The Japanese market’s panic is a sharp pivot from decades of perceived stability fueled by trust in the Bank of Japan and its ability to control yields.
A new currency crisis could be in the offing, Desmond Lachman writes in a guest commentary.
Japan spent a generation as the world's anchor of ultra‑low interest rates, but that era is cracking, and the stress is showing up first in its government bond market. As yields climb and prices fall, ...
Whether you follow Japan or not, its situation is incredibly important for investors because it is a major provider of global ...
“Japan matters globally through flows. If Japanese government bond yields rise, Japanese investors can earn more at home, ...
Takaichi's landslide election win enables ambitious fiscal policy, but Japan's 230% debt-to-GDP ratio and rising JGB yields present sustainability concerns.
"Yet the JGB has unique features going for it, which limit the odds that the next debt crisis will be made in Japan." ...
For many years, the world relied on an easy understanding of how the global economy worked: that Japan was the 'ATM' of the world.
Japan’s 229% Debt/GDP ratio, once sustainable via yield curve control, now faces crisis as inflation and rising rates end this policy era. With the Bank of Japan turning hawkish and long-term yields ...
11don MSNOpinion
Is Japan about to have a Liz Truss moment?
Japan’s upcoming election could trigger a global economic crisis similar to the UK’s “Liz Truss moment” due to the country’s ...
The last thing that an over-indebted Japan struggling with inflation needs is a prime minister who advocates fiscal stimulus and a loose monetary policy to stimulate the Japanese economy. This would ...
TOKYO (Reuters) -Sanae Takaichi, a contender to become Japan's next prime minister and the country's first woman leader, proposed fiscal spending to support investment in essential sectors such as ...
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