Abstract:A historic sell-off in Japanese Government Bonds is sending shockwaves through global fixed income markets, drawing stark warnings from Citadel's Ken Griffin about US fiscal fragility.

While the global elite mingle in Davos, a financial earthquake is emanating from Tokyo. The Japanese Government Bond (JGB) market is witnessing a historic collapse driven by skepticism over Prime Minister Sanae Takaichis massive stimulus policies and Japan's fragile debt-to-GDP ratio.
Key figures labeled the Japanese crisis as a “canary in the coal mine” for the United States. With rising debt, the risk of “Bond Vigilantes”—investors who punish profligate governments by selling their bonds—returning to Western markets is rising.
Analysts such as Ken Griffin (Citadel) highlighted a critical structural breakdown: Correlations. When bonds and stocks begin to move together, bonds lose their value as a portfolio hedge, implying the market is demanding a risk premium for fiscal irresponsibility.
The contagion risk is palpable. If JGB yields remain attractive, the repatriation of Japanese capital away from US Treasuries could accelerate, putting upward pressure on yields.