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Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Chief Investment Strategist
Japan has opted for a snap election on 8 February 2026 rather than waiting for the normal electoral calendar, which makes this a faster, higher-stakes reset of political mandate.
We think the snap election is designed to front-load political capital.
What matters for markets is not the political theatre; it’s the permission slip for policy.
Japan’s fiscal debate is being priced through the bond market first. When policy promises expand, investors quickly translate that into issuance expectations and risk premium.
We think the election has turned into a live test of fiscal credibility.
At the centre of the campaign is a very tangible cost-of-living pledge: a two-year suspension of the 8% reduced consumption tax on food (the reduced rate that has been in place since the 2019 move to a 10% standard rate). More broadly, the campaign rhetoric leans toward bigger fiscal support—tax relief and higher spending—alongside a push to fund priorities like security/defence and industrial policy.
Historically, this is why markets are reacting quickly. Japan’s consumption tax has mostly been a one-way ratchet higher (from 5% to 8% in 2014, then 8% to 10% in 2019). Cutting the food rate to zero, even temporarily, would be a clear break from the post-2010 playbook where support was often delivered via targeted subsidies, transfers, or temporary programmes rather than headline rate cuts.
The debt backdrop makes the funding question unavoidable. On an internationally comparable basis, Japan’s gross general-government debt is still around ~230% of GDP. The focus now is also on the flow: the FY2026 budget is about 122.3 trillion yen, while debt-servicing costs are about 31.3 trillion yen—a reminder that as Japan exits zero rates, interest sensitivity rises.
One important stabiliser is that Japan’s debt is overwhelmingly yen‑denominated and largely held domestically (including by local institutions and, indirectly, the BOJ). That reduces classic “external funding” and foreign‑currency rollover risk.
But it does not make the debt story risk‑free. The constraints show up differently: higher rates raise the servicing bill, the super‑long end can demand more term premium, and the adjustment can come through financial repression, inflation, or a weaker yen rather than an outright funding crisis.
Against that backdrop, the debt management plan matters. The Ministry of Finance’s FY2026 issuance plan sets total government bond issuance at 180.7 trillion yen (including refunding), with newly-issued bonds at 29.6 trillion yen, and it explicitly tilts issuance away from the super-long end.
Why this has become a credibility test:
Markets don’t trade politics in the abstract—they trade what the result means for the policy path, the ability to execute it, and the probability of surprises.
Scenario A — Strong win / clear mandate
Scenario B — Win, but tighter-than-expected
Scenario C — Messy result / coalition friction
The BOJ is not set by politics, but it is highly sensitive to the inflation outlook and financial conditions—both of which elections can influence indirectly via fiscal expectations and FX.
We think the BOJ won’t react to the election headline itself, but it may react to the consequences:
Risks
The yen is reacting to a mix of rates, risk sentiment, and policy signalling. In election periods, messaging can matter almost as much as macro.
Why the yen can stay pressured
What prevents a one-way trade
Our base-case view would be higher two-way volatility in the Japanese yen rather than a straight-line trend.
Japanese equities tend to respond to the expected mix of growth impulse, yields, and FX. The key is whether yields rise in an orderly reflation way or because investors demand a higher risk premium.
Broad equity view
Sector lenses (where dispersion matters)
Want to explore ideas across Japanese sectors? See our Japan stocks shortlist here: Japan stocks shortlist.
Japan’s snap election is a test of mandate, but the market is testing something else: credibility. If bond demand stays stable, fiscal impulse can dominate. If the super-long end wobbles, credibility limits will set the boundary conditions for everything else, including yen, rates, and equities.