Can Japan’s $500B ETF Mountain Affect Crypto?
Japan’s central bank is getting ready to do something markets have talked about for years: start selling its huge pile of equity ETFs.
According to multiple reports based on briefings from people familiar with the plans, including coverage from Reuters and GuruFocus, the Bank of Japan (BOJ):
Holds around ¥83 trillion (about $530 billion) in stock ETFs at current market value
Plans to begin selling as early as next month, once the operational plumbing is ready
Will sell at a pace of roughly ¥330 billion per year based on book value
Based on that schedule, officials including Governor Kazuo Ueda say it will take more than 100 years for the BOJ to fully unwind its ETF portfolio.
How Big Is The BOJ’s ETF Position?
The BOJ’s ETF program started back in 2010 as part of Japan’s long experiment with unconventional monetary policy and quantitative easing. Over time, it turned the central bank into one of the single largest equity holders in the country.
Recent estimates from the Japan Times and policy think tanks such as CEPR put the numbers roughly at:
Market value: ¥79–83 trillion in ETFs
Book value: about ¥37 trillion
Share of domestic equity market: around 7% of total Japanese stock market capitalization
In September 2025, the BOJ’s policy board formally approved a framework to dispose of ETFs and J-REITs, with an outline that matches today’s reports. The official document, “Decisions on Disposal of ETFs and J-REITs” on the BOJ’s site, confirms plans for sales of about ¥330 billion per year at book value and notes that the bank aims to avoid destabilising markets while limiting losses. You can read the decision in full on the BOJ’s website.
How Slow Is ¥330 Billion Per Year?
At first glance, ¥330 billion sounds like a big number. In the context of an ¥83 trillion ETF hoard, it is tiny.
Commentary pieces such as those from CETEx / CEPR and AInvest put it in perspective:
At that pace, the unwind would take around 100–110 years if ETF prices stayed flat.
On a market value basis, the selling works out to about ¥620 billion per year, assuming current levels.
The BOJ has explicitly said it can slow or pause sales if markets become unstable or if a major crisis hits.
In other words, this is not a fire sale. It is more like a very slow leak in a balloon that has been inflating for over a decade.
Why Start Selling Now?
There are three main motivations behind the move.
Normalising monetary policy: After years of ultra-loose policy, including negative rates, yield-curve control and asset purchases, the BOJ is trying to slowly return to a more normal toolkit. Selling ETFs is part of stepping back from direct equity market intervention.
Reducing balance-sheet risk: Holding such a large stock portfolio exposes the central bank to swings in equity prices. Unrealised gains have ballooned as Japanese stocks rallied, but a sharp downturn would leave the BOJ carrying large paper losses. Gradually trimming the position reduces that risk.
Governance and politics: With ownership of roughly 7% of the market, the BOJ is a major silent shareholder in corporate Japan. Critics argue that this blurs the line between central banking and state capitalism. Unwinding the position, even slowly, is a way to reduce those concerns.
Governor Ueda has emphasised that sales will be market-neutral as far as possible, comparing the plan to the low profile disposal of troubled bank stocks that the BOJ completed in July 2025 without major disruption.
Will This Crash The Japanese Stock Market?
Most analysts do not expect a sudden crash from the ETF unwind itself, mainly because:
The pace is extremely slow compared to daily trading volumes on indices like TOPIX and the Nikkei 225.
The BOJ will sell proportionally across its holdings and can alter or pause the pace if conditions deteriorate.
Foreign investors have been net buyers of Japanese equities, providing a potential offset to gradual BOJ selling, as highlighted in research from CEIC/EPFR.
That said, there are real second-order risks:
If markets fixate on the idea that “a giant seller is always in the background,” multiples on Japanese equities could compress over time.
A sharp global risk-off event that hits Japan just as the BOJ is selling could amplify volatility, even if the central bank later pauses the program.
So the base case is a controlled, long-duration headwind rather than an immediate shock.
What It Means For The Yen And Global Risk Sentiment
The ETF unwind is part of a broader BOJ shift that includes rate hikes and a move away from extreme easing.
FX desk notes from banks such as MUFG and others point out that:
As the BOJ tightens policy while the Fed moves toward cuts, the US–Japan yield gap narrows, which can support a stronger yen over time.
A stronger yen often acts as a drag on Japanese equities, since it hurts exporters and unwinds carry trades.
Taken together with ETF sales, this puts Japan in a new regime where:
The BOJ is no longer a one-way backstop buyer of risk assets
Currency and equity markets are more sensitive to data and earnings
Global investors must treat Japan more like a “normal” market again, instead of a central-bank-sheltered outlier
Does This Affect Crypto?
Indirectly, yes.
For crypto traders, the BOJ’s ETF unwind is another piece of the global liquidity puzzle:
When a major central bank normalises policy, it can reduce the overall risk appetite that has helped fuel flows into Bitcoin, Ethereum and high beta altcoins.
If the unwind contributes to stronger yen and weaker Japanese equities, some local investors may have less wealth effect to push into speculative assets, including crypto.
On the other hand, a Japan that is less distorted by central bank buying could attract more long term capital, which might eventually spill into digital assets as part of diversified portfolios.
In the near term, the program is so slow that any direct impact on crypto is likely to be small. But as part of a bigger story of global quantitative tightening and balance sheet shrinkage, it is one more reason markets are sensitive to macro shifts.
Conclusion
The Bank of Japan is finally preparing to unwind its enormous ETF holdings after more than a decade of unconventional policy. With around ¥83 trillion in equity ETFs and a planned disposal pace of roughly ¥330 billion per year, the process could span a century.
This is not a shock-and-awe sale, but a carefully calibrated exit meant to minimise disruption while reducing balance sheet risk and political pressure over the BOJ’s outsized role in Japan’s stock market.
For global markets, it marks another step toward policy normalisation in a major economy. For crypto traders, it is a reminder that the era of ever-expanding central bank balance sheets is fading, and that macro currents can matter just as much as native crypto news when it comes to risk appetite.
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Filed under: Bitcoin - @ December 15, 2025 8:21 am