What’s going on here?
Japanese bond yields climbed after US Treasury yields soared and the yen weakened to its lowest in nearly three months.
What does this mean?
Japan’s 10-year government bond yield hit 0.985%, its highest since early August, before settling up 2 basis points at 0.975%. This mirrors the US 10-year Treasury yield’s jump to 4.22% during Asian trading. Affected by the Treasury spike and the yen’s drop, yields across Japanese bonds rose. Longer-term bonds also saw increases, with 20-year yields at 1.775% and 30-year yields at 2.2%. The yen’s dip to nearly 151.1 per dollar signals pricier imports and could influence domestic pricing, potentially affecting the Bank of Japan’s interest rate stance.
Why should I care?
For markets: Riding the yield wave.
Rising yields on Japanese and US Treasuries could pressure equities as investors eye better bond returns. A weaker yen raises import prices, posing inflation risks that may…


