Tokyo decision-makers stayed up all night. What they are waiting for is not just the rate announcement, but the end of the thirty-year era of cheap money.
In the trading community, the atmosphere is unusually tense. A chart of yen arbitrage unwind paths is circulating—$3.4 trillion in arbitrage positions are approaching a critical point. As soon as the Bank of Japan tightens the liquidity tap, borrowing cheap yen to chase high-yield hot money globally, they must immediately reverse and exchange yen to fill the positions.
There are precedents in history. After Japan raised interest rates in 2000, the dot-com bubble burst; after the tightening began in 2006, the subprime mortgage crisis fully erupted. Will the script repeat itself?
When financing costs suddenly surge, a sell-off is inevitable. The crypto market, as an asset class deeply tied to global liquidity, is the first to be affected. This is not minor turbulence but a stress test.
Deeper issues lie beneath the surface. Experienced traders know that yen arbitrage is just a surface phenomenon. Fundamentally, the global debt order has become rotten—according to the International Financial Statistics, global debt has approached a record high of $338 trillion. When this foundation begins to shake, how quickly will the transmission chain from finance to crypto unfold? No one can give a definitive answer.
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DeFiGrayling
· 2025-12-22 19:22
34 trillion in Arbitrage positions are about to explode, is it really coming?
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The move by the Central Bank of Japan seems to have revealed the bottom cards of global Liquidity.
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Wait a minute, 338 trillion in debt, this number is a bit outrageous...
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The explosion of Arbitrage has long been something that the encryption world should have prepared for, who can we blame?
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It's another echo of history repeating itself, but is it really the same this time?
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The era of cheap money is really over, I believe. The crypto world is going to face tough times ahead.
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34 trillion... if this really gets dumped, don't even mention encryption, the stock market won't survive either.
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It feels like listening to a horror story, but the data is all real.
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Yen Arbitrage getting Closed Position? It should have exploded long ago, dragging it out to now is rather abnormal.
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Soaring financing costs = dumping wave, and encryption bears the brunt, it's written all over.
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I agree with the argument that global debt is decaying, but does no one know how fast the transmission really is?
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So should we reduce position or increase the position now, who can give a definite answer?
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SchrodingerPrivateKey
· 2025-12-20 21:39
Japan's recent move is really causing trouble. The $3.4 trillion arbitrage position is about to burst, and the crypto market probably won't be able to avoid it.
Tokyo decision-makers stayed up all night. What they are waiting for is not just the rate announcement, but the end of the thirty-year era of cheap money.
In the trading community, the atmosphere is unusually tense. A chart of yen arbitrage unwind paths is circulating—$3.4 trillion in arbitrage positions are approaching a critical point. As soon as the Bank of Japan tightens the liquidity tap, borrowing cheap yen to chase high-yield hot money globally, they must immediately reverse and exchange yen to fill the positions.
There are precedents in history. After Japan raised interest rates in 2000, the dot-com bubble burst; after the tightening began in 2006, the subprime mortgage crisis fully erupted. Will the script repeat itself?
When financing costs suddenly surge, a sell-off is inevitable. The crypto market, as an asset class deeply tied to global liquidity, is the first to be affected. This is not minor turbulence but a stress test.
Deeper issues lie beneath the surface. Experienced traders know that yen arbitrage is just a surface phenomenon. Fundamentally, the global debt order has become rotten—according to the International Financial Statistics, global debt has approached a record high of $338 trillion. When this foundation begins to shake, how quickly will the transmission chain from finance to crypto unfold? No one can give a definitive answer.