in the short term, bro.
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We couldn’t handle even an 8% drop before, if they really hike rates this time, won’t it crash right through?
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The Bank of Japan is truly the last holdout. Once they pull out, the whole world will suffer.
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Those going long need to be careful. Once the sell-off starts, there’s no stopping it.
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Saying there won’t be a sustained crash sounds like a joke. Just seek short-term safety and that’s it.
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The yen appreciation has completely killed arbitrage opportunities; this game really can’t be played anymore.
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It’s going to be bottom-fishing for government bonds again. Risk assets are always the ones to take the hit.
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When discount rates go up, valuation logic breaks down immediately. Crypto is really fragile.
View OriginalReply0
MEVHunterWang
· 12-06 07:30
Oh no, time to cut the leeks again, the carry trade game is over.
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This move by the Bank of Japan hits the core directly, anyone going long with yen has to bleed out.
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Liquidity tightening is non-negotiable, Bitcoin is likely to take a hit this week.
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Just the expectation of a rate hike drops 8 points, when the actual hike comes it might crash. A shorting opportunity is here.
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Medium to long-term support? Survive this wave first, in the short term it's just a harvesting rhythm.
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A wave of carry trade liquidations is coming. It's fun, but the price is too steep.
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Central banks around the world are tightening, this time the crypto market really can't escape.
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As soon as the valuation logic changes, prices fall. In a rate hike cycle, anything with no yield is trash.
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Haven’t seen such a strong move in 17 years, Japan is really ruthless this time.
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Funds are flowing into government bonds, what does your crypto count for? Time to liquidate.
View OriginalReply0
CryptoComedian
· 12-06 07:29
Laughing and then suddenly crying—after this move by the Bank of Japan, my carry trade dream is completely gone.
View OriginalReply0
WenAirdrop
· 12-06 07:28
Here we go again, this round of carry trades is probably going to get wiped out. What are the guys who borrowed yen to buy the dip thinking?
View OriginalReply0
DegenRecoveryGroup
· 12-06 07:23
Damn, this carry trade is really about to end. Should've closed the position earlier.
Long traders, take note! This move by the Bank of Japan could have a bigger impact than you think.
The Bank of Japan plans to hold a monetary policy meeting on December 18-19, and market expectations for a rate hike have already surpassed 70%—with a high probability that rates will be raised directly from 0.5% to 0.75%. This would be the largest move in 17 years. As the world’s second-largest liquidity currency, changes in yen policy are definitely a big deal.
In the short term, the crypto space will face direct impacts:
Carry trades are about to collapse. For the past decade or so, people have been borrowing low-interest yen to invest in high-yield assets like Bitcoin—it's been a pretty smooth game. But now with rate hikes, the cost of yen borrowing rises, the yen appreciates, and the arbitrage opportunity is directly compressed. Investors will definitely prioritize selling off crypto positions—since they’re highly liquid and easy to rebalance. Last time a rate hike was merely anticipated, Bitcoin plunged over 8%, and Ethereum dropped nearly 9%. If the hike actually happens this time, the selling pressure will only be stronger.
Global liquidity is tightening. Japan is the last major central bank to exit ultra-loose monetary policy, and this move means a definitive tightening of global liquidity. As risk appetite declines, capital naturally flows to safe assets like government bonds. As Japanese bond yields rise, domestic institutions will surely repatriate overseas investments to allocate more to domestic bonds. With no new inflows and existing funds withdrawing, how can prices not be suppressed?
Valuation logic is also changing. The value of cryptocurrencies largely relies on market expectations of high future returns. Rate hikes push up the benchmark for global asset pricing, and for non-yielding assets like crypto, the discount rate increases, risk premium narrows significantly, and with the change in valuation logic, market prices are naturally pushed down.
However, in the medium to long term, the crypto space still has structural support, so a sustained plunge is unlikely. But in the short term, this shock is definitely something to be wary of.