The Big Shift in Japan's Bond Market
For decades, Japanese government bonds were the wallflowers of the global bond party. Yields sat near zero thanks to the Bank of Japan's strict control over borrowing costs. Nobody got excited about them because nobody got paid to own them.
The benchmark 10-year Japanese government bond (JGB) yield hit 2.901% on July 9, the highest since 1996. It now trades at 2.781%, which is more than 70 basis points higher than where it started 2026. The 20-year JGB hit a multi-decade high of 3.901% on the same day.
The reason is straightforward. The Bank of Japan abandoned its yield curve control program in March 2024, which had kept the 10-year yield target set at "around zero." That move was part of a broader effort to normalize monetary policy after years of ultra-low rates meant to reflate Japan's economy. With that program gone, yields were free to move higher.
Concerns about spending plans from Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi have also pushed yields up, along with Middle East geopolitical tensions that have also been pushing global yields higher.
The bottom line: Japanese bonds are no longer the boring, low-yield safe haven they once were. They are actually paying investors something for the first time in a very long time.
The Big Debate: Buy Japan or Stay Away?
The question investors are wrestling with is simple. Are Japanese bonds finally a good deal, or is the risk still too high?
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Some big names think it is time to buy. Charles Gave, co-founder of research firm Gavekal, said in a research note: "The asset to buy in Japan is one that no one owns: Japanese bonds, especially Japanese long bonds. The Japanese bond market is probably the most attractive bond market in the world today." He also said: "Pretty soon, Japanese yields will start falling and the yen will start to go up, especially if oil remains at its current price. Long-duration Japanese bonds should therefore significantly outperform gold in yen terms for the foreseeable future."
State Street Investment Management's senior fixed income strategist, Masahiko Loo, put it simply: "JGBs are increasingly moving from 'uninvestable' to 'investable' for global bond investors." He added, "investors are finally getting paid to own Japanese paper again."
But not everyone is convinced. DWS's global head of multi-asset, Henning Potstada, argued that European bonds remain more attractive. "If you have European positions stay or even do more in Europe, because the debt sustainability issues, we think will hold on, and exactly for these investors, Europe offers stability," he said.
The European Central Bank has its policy rate at 2.25%, compared to the Bank of Japan's 1%. Japan's debt-to-GDP ratio stands above 200%, far higher than the EU's 81.7%.
What This Means for Your Portfolio
The shift in Japan's bond market is not happening in a vacuum. It is rippling across the globe. Japanese investors have been selling U.S. debt and bringing money home.
During just the first three months of 2026, they offloaded $29.6 billion in U.S. bonds. This eliminates a buyer that had been a steady source of demand from markets already contending with large fiscal deficits.
Mattioli Woods investment manager Lauren Hyslop said: "Japan spent two decades as the silent subsidizer of cheap global borrowing. That era is over."
There is a catch, though. If yields keep climbing, some big players could be forced to sell. Hyslop cautioned: "Life insurers become forced sellers if the 30-year breaches 4.5%, so that level is simultaneously an opportunity and a danger zone."
But there is also a potential lifeline. Japan's Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) manages $1.8 trillion in assets. It is the world's largest pension fund.
Japan's Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama reportedly stated that the government plans to find methods to urge pension funds, including GPIF, to invest more heavily in domestic financial assets. No immediate revisions to GPIF's medium-term objectives have been announced.
For investors watching from outside Japan, the lesson is one of opportunity and caution. Yields are higher than they have been in decades, which means income is finally available. But Japan's debt load, the Bank of Japan's next moves, and global uncertainty all make this a market that rewards careful attention.
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