When foreign governments like Japan defend their currencies by selling US Treasury bonds, it increases bond supply, raises yields, and makes borrowing more expensive domestically; this creates a feedback loop where currency defense measures can inadvertently worsen the very economic conditions they aim to address, as Japan's $54.7 billion intervention in a single week demonstrates how currency defense strategies can conflict with debt sustainability concerns.
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Why Beijing Is Watching Japan's Every Move Right NowAñadido:
Here is a number most Americans have never heard of, and it might be the most important one in the world right now.
$54.7 billion. That is how much Japan spent in a single week trying to keep its currency from collapsing. And a big chunk of that money came from selling United States Treasury bonds. Japan, America's closest ally in the Pacific, the largest single foreign holder of US government debt, just sold a portion of that debt into the open market. Not because they wanted to, because they had to. And the Treasury Secretary of the United States got on a plane to Tokyo this week specifically to have a conversation about it. This is not a distant geopolitical story. This is a story about what happens to interest rates, mortgage payments, and the cost of borrowing in this country when foreign governments stop being reliable buyers of American debt. And that process may have quietly started last week. To understand why this matters, you have to understand one very simple relationship. The United States runs a massive budget deficit every year. In practical terms, that means the government spends significantly more than it collects in taxes, and it makes up the difference by borrowing money, selling Treasury bonds to investors around the world. Japan has been one of the most reliable buyers of those bonds for decades. Right now, Japan holds approximately $1.2 trillion in US treasuries. That is not a typo, 1.2 trillion. Those purchases keep US interest rates lower than they would otherwise be. More demand for bonds means higher bond prices, and higher bond prices mean lower yields, which translate directly into lower mortgage rates, lower car loan rates, and lower rates on the credit card debt that the average American household is carrying.
Every time a major foreign buyer steps back from that market, rates face upward pressure. The math is that straightforward. Now, here is the thing about Japan. Their economy runs on imported energy. They buy virtually all of their oil from abroad. And since January of this year, with the conflict in the Middle East disrupting supply routes through the Strait of Hormuz, oil has surged to over $113 a barrel, more than 50% higher than before the conflict began. Japan is paying for that oil in dollars, but Japan earns yen. So every time the yen weakens against the dollar, that energy bill gets more expensive in terms of what Japanese households actually earn and spend. The yen has been sliding toward60 per dollar, a level that historically has been the point at which Tokyo decides it has to act. So they acted.
Japan's finance ministry spent roughly $54.7 billion in a single week defending the yen. And the Federal Reserve's own custody data shows that holdings of US treasuries for foreign official accounts dropped by $8.7 billion in the same period. The pieces fit together in a way that is hard to dismiss. At this point, you might be thinking, okay, 8.7 billion out of 1.2 2 trillion is barely a rounding error. Japan still has an enormous stockpile. Goldman Sachs analysts have estimated that Japan could theoretically conduct around 30 more interventions of this scale before hitting meaningful limits on its reserves. 30 more. That sounds reassuring. And if this were an isolated event, a one-time currency blip that resolves in a few weeks, it would be.
The problem is that the pressure driving the yen lower is not a temporary glitch.
It is structural. Japan cannot easily raise interest rates to defend its currency the way most central banks would because the country carries one of the highest public debt burdens of any developed economy on Earth. Government interest payments are already projected to reach the equivalent of roughly 30% of Japan's national budget within a few years. If they raise rates aggressively, their own debt service costs spiral.
They are caught. So what does a country do when it is caught between a weakening currency and a debt trap? It reaches into its foreign reserves. It sells the thing that is easiest to sell in large quantities with minimal market disruption. And the most liquid, most universally accepted asset on Japan's balance sheet is United States Treasury bonds, not cash, not gold, treasuries.
The head fake here is the word firepower. Yes, Japan has it, but using that firepower is not neutral. Every sale of US treasuries adds supply to a market that is already under stress. It pushes yields higher and rising yields make America's own debt more expensive to service at a moment when the US deficit is already ballooning due to wartime spending. What looks like Japan managing its own problem is also simultaneously a problem being exported into the US bond market. Let me show you exactly how the mechanism works because this is the part most financial news coverage skips over. When a foreign government like Japan wants to buy yen using its dollar reserves, it first needs dollars. If it has cash in dollar deposits, it can use those directly. But if, as appears to have happened last week, it has already deployed most of its easy cash, it has to generate dollars by selling something denominated in dollars. The most natural thing to sell is Treasury bonds. Japan sells a Treasury bond, receives dollars in return, then takes those dollars into the open foreign exchange market and buys yen. The yen strengthens. Mission accomplished, at least temporarily. But here is what happens on the other side of that trade. The Treasury bond Japan just sold now belongs to someone else or it is sitting in the market looking for a buyer. More supply, same demand means the price of that bond falls slightly.
When a bond's price falls, its yield, the effective interest rate it pays, rises. And because the US Treasury market is the global benchmark for borrowing costs, a rise in Treasury yields ripples outward into everything.
Mortgages, corporate bonds, car loans, student debt refinancing. Right now, the 10-year Treasury yield sits at approximately 4.41%.
It has been under sustained pressure since the beginning of the year. Each incremental push higher by a seller like Japan adds to a pile of pressures that already includes large US deficit spending, elevated oil prices feeding inflation expectations, and uncertainty about Federal Reserve policy. None of these forces is dominant alone. Together they compound and the timing could not be more geopolitically loaded. Scott Bessant, the US Treasury Secretary is in Tokyo right now as of this week. He is meeting with Japan's prime minister, Finance Minister, and the governor of the Bank of Japan. Bloomberg is reporting that the January session with Japan's finance minister looked less like a diplomatic conversation and more like a reprimand. Bessant has been explicit in his own words. His job is to be America's top bond salesman. Every basis point that yields rise because of foreign selling is a direct indictment of how that job is going. The deeper issue Bessant faces is this. You cannot credibly pressure a foreign government to keep buying your debt while simultaneously running policies that make their own economic situation more painful. Japan is dealing with an energy crisis partly caused by a conflict in which the United States is involved. The yen is weakening partly because of interest rate differentials that reflect US monetary policy choices. Tokyo is not selling treasuries to make a political statement. They are selling them to survive. And that distinction is important because it means the selling will continue as long as the underlying conditions continue. I know that was a lot to work through. The global financial system has a way of making everything feel either too abstract to care about or too scary to look at directly. What I am trying to do, what this channel is built around is give you the clearest possible picture of what is actually happening grounded in real numbers so that you can make decisions from a position of understanding rather than confusion or panic. Because here is what I actually believe. The people who navigate these shifts best are not the ones who had the most money going in.
They are the ones who understood the direction of travel early enough to position accordingly. And that understanding is not a privilege. It is learnable. It is the whole point of being here together. If you want to go deeper on this, if you want to talk through what these treasury dynamics actually mean for your own portfolio, your savings strategy, your thinking about interest rates, the link is below.
Join us when you're ready. So, what does a regular American actually do with this information? A few things are worth holding on to. First, watch the 10-year Treasury yield. It is the single most important number in American personal finance. When it rises, borrowing costs rise. Mortgages, home equity lines, refinancing windows. If you have been waiting for rates to fall before making a financial move, understand that the foreign buyers who help keep those rates low are under pressure right now.
Second, understand that this is not just about Japan. Japan is the largest foreign holder of US treasuries, but China is the second largest. And China is watching everything that is happening between the US and Japan this week with considerable interest. The US China summit is happening right after Bessent leaves Tokyo. The bond market and the geopolitical calendar are on the same clock right now. Third, and this is the part that almost nobody is talking about. Every country watching this episode is updating its own calculation about the reliability of US treasuries as the world's safe haven asset. That is not a crisis yet, but it is a slow drift, and slow drifts are precisely what most people miss until they have already moved. The story is not over. In fact, it is barely beginning. Japan still has significant reserves. The next intervention will tell us something about whether treasury sales become a pattern. And whether they become a pattern will tell us something very important about the future cost of American debt, which is the future cost of your mortgage, your car payment, and the rate your savings account earns.
This one is worth watching closely. Next week we are going to follow Bessant to Beijing because whatever he agreed to with Tokyo is going to set the terms of what he can actually ask for in China.
And that conversation may matter even more. Make sure you're subscribed because that episode is going to connect a lot of dots.
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