Japan is usually described through its visible exports, like cars, electronics, machinery, robotics and industrial equipment. In market terms, its more important export for decades was savings. Japan generated more capital than its domestic economy could absorb, then recycled that capital abroad through foreign bonds, equities, direct investment and reserves.
That model became one of the quiet pillars of global finance. A low-yielding domestic economy pushed Japanese institutions and households outward, while the rest of the world, especially the United States, absorbed that surplus capital. Japan’s external balance sheet shows the scale. At the end of March 2026, Japanese residents held ¥1,849.6 trillion in external financial assets, roughly $11.44 trillion at 161.69. Japan’s net international investment position stood at ¥560.1 trillion, roughly $3.46 trillion.
This is the balance sheet behind the “savings exporter” story. Japan’s foreign portfolio investments alone were ¥757.7 trillion ($4.69 trillion). Foreign debt securities accounted for ¥360.5 trillion ($2.23 trillion). These numbers represent one of the world’s largest pools of cross-border capital.
Japan is no longer operating in a zero-rate world. The Bank of Japan has raised its policy rate to 1.0%, Japanese government bond yields have moved higher, and the yen remains under pressure near multi-decade lows. The result is a more complex investment regime. Domestic yields are rising, the currency is weak, and the central bank is trying to normalize policy inside a sovereign bond market that still depends heavily on official support.
Fiscal Dominance Is the Constraint
Fiscal dominance means that the size of government debt starts to limit the freedom of monetary policy. The central bank can still raise rates, but every rate increase also changes the debt dynamics. Higher yields raise debt-service costs, pressure the budget, and can destabilize the bond market. BIS General Manager Agustín Carstens described the broader problem clearly: public debt can threaten monetary stability when the central bank is pushed toward financing debt service, creating fiscal dominance over monetary policy.
Japan sits close to that problem because the debt stock is enormous. The Ministry of Finance estimates general government gross debt at ¥1,441 trillion for the end of FY2025 ($8.91 trillion). Long-term debt outstanding of the central and local governments is estimated at ¥1,330 trillion ($8.23 trillion). In that environment, interest rates are a debt-sustainability variable, not just an inflation-management tool.
The ownership structure of the bond market makes the constraint even clearer. As of December 2024, the Bank of Japan held ¥561.3 trillion of s and T-Bills ($3.47 trillion), equal to 46.3% of the total outstanding stock. On a JGB-only basis, the BOJ held 52.0% of the market. A bond market where the central bank owns around half of the sovereign curve cannot be treated like a fully private market.
The BOJ is trying to reduce that footprint, but the exit is controlled. Its June 2026 JGB purchase plan says long-term rates should, in principle, be formed in financial markets. The same document also says the BOJ can respond flexibly if long-term rates rise rapidly, including by increasing JGB purchases. From April 2027, the BOJ still plans to buy about ¥2 trillion of JGBs per month, roughly $12.4 billion.
That is the core of Japan’s fiscal-dominance risk. The BOJ can raise short rates and taper purchases. It still has to preserve the functioning of a government bond market that finances one of the largest public debt stocks in the developed world.
Real Rates Matter More Than Nominal Rates
Japan’s policy rate is now higher, but policy is still easy in real terms. The BOJ itself says financial conditions remain accommodative and real interest rates are negative, especially in the short- to medium-term part of the curve. It also expects accommodative financial conditions to continue supporting economic activity even after the rate increase.
That matters for asset allocation. A 1% policy rate still leaves Japan far from being a high-yield market. What has changed is the anchor: the zero-rate world that shaped Japanese capital allocation for decades is no longer intact. Japanese investors can now compare foreign assets against a domestic market where nominal yields exist again, inflation expectations are higher, and the BOJ may be forced to keep real rates contained because of the debt burden.
The repatriation mechanism is more subtle than a simple move toward higher domestic yields. Japanese yields are still low in absolute terms. The real comparison is between domestic returns and the yen-adjusted return on foreign assets. Once currency risk, hedging costs, intervention risk and domestic inflation enter the calculation, keeping fresh savings abroad becomes less automatic.
That shift would likely happen without a dramatic liquidation of existing foreign assets. It can come through lower reinvestment, smaller incremental purchases, more domestic allocation, and a higher hurdle rate for buying foreign bonds. For a country with more than $11 trillion in external financial assets, even small changes in flow behavior can matter.
The Yen Makes the Story Harder
The yen is the pressure valve in this system. In a simple textbook version, BOJ rate hikes and higher Japanese yields should support the currency. The market, however, is giving a different answer. The yen has remained weak against the dollar even after the BOJ moved the policy rate to 1%, and Reuters reported that USD/JPY traded around 161.7, close to levels not seen since 1986.
The explanation is relative policy. Japan is tightening from an extremely low base while the United States still offers much higher nominal and real yields. Markets were still pricing a Fed hike this year, while former BOJ policymaker Sayuri Shirai warned that another Fed hike could push the yen toward 165 per dollar. That would take the currency to its weakest level since 1986.
Intervention can slow the move, but it cannot easily reverse the underlying rate differential. Japan spent a record ¥11.7 trillion ($72.4 billion) intervening between late April and early May after the yen moved beyond 160. The currency still returned toward the same zone. That tells investors the market is testing the limits of currency defense.
The weak yen creates tension for Japanese investors. Unhedged foreign assets can look attractive when the yen falls, because foreign-currency returns translate into more yen. At the same time, the starting point becomes more dangerous as the currency moves deeper into intervention territory. A Japanese investor buying dollar assets near 160–165 is no longer just buying U.S. yield. They are also accepting a large currency call.
The Domestic Pool Is Enormous
The foreign balance sheet is only one side of the story. Japan also has a huge domestic savings pool. The BOJ’s Flow of Funds report shows Japanese household financial assets at ¥2,386 trillion at the end of March 2026 ($14.76 trillion). Currency and deposits alone were ¥1,126 trillion ($6.96 trillion) or 47.2% of household financial assets.
That cash-heavy structure is central to the real-asset argument. If inflation becomes more persistent and real rates remain low, household cash becomes less comfortable. A gradual rotation does not need to be extreme. More equity exposure, more investment trusts, more real estate, more infrastructure and more inflation-sensitive assets would already represent a meaningful change for a system built around deposits.
Japan’s policy mix also points in that direction. The government’s new growth strategy targets more than ¥370 trillion (roughly $2.29 trillion), in combined public and private investment through fiscal 2040 across strategic sectors including AI and semiconductors. That investment agenda could support nominal growth and domestic asset demand, while also adding pressure to public finances.
This is the investment tension at the heart of Japan. Higher nominal growth and a weaker currency can support corporate profits, equities and real assets. Higher yields can damage long-duration JGBs and raise fiscal pressure. Fiscal dominance then limits how far real rates can rise before the bond market becomes the problem.
What Does This Mean for Japan?
For Japan, the optimistic version is a controlled reflation. Savings that once went abroad start to find more opportunities at home. Corporates benefit from nominal growth, domestic investors reduce their extreme cash preference, and real assets become the pressure valve for a system that cannot afford very high real rates.
The riskier version is more unstable. The BOJ raises rates slowly because of the debt burden, the yen stays weak because the rate gap remains wide, and inflation pressure forces the central bank to tighten further into a fragile bond market. That path would make the long end of the JGB curve the main stress point.
The crucial variable is the real rate. Japan does not need high nominal rates to change investor behavior. It needs a regime where cash no longer feels costless, foreign bonds no longer look automatically superior in yen terms, and domestic assets offer a credible way to preserve purchasing power.
What Does This Mean for the United States?
The U.S. angle is the other side of the savings-export model. Japan remains the largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasuries. The Treasury’s TIC data reported that Japan raised its Treasury holdings to $1.21 trillion in April 2026 from $1.19 trillion a month earlier. Total foreign holdings of U.S. Treasuries stood at $9.353 trillion.
That data does not show a sudden exit from Treasuries. It shows that Japan is still deeply embedded in U.S. debt financing. The bigger issue is how much of Japan’s future savings still gets recycled into foreign bonds. If a smaller share of Japan’s new savings goes automatically into foreign bonds, the U.S. loses one of the structural tailwinds that helped absorb Treasury supply for decades.
This matters more in a world where U.S. issuance needs remain large. Foreign investors do not have to sell Treasuries aggressively to affect the market. Lower marginal demand can still push more financing pressure onto domestic buyers, other foreign investors, or higher yields.
Japan’s foreign reserves add another layer. Japan holds about $1.3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves, largely tied to its ability to intervene in the yen, and that the government is studying ways to improve management of those public-sector assets. Any major shift in reserve strategy would be constrained by liquidity, credibility and the U.S. relationship, but the fact that the debate exists shows how fiscal pressure is reaching into asset-management policy.
The Investment Conclusion
Japan spent decades exporting savings because domestic yields were too low and the economy could not absorb its own capital. That regime is now under pressure from higher Japanese yields, persistent yen weakness, inflation pressure and a central bank constrained by the size of the sovereign bond market.
The cleaner market implication is a gradual reallocation of future flows. Japan can keep holding large foreign assets while still sending less new capital abroad. That is the part investors should watch. Stock effects move slowly, flow effects can reprice markets at the margin.
For Japan, this points toward a stronger domestic bid for real assets if real rates remain contained. For the United States, it points toward a weaker structural recycling of Japanese savings into Treasuries over time. Japan does not need a sudden reversal in capital flows for this to matter. With balance sheets measured in trillions of dollars, even a modest shift in where new savings go can become a global macro event.

