Japan Pulled the TRIGGER – The U.S. Dollar Is Getting DESTROYED

For the first time in years, the world’s attention is locked not on Washington, not on Beijing, but on Tokyo. Because something very unusual is happening in Japan right now. Something that could reshape global currencies shake bond market and snap a 50-year streak for the US dollar. The Japanese yen after years of decline is suddenly strengthening. And the Bank of Japan, one of the most famously cautious central banks on the planet, may be preparing to do the unthinkable to raise interest rates again. I’ve uploaded two videos recently on Japan’s bond market and the implications of Japan’s unimaginable debt to GDP ratio in the global economy. In today’s video, we’re going to focus specifically on the United States dollar and the yen. To understand why Japan is shaking global economies, we need to rewind just a little bit. Back in early October, the yen began to plunge when PM Saita Kaiichi won the leadership vote for Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party. She’s a known follower of Shinszo Aby’s economic playbook, which means a lower interest rates, heavy stimulus, and a strong expert-driven model. The coalition immediately fractured. As you may know, the centrist party actually withdrew support and refused to back her foreign policy hawkishness and her conservative social stance. But Takayichi assembled enough backing from smaller right-wing parties, and she became prime minister on October the 21st, and that’s when the chaos began. Markets reacted instantly. The yen dropped again, hitting levels not seen since January. But then something unexpected happened. Takichi’s own economic advisor, now the chief economist in Japan, revealed that she might actually tolerate a rate hike. Just one rate hike, a single 25 basis point increase uh sometime before 2027. That was the original plan. At first, the expectation was January, too. But the calendar is shifting very fast. Traders now see a strong possibility of that high coming in December at the Bank of Japan’s meeting on the 18th and the 19th. The yen has already started moving in anticipation. Two weeks ago, it touched 157 yen against the dollar, which is shockingly weak. But then momentum actually flipped and the currency has been climbing sharply since then. It reached 154 yen against the dollar and it gained more than 2% in less than two days. Even at these levels, the yen is nowhere near its historic norm. It typically trades around 110 yen to the dollar as you can see from this chart. But after years of steep decline, it is fair to say that any upward movement is quite consequential. So it is clear that Japan is in an unusual bind. A weak currency boosts profits for exporters, which is the backbone of Japan. But on the flip side of that, it also makes imports painfully expensive. And Japan imports all of its oil, for example. Every barrel that is priced in US dollars pushes domestic inflation higher when the yen is already weak. So it is very bad news and something that PM Takahichi can’t exactly change because it is outside of her control unless of course she changes her fiscal policies which she is unlikely to do. After decades of fighting deflation, Japan finally reached sustained inflation above 2% in early 22. Now it is running around 3%. So inflation has risen and the Bank of Japan believes that it has no choice but to stabilize prices by hiking rates. That’s why Governor Kazu Oeda is hinting at action. He said the central bank will weigh the pros and the cons of raising rates from 0.5 to 0.75%. Marcus heard only one thing. uh they heard that a rate hike is coming and as the result of that and I focused on this in prior videos so I don’t want to repeat myself but as the result of that bond yields shot up 30-year Japanese government bonds saw their strongest demands since 2019 yields are now touching highs that were last seen before the Lehman Brothers collapse in 2007 and yet in the middle of this tightening cycle Takichi rolled out a massive stim stimulus plan that is worth2.3 trillion yen which is about 135 billion US. This is the biggest spending package since the pandemic. So you see how these moves are very very questionable. The stimulus includes cash to offset high energy bills for consumers. It includes subsidies for households and one-time payments for children. One doesn’t have to be an economist, in my opinion, to see that it is an odd mix because it combines fiscal stimulus alongside monetary tightening, which is likely an effort to control inflation without crushing households already squeezed by higher prices. Needless to say, the markets aren’t quite sure what to make of it. Normally higher interest rates hit growth stocks hard by making borrowing more expensive. But Japan is seeing the opposite. And this is why it is so confusing in my opinion. Investors are treating a rate hike as a sign of confidence, a signal that the Bank of Japan believes Japan can handle higher borrowing costs. But if you look at Japan’s extremely heavy debt to GDP ratio and the projections that the IMF um posted recently and that I discussed in my recent video, I don’t know why you would buy that narrative. I don’t know why this is a sign of confidence. Now, how does the United States dollar factoring here? Part of this rally has nothing to do with Japan at all. The United States dollar is weakening sharply. The United States dollar index just logged in its 11th consecutive day of declines, its longest losing streak since 1971. What happened in 1971? Comment below if you remember. That was the year that Nixon ended the gold standards. That’s how rare this moment is. This is why it stands out. With the Federal Reserve expected to cut rates, global capital is already shifting toward currencies and markets that look more stable. And right now, surprisingly, Japan is one of them. Still, the yen is notoriously unpredictable around rate decisions. When the Bank of Japan raised rates for the first time in 17 years last March, the yen actually weakened because signaled that the central bank would move slowly going forward. and uh he actually stayed true to that message. The Bank of Japan has delayed further hikes since January and that was done partly because of global turmoil that was triggered by President Trump’s new tariff policies. And that’s where the real risk lies. A rate hike isn’t just about inflation. It is about confidence. If the Bank of Japan raises rates too quickly, Japan could slide back into stagnation. If it waits too long, the yen could actually collapse again, which would drive energy prices higher and uh it would definitely fuel more inflation. It is a very delicate balancing act as you can tell and it is not easy to make a decision at all in this environment, especially when so many factors are up in the air and they’re constantly changing. As we approach the December 18th, December 19th meeting, all eyes are on the Bank of Japan, not just in Japan, of course, but around the world, too. Because the Bank of Japan isn’t just deciding the future of the yen. The next few days could shape Japan’s trajectory, and they will also impact global bond markets, stock markets, and currency markets worldwide. Stay tuned. Something big is coming out of Tokyo. And once it hits, the ripple effects won’t stop in Japan. they will definitely be felt across the entire global economy. I hope that this quick video helped clarify the current events in global economics. Let me know if you have any questions in the comments below. Thank you so much for watching. As always, I appreciate your time. Like, subscribe, and share, and I will see you back here tomorrow. Take care.

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Japan is suddenly at the center of the global financial conversation—and for good reason. After years of decline, the Japanese yen is strengthening, the U.S. dollar is on its longest losing streak in 50 years, and the Bank of Japan may be preparing for a surprise interest-rate hike that could shake markets worldwide. In this video, we break down exactly what’s happening and why Tokyo—not Washington or Beijing—is driving global currency trends right now.

In today’s video, we go deep into how Japan’s unique economic pressures, its staggering debt-to-GDP ratio, global energy prices, the Fed’s upcoming rate decisions, and unexpected policy shifts are combining to reshape the yen, the dollar, and the balance of power in global markets. With the critical BOJ meeting approaching on December 18–19, this moment could determine not just the future of Japan’s currency, but the direction of global capital flows for years to come.

If you’ve been following my recent videos on Japan’s debt crisis and the chaos brewing in its bond market, this episode completes the picture. We’re now looking directly at the currency war unfolding between the yen and the dollar—and what it means for investors, policymakers, and the global economy.

Timestamps:
0:00 – Why all eyes are on Tokyo
1:10 – The political shift under PM Takaichi
3:00 – Why the yen suddenly reversed
5:12 – The BOJ’s potential rate hike
7:40 – Japan’s massive new stimulus package
10:03 – The U.S. dollar’s 50-year losing streak
12:20 – What the December 18–19 BOJ meeting means for the world

#JapanEconomy, #geopolitics, #JapaneseYen, #YenVsDollar, #USDollarCollapse, #BOJRateHike, #BankOfJapan, #ForexNews, #CurrencyMarkets, #GlobalEconomy, #USDEURJPY, #JapanDebtCrisis, #SanaeTakaichi, #KazuoUeda, #FinancialMarkets, #BondMarket, #MacroEconomics, #Geopolitics, #USDollarIndex, #FederalReserve, #ForexTrading, #MarketAnalysis, #GlobalFinance, #EconomicUpdate, #YenStrength, #USDWeakness

22 Comments

  1. Seems like great content, but Lena Petrova is a mystery. No info available on her background or outside support for her education and claimed credentials. Lena, you are holding yourself back from many more followers by simple not including a short, verifiable bio on your various channels. Why no verifiable info or background Lena?

  2. The real problem is not having any other economic model other than an expansionist model.

    Countries that have an aging population that inevitably means a declining population that implies declining domestic economy only. But Japan van still be a stable economy with better debt management that relies on greater exports.

    Knowing you have an aging population signalled by birthrates means you have to change economic objectives like not focusing on gdp but on reducing debt to be be positive- -ve debt , having good credit balances with other nations, good cash reserves “, and currency value. It also means not being a provocateur but being mindful in foreign policy setting. Not like what has been displayed by Sanae Takaichi.

    Here is the gross stupidity of the woman and those that back her.

    The most valuable asset And crucial asset for Jp future is young people and having children. Calling war you send your young people off to that conflict and they do not have babies out of fear of the times. It is the fastes most devastating action you can do to your people and nation.

    Instead you have plans and management in place for managed decline. You draw on reserves as the aging population passes through. Eventually it will ease and then a new rebirth will naturally take place assuming there is no conflict etc. That is when Jn goes through a managed rebuilding. There is no escaping it unless you want to completely change the demographics of Japan. That too is a false solution because the same outcome of aging population will occur. Take Au for example it has relied on importing people to support the aging population but every year it needs more and more people. It is a pyramid scheme that gives no real solution. It is a lazy political parties offer falsely sold as a solution.

  3. The answer as to why markets aren't reacting as usual in Japan is simple. Japan is one of the biggest buyers of usa debt, and even these buyers are now seeing usa debt as a big risk, especially given the usd collapse which will continue, for the simple reason that the usa is isolating itself, and its economy is a basket case.

  4. As per I know , us govt is spreading lies. De-dollarisation is already planned by us govt. I am waiting when japan to dump treasury bills . Waiting for deep state to give signal

  5. I’m sitting on about 30k in cash right now, and with all the talk about recession dips being the ideal entry point, I’m trying to figure out how to put it to work. I’m mainly looking to understand which kinds of opportunities or sectors might make the most sense in the current market.

  6. Same with Philippines….

    58peso to $1 12 months ago, still 58peso to $1 ( effectively 58peso for $.90 cents!) 😊, the Yen and Peso are "stapled" to $US to hide the realities of their Economies.

    The Yen Devaluation 12 months ago was supposed to have sorted the Yen, but FAILED!

    Trump's Tariffs caused all this for Japan!

    Japan was barely floating above Water, so why put another stone in Japan's pocket❓

  7. The little goody two shoes in Western eyes is actually an ambitious imperial militaristic regime that is eager to free itself from US and carry out what's unfinished before it was stopped at WW2…

  8. In my view, the chief threat to the Japanese economy is Trump's predatory tariff on electronics and cars. He has all but forced Japan to reduce or liquidate it's US bonds in order to stabilize its economy. Like China, Japan may be sending the message to Trump that he can't have his cake and eat it too. The message is "trade fairly, or lose our help to pay for your deficits." I'm speculating, of course. But, intended or not, Japan is putting pressure on US treasury bonds that can most easily be relieved by removing the predatory tariffs. The EU could learn a thing or two from Japan if this works.