The Japanese government rolled out a massive 21.3 trillion yen ($135.5 billion) supplementary budget, the largest since the COVID-19 era.
This stimulus aims to cushion households from cost-of-living squeezes and reignite growth, but it has volatility implications for crypto traders.
Approved by the cabinet on Friday, November 21, 2025, this fiscal injection is focused on easing rising prices, driving robust growth, and boosting defense and diplomacy.
In addition to the 21.3 trillion yen injection, the Japanese stimulus includes local government grants and energy subsidies. This is expected to benefit households by around 7,000 yen over three months.
While the fund is expected to pump liquidity into the economy to avert a deeper slump, it is complicated in Japan’s case. The country is faced with decades of debt, a weakening currency, and global interconnections.
The Japanese economy is weak after a fragile recovery. In Q3 2025, the country’s GDP fell 0.4% quarter-on-quarter, equal to a 1.8% annualized contraction, the first decline in 18 months.
Japan Stimulus Update | Source: The Kobeissi Letter
This signals weakening consumer and business activity, possibly from higher import costs amid a strong USD.
Also, inflation is above the Bank of Japan’s 2% target for 43 consecutive months, hitting 3% in October 2025. While this sounds good for growth in theory, it is eroding real wages and household spending.
The government projects this package will boost real GDP by 24 trillion yen, with a multiplier effect pushing total economic impact to around $265 billion. Simply put, this move is a bid to stabilize without waiting for BOJ rate hikes, which remain cautious at 0.5%.
However, some market observers remain skeptical despite initiatives to spark growth. A recent Nikkei report cautioned about the continued use of fiscal stimulus beyond emergencies.
Furthermore, the yen fell sharply following the stimulus announcement. The USD/JPY rate hit its weakest since January 2025, as investors bet the stimulus signals more money printing and BOJ dovishness.
Moreover, the 40-year bond yield soared to a historic 3.774% on Thursday, defying expectations that stimulus would ease long-term rates.
Every 100-basis-point jump in yields raises annual government financing costs by approximately 2.8 trillion yen. This typically fuels fears of unsustainable debt servicing.
A rising yield puts pressure on the $20 trillion yen-carry trade, where investors borrow yen cheaply to invest overseas. Hence, higher yields and yen appreciation could spark a quick unwinding, forcing asset sales worldwide.
For Bitcoin and other crypto assets, the stimulus sends mixed signals. Historically, yen depreciation drives Japanese investors toward alternative assets such as Bitcoin (BTC).
On the downside, higher bond yields pose risks. The resulting outflows from unwinding the yen-carry trade may force institutions to sell investments, including Bitcoin holdings.
Similar conditions happened earlier this year when the JGB yield rose 2.265%, hitting a 16-year record high.
In parallel, Japan Post Bank has officially announced plans to issue a digital currency, DCJPY, in fiscal 2026. As featured in our recent coverage, the bank wants to activate more than 190 trillion yen in idle customer funds.
This news comes shortly after reports that Japan’s FSA is preparing to approve the issuance of the nation’s first yen-pegged stablecoin.
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