Crypto & Web3·Jun 16, 2026

Japan Rates Hit Three-Decade High, But No ‘Meaningful Disruption’ to Crypto Market

In brief The Bank of Japan raised its benchmark rate to around 1%, its highest in over three decades. Bitcoin and the broader crypto market held steady, even as traders appeared to have braced for a selloff. A U.S.-Iran ceasefire had rallie

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Japan Rates Hit Three-Decade High, But No ‘Meaningful Disruption’ to Crypto Market
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In brief The Bank of Japan raised its benchmark rate to around 1%, its highest in over three decades. Bitcoin and the broader crypto market held steady, even as traders appeared to have braced for a selloff. A U.S.-Iran ceasefire had rallie

  • In brief The Bank of Japan raised its benchmark rate to around 1%, its highest in over three decades.
  • Bitcoin and the broader crypto market held steady, even as traders appeared to have braced for a selloff.
  • A U.S.-Iran ceasefire had rallied crypto days earlier, softening the hike's blow.
  • A signing is expected on Friday.At time of publication, Bitcoin is trading around $66,000, down 1.1% on the day, per CoinGecko data.
$65,000$60,$66,000,$55,000$2.34 trillion$1.3 billion
In this article

In brief The Bank of Japan raised its benchmark rate to around 1%, its highest in over three decades. Bitcoin and the broader crypto market held steady, even as traders appeared to have braced for a selloff. A U.S.-Iran ceasefire had rallied crypto days earlier, softening the hike's blow. Crypto markets held steady on Tuesday even as Japan lifted interest rates to a three-decade high amid rising domestic inflation.The Bank of Japan’s policy board raised its benchmark interest rate to around 1% in a 7-1 vote, with the new guideline effective June 17. Policymakers flagged a risk of inflation rising above a 2% target as higher oil prices feed through to consumer goods, with further hikes expected.A relief rally lifted crypto markets after President Trump announced a deal with Iran over the weekend, easing the tensions which the Bank of Japan had tied to rising oil prices. The deal moved Bitcoin above $65,000 from the low $60,000s. A signing is expected on Friday.At time of publication, Bitcoin is trading around $66,000, down 1.1% on the day, per CoinGecko data. Traders on prediction market Myriad, owned by Decrypt’s parent company Dastan, remain predominantly bearish on its outlook, placing a 64% chance on Bitcoin’s next move taking it to $55,000.Japan's economy has “recovered moderately” despite weakening factors tied to the Middle East, with strong corporate profits and a firmer job market cushioning the strain on activity, the central bank stated.The country’s broader economy is expected to align with the “baseline scenario” for moderate growth, “albeit at a decelerated rate," the guidance reads, pointing at government measures to soften energy costs that could ease the risk of a sharp slowdown.Tuesday’s quarter-point move to 1% lifted Japan's benchmark rate to its highest in over three decades, a level last reached in 1995.The Yen carry trade and cryptoBank of Japan rate hikes have long pressured crypto by unwinding the yen carry trade, where investors borrow cheap yen to buy higher-yielding assets abroad and profit on the rate gap while the currency stays weak.Still, Bitcoin and the broader crypto market held steady despite Tuesday's rate hike, even as traders appeared to have braced for a selloff.Crypto's total market cap held around $2.34 trillion, down 1.4% on the day, according to CoinGecko data. Open interest in Bitcoin futures eased over the prior day, per CoinGlass data, suggesting traders had pulled back from leveraged positions, leaving little room for a selloff to unwind.“The Yen carry trade has failed to trigger any meaningful disruption in either crypto or global equities this time around,” Ryan Yoon, senior analyst at Tiger Research, told Decrypt.Memory of the previous carry trade scare is "still incredibly fresh," Yoon said, and investors “refused to panic” because the market appears to have “fully recovered” from that earlier shock.Decades of low and negative rates have propped up global markets, and Japan now carries public debt above 200% of GDP, the largest load among advanced economies, per IMF data.The yen carry trade would remain to be "just another headline" unless Japan's shift drains liquidity from the U.S. market, Yoon said. Once the market processes a narrative and realizes “the sky isn't falling,” that scare “loses its power to move prices,” he added.Japan's hike had less importance to the market now, given how “it's been priced in before,” Maksim Balashevich, founder and CEO of Santiment, told Decrypt.“The ‘unknown’ events of the future, which aren't fully priced in and able to move markets significantly, must be some other pieces of unveiling reality,” he added.Tuesday’s hike was paired with a pledge to step up bond purchases if long-term yields rise sharply, limiting how far the move tightened conditions. The bank confirmed plans to keep trimming those purchases by about ¥200 billion (roughly $1.3 billion) each quarter until early 2027, then level off near ¥2 trillion (about $12.5 billion).Daily Debrief NewsletterStart every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.

Integrity note  ·  Xela does not rewrite or paraphrase article content. The excerpt above is the source publication's own words, sanitized for display. For the full piece — including any quotes, charts, or images — read it at Decrypt. Xela's rewritten version is off for this story, so there's no editorial angle attached — you're getting the source's reporting unfiltered. When the rewrite is on, we add a What this means block underneath with the operator/trader takeaway.

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