Here’s why Bitcoin feels a liquidity squeeze amid Japan’s policy shift

Here’s why Bitcoin feels a liquidity squeeze amid Japan’s policy shift

BTC: Japan’s election shock triggers global liquidity squeeze as Bitcoin leverage unwinds

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Japan’s election shock triggered a cross-asset repricing. Sanae Takaichi’s landslide victory signaled aggressive fiscal stimulus and tolerance for yen weakness. Markets reacted swiftly. Capital rotated toward Japanese government bonds as reflation expectations strengthened domestic yields.

This reallocation drained incremental liquidity from U.S. equity ETFs. Simultaneously, yen depreciation reinforced dollar strength, tightening global financial conditions.

Source: CryptoQuant

U.S. indexes corrected as risk appetite cooled; Nasdaq, S&P 500, and Russell 2000 all posted weekly losses amid macro reassessment.

This de-risking spilled into crypto. Bitcoin [BTC], which often trades as a high-beta liquidity asset during risk-off phases, faced a positioning unwind rather than a fundamental deterioration. Leverage compressed, and short-term flows turned defensive.

The implication is liquidity-driven, not structural. In the near term, tighter global capital conditions may cap upside and extend volatility in Bitcoin.

However, Japan’s supportive Web3 policies and favorable regulations could eventually reignite investor interest. For now, economic pressures weigh on the market, but future conditions may provide strong support.

From Japan’s liquidity pulse to Bitcoin’s price cycles

Bitcoin’s price continues to track global M2 liquidity cycles closely. As M2 supply expanded steadily above $100 trillion into the 2020–2021 window, BTC surged toward prior cycle highs, reflecting abundant macro liquidity.

Simultaneously, M2 YoY growth spiked sharply, reinforcing risk-asset demand. However, conditions shifted in 2022. M2 growth turned negative, and Bitcoin corrected alongside, highlighting tightening financial conditions.

Source: CoinGlass

Liquidity contraction suppressed speculative inflows and compressed leverage. Momentum then reversed in 2024–2025. M2 supply climbed toward $120 trillion, while YoY growth rebounded. Bitcoin followed, reclaiming higher price ranges.

Japan’s sustained easing contributed to this liquidity base, supporting carry flows. Thus, M2 expansion continues to underpin Bitcoin’s macro-driven growth correlation.

Macro liquidity stress triggers cascading leverage liquidations

As global M2 conditions tighten and carry trades unwind, Bitcoin’s derivatives complex continues absorbing the shock through forced leverage compression.

Futures Open Interest had already declined from cycle concentrations above $50 billion toward the mid-$20 billion range, confirming systemic deleveraging rather than passive positioning shifts.

Source: Glassnode

Liquidation heatmaps now refine that narrative at the execution level. Dense long clusters formed just below prevailing ranges, particularly across the $68,000–$70,000 zone, creating reflexive downside trigger zones.

When price probed these pockets, cascading liquidations followed. Intraday stress events in early February erased over $1 billion in leveraged longs, with BTC-specific wipes exceeding $700 million in single sessions.

Source: CoinGlass

This forced selling loop accelerated OI contraction: liquidations closed outstanding contracts, compressing leverage by 20–30% in short windows.

Structurally, this aligns with liquidity withdrawal cycles where macro tightening begets carry unwinds, which ignite liquidation cascades, reinforcing Bitcoin’s leverage reset before any durable re-expansion phase can emerge.


Final Thoughts

  • Japan-driven liquidity reallocation triggered cross-market deleveraging, compressing Bitcoin leverage as macro capital tightened.

  • M2 contraction and liquidation cascades reinforce a leverage reset phase, delaying upside until structural liquidity rebuilds.

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