Japan's Ministry of Finance announced the budget plan for fiscal year 2026, reaching a record high of 122.3 trillion yen. At the same time, financial regulators are also pushing forward comprehensive reforms in the crypto asset framework. The combined effect of these two initiatives is bringing both opportunities and challenges to the crypto market.
The stablecoin testing is the most watched highlight. Yen stablecoin projects led by the three major banks—Mizuho Bank, Mitsubishi UFJ, and others—have entered the pilot testing phase, covering payment scenarios for 300,000 businesses. Once the testing is successfully implemented, this channel will directly connect crypto assets with traditional industry settlements, providing real commercial support for compliant on-chain applications. The new budget's emphasis on technological innovation investment coincides with the Financial Services Agency's payment innovation plans. Meanwhile, the government has also allocated R&D space for blockchain risk prevention and control technologies in crisis response investments.
However, the risks behind expansionary fiscal policies cannot be ignored. Japan's government debt ratio has already exceeded 260%, and concerns over debt sustainability caused by large-scale financing could further boost the yen's depreciation expectations, negatively impacting the attractiveness of yen-denominated crypto assets.
Regulatory adjustments are also worth closer observation. Starting from fiscal year 2026, crypto assets will be upgraded to financial commodities and included under the unified regulatory framework of the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act. There are also significant reforms in the tax system— a fixed 20% tax rate will replace the previous progressive tax system with a maximum of 55%. This change, on one hand, reduces the tax burden for institutional investors and helps attract traditional financial institutions; on the other hand, regulations on crypto lending, initial coin offerings, and other activities are tightening, requiring platforms to meet strict standards such as asset segregation and cold wallet custody.
In the near term, the promotion of yen stablecoin pilots and tax system optimization are likely to attract new capital inflows. However, the uncertainty of yen fluctuations and the policy gap before the release of detailed regulations may increase market volatility in the short term.
Looking at a longer cycle, Japan is adopting a dual-track strategy of sandbox innovation and clear regulation. This approach is setting a reference model for the standardized development of the global crypto industry.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
8 Likes
Reward
8
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
PriceOracleFairy
· 3h ago
yo so japan's basically running the playbook for regulatory arbitrage rn... that 260% debt ratio tho, gives me major yen carry trade anxiety ngl
Reply0
MetaverseVagrant
· 5h ago
This move in Japan, the key is actually the implementation of stablecoins. What does the payment scenario of 300,000 companies indicate? Traditional finance is starting to compromise.
View OriginalReply0
DefiOldTrickster
· 5h ago
Uh... a 262% debt ratio and still keep pumping here? I think, the yen stablecoin is a real arbitrage opportunity, but the prerequisite is that the yen doesn't collapse into paper. Cutting the tax rate from 55% to 20% is indeed attractive, but short sellers are also sharpening their knives. Short-term volatility is guaranteed, and this wave will have to eat the liquidation price of snail noodles...
View OriginalReply0
SerLiquidated
· 5h ago
Japan's move this time is really awesome. The tax rate was cut from 55% to 20%, and the institutions are probably going to start疯狂抄底.
View OriginalReply0
Ser_APY_2000
· 5h ago
Japan's recent moves are really bold—printing money while tightening policies, it feels like they're betting that the yen stablecoin can save the situation.
Japan's Ministry of Finance announced the budget plan for fiscal year 2026, reaching a record high of 122.3 trillion yen. At the same time, financial regulators are also pushing forward comprehensive reforms in the crypto asset framework. The combined effect of these two initiatives is bringing both opportunities and challenges to the crypto market.
The stablecoin testing is the most watched highlight. Yen stablecoin projects led by the three major banks—Mizuho Bank, Mitsubishi UFJ, and others—have entered the pilot testing phase, covering payment scenarios for 300,000 businesses. Once the testing is successfully implemented, this channel will directly connect crypto assets with traditional industry settlements, providing real commercial support for compliant on-chain applications. The new budget's emphasis on technological innovation investment coincides with the Financial Services Agency's payment innovation plans. Meanwhile, the government has also allocated R&D space for blockchain risk prevention and control technologies in crisis response investments.
However, the risks behind expansionary fiscal policies cannot be ignored. Japan's government debt ratio has already exceeded 260%, and concerns over debt sustainability caused by large-scale financing could further boost the yen's depreciation expectations, negatively impacting the attractiveness of yen-denominated crypto assets.
Regulatory adjustments are also worth closer observation. Starting from fiscal year 2026, crypto assets will be upgraded to financial commodities and included under the unified regulatory framework of the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act. There are also significant reforms in the tax system— a fixed 20% tax rate will replace the previous progressive tax system with a maximum of 55%. This change, on one hand, reduces the tax burden for institutional investors and helps attract traditional financial institutions; on the other hand, regulations on crypto lending, initial coin offerings, and other activities are tightening, requiring platforms to meet strict standards such as asset segregation and cold wallet custody.
In the near term, the promotion of yen stablecoin pilots and tax system optimization are likely to attract new capital inflows. However, the uncertainty of yen fluctuations and the policy gap before the release of detailed regulations may increase market volatility in the short term.
Looking at a longer cycle, Japan is adopting a dual-track strategy of sandbox innovation and clear regulation. This approach is setting a reference model for the standardized development of the global crypto industry.