Japan's push to bring home capital from the world's largest pension fund threatens to drain liquidity from global markets that have fueled Bitcoin's rally this year.
Japan's push to bring home capital from the world's largest pension fund threatens to drain liquidity from global markets that have fueled Bitcoin's rally this year.

Japan's push to bring home capital from the world's largest pension fund threatens to drain liquidity from global markets that have fueled Bitcoin's rally this year.
Bitcoin fell 2.3% to $84,210 by 06:30 UTC on Friday after Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said the government would encourage the Government Pension Investment Fund, the world's largest pension fund with $1.8 trillion in assets, to boost holdings of domestic assets. The yen strengthened 0.6% to 161.4 per dollar, while benchmark 10-year Japanese government bond yields dropped 10 basis points to 2.775%, according to Reuters data.
"The big asset repatriation is the missing piece in Japan's reflation journey," said Fred Neumann, chief Asia economist at HSBC. "Despite rising interest rates locally, and a buoyant equity market, Japanese investors have shown little appetite so far to reduce their sizeable overseas holdings and to return funds to domestic markets."
The GPIF held about $931 billion in foreign assets as of March 31, split between foreign equities (24.80% of its portfolio) and foreign bonds (24.48%), according to its latest annual report. A shift toward domestic assets would require selling dollar-denominated holdings, potentially triggering a broader risk-off move across global markets. Bitcoin's 24-hour trading volume stood at $28.4 billion, below the seven-day average of $34.1 billion, CoinGecko data shows, suggesting thin liquidity that could amplify any selloff.
The GPIF's potential repositioning comes at a precarious time for Bitcoin. The Bank of Japan raised rates to a 31-year high in June and is shrinking its balance sheet, removing a key buyer from the JGB market that had absorbed half of all outstanding bonds for more than a decade. If the GPIF follows through on selling foreign assets to rebalance toward domestic bonds and equities, the resulting dollar-yen flows could tighten global dollar liquidity — a historically bearish signal for Bitcoin and other risk assets.
"Trying to change the issue structurally or fundamentally, which is to create more flows into yen-denominated assets, would be supportive of the currency in the longer term," said Fabien Yip, market analyst at IG in Sydney. For Bitcoin, a sustained yen rally has historically correlated with dollar weakness and tighter global financial conditions, both headwinds for the crypto market.
The Nikkei 225 has surged 36% year to date, outperforming the S&P 500 and MSCI All-Country World Index, while the yen remains near multi-decade lows despite record government intervention in April and May. Bitcoin's correlation with the Nikkei has risen to 0.42 over the past 90 days, according to data from IntoTheBlock, meaning a Japanese equity selloff triggered by capital repatriation could spill directly into crypto markets.
Some analysts doubt the impact will be immediate. "I doubt it will be enough to change the game, given underlying fundamentals suggesting persistent yen weakness," said Norihiro Yamaguchi, lead Japan economist at Oxford Economics, pointing to South Korea's similar push in December to get its National Pension Service to defend the won. Bitcoin's key support sits at $82,000, a level tested three times in the past two weeks, with resistance at $87,500, Coinglass data shows.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.