The General Election and JPY’s Nosedive: did they Assure more Money into Bitcoin?

 | Nov 10, 2021 11:43

By Yuya Hasegawa, a Market Analyst at bitbank, inc.

It has been a bit of a busy couple of months for the Japanese investors and traders alike, as the Nikkei Stock Average (Nikkei henceforth) — the most prominent stock index in Japan — going literal roller coaster, and JPY plummeting to multi-year low against the greenback (Fig. 1).

Nikkei rallied back in September after former Prime Minister of Japan Yoshihide Suga, struggling to maintain his popularity, announced that he would step down. However, the September gain was almost immediately wiped out as the new leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), Fumio Kishida, was chosen. Kishida is a big advocate of structural reforms and wealth distribution which, in the eyes of overseas investors, seemed all confusing — since there is just not enough growth to distribute — and unnecessary.

However, Kishida’s promise for a large stimulus package saved the index from plunging below the September low, and his party’s victory at the Oct. 31 general election pushed up the index to just inches away from ¥30k.

As for the Yen's nose dive, it was caused primarily by the widening Japan-US yield spread, which was in turn caused by the impending beginning of the Fed’s tapering of monthly bond purchases and the fear of rising inflation in the states.