Japan 10-year bond sale draws weaker demand than average

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Japan’s government bond market is flashing warning signs, and the rest of the financial world is paying attention. The country’s latest 10-year bond auction drew weaker demand than its trailing average, continuing a pattern that has quietly unsettled investors across asset classes.

The February 2026 auction for the 10-year Japanese Government Bond posted a bid-to-cover ratio of 3.02, slipping below the 12-month average. A bid-to-cover ratio measures how much demand exists relative to the bonds on offer.

Why Japan’s bond market is struggling to find buyers

The demand problem is not isolated to 10-year paper. June’s 30-year JGB auction recorded a bid-to-cover ratio of 2.94, the weakest reading since mid-2025, against a 12-month average of roughly 3.4.

Investor hesitation stems from a few converging pressures. Looming elections and fiscal policy uncertainty have made buyers cautious about locking into long-duration debt. Meanwhile, the Bank of Japan has been stepping back as a buyer, cutting its monthly JGB purchases to ¥2.9 trillion in the first quarter of 2026, down sharply from ¥5.7 trillion in August 2024.

The 10-year JGB yield climbed to roughly 2.47% in April 2026, a level Japan has not seen since the mid-1990s. At one point this year, yields pushed into the 2.5% to 2.8% range. The BOJ has held its policy rate at 0.75% even as inflation persists.

The crypto connection investors should not ignore

Rising JGB yields affect global carry trades, where investors borrow cheaply in yen to fund positions in higher-yielding assets including equities, commodities, and crypto. When Japanese yields rise, the cost of that trade increases, and positions start getting unwound.

January 2026 offered a live demonstration. A surge in JGB yields, with 30-year bond yields jumping roughly 31 basis points, coincided with Bitcoin dropping below $91,000.

There is also a second-order effect worth considering. If weak auction demand forces Japan’s government to offer higher yields to attract buyers, that raises the relative attractiveness of holding yen-denominated safe assets versus speculative ones. Capital that might otherwise flow into emerging market assets or crypto has a reason to stay closer to home.

For years, Japanese institutional investors, including insurers and pension funds, suppressed domestic yields while deploying capital abroad. That dynamic is now slowly reversing.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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