
Market update - December 5th, 2025
2 Min. Lesezeit
- Daten
Japan’s bond stress tests global liquidity
This week’s market developments have been dominated by events in Japan, where turbulence in the long end of the government bond curve has intensified. The recent 20 year JGB auction showed notably weak demand, with a sharp widening in the price tail and a subdued bid to cover ratio. While this does not guarantee that the yen funded carry trade is set for a disorderly unwind, it signals rising stress in a market that has long served as an anchor for global yield suppression. Japanese institutions have played a central role in propping up foreign bond markets through overseas purchases and currency hedged flows.
This matters for crypto because most investors continue to interpret the rise in US long term yields as a purely domestic fiscal phenomenon. The broader context is more nuanced. US Treasuries and US equities have benefitted for years from steady Japanese inflows. If even a modest portion of that capital begins to be repatriated, the result would tighten global liquidity conditions. Although this is not yet a certainty, the risk has increased and markets are already sensitive to it. Bitcoin has reflected this caution, trading lower alongside broader risk assets, yet it may ultimately benefit if stress in sovereign bond markets encourages investors to seek alternative stores of value.
Softer US job data put pressure on risk assets
US macro data added to the uncertainty. Employment figures came in weaker than expected, with a -32k print versus forecasts of +10k. This supports the case for a December rate cut. Even with cuts on the horizon, financial conditions remain tight. Crypto markets have felt this tension, with the recent pullback exacerbated by futures roll activity and broader volatility across rates and equities.
Concerns about Tether solvency also reappeared in market commentary, although these fears look misplaced. The company reports total reserves of more than US$181B against liabilities of roughly US$174.45B, leaving a surplus of about US$6.78B. Tether has generated more than US$10B in profit so far this year, helped by the large interest income on its reserve assets. Although stablecoin risks should never be dismissed outright, the current data do not indicate systemic vulnerability.
The DAT (Digital Asset Treasury companies) sector continues its process of recalibration following this year’s steep correction. Companies with limited operating businesses and oversized token positions have come under pressure, with many trading below the value of their underlying assets. Some have responded with further equity issuance, while others may consider buybacks or selective token sales. We believe the longer term path will favour firms with clear revenue models and more measured treasury strategies, as the market becomes less tolerant of excessive dilution and speculative balance sheet expansion.
Fund flows this week have reflected the market choppiness, while on an aggregate basis we see flows of US$725M this week so far, we saw minor outflows yesterday, largely reflecting a marginal lowering in expectations for a December rate cut.

