Bitcoin is up in dollars but lagging in yen, as fears of Bank of Japan intervention create a rare divergence across fiat pairs.
Bitcoin is up in dollars but lagging in yen, as fears of Bank of Japan intervention create a rare divergence across fiat pairs.

Bitcoin is up in dollars but lagging in yen, as fears of Bank of Japan intervention create a rare divergence across fiat pairs.
Bitcoin rose 1.15% to $64,014 on Nasdaq but gained just 0.68% in yen terms on BitFlyer, a 47-basis-point gap driven by BOJ intervention fears that strengthened the yen against the dollar.
"The yen's sharp rebound is compressing crypto returns for JPY-based traders," analysts at InvestingLive said, noting the divergence reflects yen strength rather than BTC weakness. The yen jumped to 161.55 per dollar from 162.42 earlier Thursday, after Japan's June producer price index rose 7.1%, the fastest annual pace since March 2023.
The data reinforced expectations for faster BOJ rate hikes. Former central bank official Tsutomu Watanabe warned the benchmark rate, currently at 1%, could exceed 2% as the yen continues to slide. The 10-year Japanese government bond yield already hovers above 2.8%, the highest in three decades.
The divergence matters because Bitcoin's 52-week correlation with USD/JPY has reached 0.90, meaning yen strength historically aligns with BTC gains — but only in dollar terms. For Japanese investors, a stronger yen erodes local-currency returns, potentially dampening retail participation from one of crypto's largest trading hubs.
The performance gap extends beyond Bitcoin. XRP/JPY, SOL/JPY and ETH/JPY all underperformed their dollar-denominated counterparts by similar margins, according to BitFlyer and Nasdaq data as of 04:30 UTC.
The GPIF Wildcard
Japan's Government Pension Investment Fund, the world's largest retirement pool with ¥277 trillion ($1.87 trillion) in assets, may amplify the divergence. Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said Friday the government wants the GPIF to increase holdings of domestic assets, a rotation that could strengthen the yen further by reducing foreign asset sales.
"The fund held roughly equal allocations across domestic equities, foreign equities, domestic bonds and foreign bonds," InvestingLive analysts said. "Even small shifts in GPIF's strategy are closely watched across global currency markets."
For crypto traders, the key question is whether the yen's rally proves durable. Previous BOJ interventions delivered only temporary yen strength, with traders resuming carry trades shortly after. If this intervention cycle differs — backed by actual rate hikes rather than verbal warnings — the dollar-yen performance gap could persist, forcing JPY-based crypto investors to rethink hedging strategies.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.