Bitcoin faces Japan bond pressure as 30-year JGB yields hit 4%, while BTC network activity nears a key inflection zone.
Japan’s rising bond yields are adding pressure to Bitcoin as analysts watch for signs of a yen carry trade unwind.

At the same time, Bitcoin network activity is recovering, and on-chain data is moving near a key zone watched by analysts.
Japan’s 30-year government bond yield has reached 4%. This is the first time it has hit that level since the bond was issued in 1999.
The 20-year yield also rose to 3.648%, its highest level since 1997. These moves matter because Japan plays a major role in global funding markets.
For years, investors borrowed cheaply in yen and bought higher-yielding assets abroad. Those assets included US bonds, stocks, and risk assets such as Bitcoin.
However, higher Japanese bond yields can change that trade. Investors may reduce foreign positions and move money back into yen assets.
As a result, Bitcoin can face selling pressure with other global risk markets.
The yen carry trade can affect many markets at once. When the yen is weak and Japanese rates are low, the trade can support global liquidity.
However, the trade can reverse when Japanese yields rise or the yen strengthens. A sharp move in August 2024 showed how quickly pressure can spread.
During that period, global stocks sold off, and Bitcoin dropped about 15% in 24 hours. Crypto liquidations also passed $1 billion in one trading session.
Because of this, traders are watching USD/JPY closely. A sharp drop in the pair would show a stronger yen. That could force more investors to close carry trade positions.
The Bank of Japan has also been tightening policy. Inflation in Japan has stayed above 3%, while wages have continued to rise.
These conditions have made it harder for the central bank to hold down yields.
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While macro pressure is building, Bitcoin network activity is also improving. Analysts tracking network growth say activity is rebounding after a slower period.
This has drawn attention from traders watching on-chain signals.
Historically, moves in network growth above the 60 level have appeared near local Bitcoin bottoms.
These periods have also matched stronger market conditions in past cycles. However, past patterns do not guarantee the same outcome.
The Vector framework now shows Bitcoin approaching that same inflection zone. This suggests network activity is nearing a level watched by market analysts.
Still, the wider market remains sensitive to Japan’s bond moves.
For Bitcoin, the near-term setup is mixed. Rising Japanese yields may support risk-off selling if the yen carries trade unwinds.
Yet stronger network activity may show that user demand is starting to recover.
The post Bitcoin Faces Japan Bond Pressure As Network Activity Nears Key Inflection Zone appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.


