Japan's push for the world's largest pension fund to shift assets homeward is reshaping currency and bond markets across Asia.
Japan's government called on the roughly ¥250 trillion ($1.7 trillion) Government Pension Investment Fund to invest substantially more domestically, sending the yen up against the dollar and pushing long-term bond yields higher. Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama made the comments late Wednesday, marking a departure from Tokyo's traditional hands-off approach to GPIF's asset allocation.
"This is the clearest signal yet that the government wants Japan's national savings to work for the domestic economy," said Masahiro Ichikawa, chief macro strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui DS Asset Management.
The dollar-yen pair fell to its lowest in three weeks as traders priced in repatriation flows from the fund, which allocates roughly half its portfolio to foreign assets, according to its latest disclosure. The 30-year JGB yield rose on expectations GPIF would reduce foreign bond holdings, while the Nikkei 225 gained on the prospect of increased domestic equity allocations.
A shift of even 5 percentage points toward domestic investments would redirect trillions of yen into Japanese markets, potentially reshaping yield curves and equity valuations. The policy push comes alongside a broader debate about the Bank of Japan's independence, with Economy Minister Minoru Kiuchi saying Friday the government would "never convey in advance its views to the BOJ about the timing and range of rate hikes or cuts."
Kiuchi sought to allay concerns that Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's administration may pressure the central bank to delay interest rate increases. A draft economic blueprint released last month said it was "very important for monetary policy to be guided appropriately to achieve a stronger economy," language that some investors interpreted as a signal of political interference.
The last time GPIF underwent a major allocation shift was in 2014, when it doubled its target for domestic equities to 25% under then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. That rebalancing preceded a sustained rally in the Nikkei 225 and contributed to a prolonged weakening of the yen as the fund adjusted its foreign asset holdings.
For currency markets, the implications are significant. GPIF's foreign asset holdings total roughly ¥125 trillion, and any sustained repatriation would add structural buying pressure on the yen — a reversal of the dynamic that has kept the currency weak for most of the past decade. Options markets are already pricing in further yen strength, with one-month risk reversals turning the most bullish on the yen since early this year.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.