There is a company in Japan that specializes in BTC asset allocation which has been quite popular recently. The reason is simple— the Japanese Yen has been falling sharply. Japan's debt has accumulated to 250% of GDP, which means the Yen is stuck in a depreciation cycle. For companies involved in BTC treasury services, this actually becomes an advantage.
How to say? This company issues bonds for financing, with an interest rate of 4.9%, but it uses the continuously devaluing Yen. In other words, the actual cost is constantly decreasing—something American peers can't compare to in terms of affordability.
Currently, this company has accumulated 35,102 BTC, ranking fourth globally. Last week, they invested another $451 million, increasing their holdings by 4,279 BTC in one go. In an era of macroeconomic uncertainty, financing with devaluing currency to acquire BTC is indeed an intriguing strategy.
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hodl_therapist
· 01-07 12:04
Japan's move is truly hardcore—using devalued yen financing to accumulate BTC. That kind of thinking is really clear-headed.
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TokenomicsShaman
· 01-07 02:20
Japan's move is brilliant—using devalued currency to arbitrage and exchange for BTC is truly a dark recipe born out of an economic crisis.
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FarmToRiches
· 01-05 01:47
Japan's approach is truly brilliant—exchanging depreciating paper for hard assets. This is truly going with the flow.
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orphaned_block
· 01-05 01:45
Japan's recent moves are really ruthless—exchanging depreciated paper for hard assets. I have to admit, I respect this logic.
Wait, can this company really reduce financing costs just by the yen depreciating? That's a bit outrageous.
Over 35,000 BTC, ranking fourth globally—this is true institutional accumulation.
If the yen continues to fall, their financing costs will be practically free, no wonder American peers are going crazy.
Using a depreciating currency to buy the dip—this move is indeed ruthless. Let's see how the Bank of Japan handles it next.
I can't quite understand why this arbitrage mechanism isn't being played by anyone in the US?
This company is really printing money using economic principles to buy BTC.
Japan has truly become a cash machine for crypto assets.
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just_here_for_vibes
· 01-05 01:40
Haha, this move is really clever. Using worthless yen to arbitrage and exchange for BTC, the Japanese are really ruthless this time.
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SnapshotStriker
· 01-05 01:31
Wow, this move is incredible. Using depreciating paper currency to exchange for hard assets. The Japanese really have this figured out.
There is a company in Japan that specializes in BTC asset allocation which has been quite popular recently. The reason is simple— the Japanese Yen has been falling sharply. Japan's debt has accumulated to 250% of GDP, which means the Yen is stuck in a depreciation cycle. For companies involved in BTC treasury services, this actually becomes an advantage.
How to say? This company issues bonds for financing, with an interest rate of 4.9%, but it uses the continuously devaluing Yen. In other words, the actual cost is constantly decreasing—something American peers can't compare to in terms of affordability.
Currently, this company has accumulated 35,102 BTC, ranking fourth globally. Last week, they invested another $451 million, increasing their holdings by 4,279 BTC in one go. In an era of macroeconomic uncertainty, financing with devaluing currency to acquire BTC is indeed an intriguing strategy.