Abstract:The Japanese Yen faces renewed structural headwinds as the Ministry of Finance (MOF) prepares to raise its assumed interest rate for government borrowing to 3.0% for the 2026 fiscal year—the highest level since 1997.

The Japanese Yen faces renewed structural headwinds as the Ministry of Finance (MOF) prepares to raise its assumed interest rate for government borrowing to 3.0% for the 2026 fiscal year—the highest level since 1997.
Fiscal Reality Check
This adjustment, up from 2.6% in August and just 2.0% in the current fiscal year, acknowledges the new reality of rising Japanese Government Bond (JGB) yields. The 10-year JGB yield recently touched 2.1%, a level unseen since 1999, driven by:
- BOJ Normalization: The Bank of Japan recently hiked rates to 0.75%.
- Expansionary Spending: Prime Minister Takaichi's administration is pushing a record 122 trillion yen budget, necessitating massive new bond issuance.
Market Implications
The convergence of rising debt service costs (projected to hit 31.3 trillion yen) and aggressive fiscal spending creates a precarious scenario for the Yen.
- Bearish Case: If the BOJ cannot hike rates fast enough to offset the inflationary impact of fiscal expansion, real yields may remain negative, punishing the JPY.
- Bullish Case: If rising servicing costs force fiscal discipline or faster BOJ hikes, the JPY could stabilize.
Currently, the market views the debt sustainability issue as a long-term drag on the currency, leaving USD/JPY sensitive to any widening in the US-Japan rate differential.
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