A statement just dropped that most market participants are dramatically underestimating.

🇯🇵 BoJ board member Makoto Sakurai has indicated that Japanese policy rates could be raised as high as 1.5%.

This is not a casual comment.

This is a forward signal.

For decades, Japan has been the backbone of global liquidity — zero rates, yield suppression, and unlimited capital export. That era is now cracking.

🧠 Why This Matters More Than People Realize

A move toward 1.5% in Japan would represent a historic policy reversal.

Japan is not just another economy:

It is one of the world’s largest creditors

A primary funding source for global carry trades

A critical anchor for bond and FX stability

Raising rates at this scale forces capital to come home.

🔻 The Hidden Bear Case for Risk Assets

If Japanese yields rise meaningfully:

Carry trades unwind

Yen strengthens

Global liquidity tightens

Bond volatility spikes

Risk assets lose their marginal buyer

This is structurally bearish for:

Equities

High-beta tech

Crypto

Emerging markets

Not immediately — but inevitably.

⚠️ Markets Are Still Pricing the Old Regime

Current risk pricing assumes:

Japan stays dovish

Liquidity remains abundant

Volatility stays contained

Sakurai’s comment directly challenges that assumption.

Macro turning points never arrive with alarms.

They arrive quietly — through comments like this.

📌 Bottom Line

When the last central bank pillar starts to shift, the global system feels it.

This isn’t just a Japan story.

It’s a global liquidity warning.

Ignore it at your own risk.