Looking to Japan to see the future of the global financial landscape – and the growing role of Bitcoin

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Bitcoin is increasingly seen as the dominant asset of the 21st century — a form of “digital gold” with a limited supply and a superior ability to combat inflation compared to any current fiat currency. The rise of Bitcoin is not coincidental, but is linked to deep fractures within the global monetary system.

Currently, the world is quietly entering a monetary system transformation, even though most are still unaware of it.

Japan: the place where the story begins

On the surface, the global economy seems stable. But upon closer inspection, the fiat currency system is being eroded by:

  • persistent inflation
  • public debt reaches a record high
  • currency depreciates significantly

It is not a coincidence that central banks in many countries are quietly accumulating gold, preparing for an era of scarce assets — where Bitcoin is also becoming one of the strategic choices.

And the brightest lesson for this transition is Japan.

Japan's public debt is the highest in the world## Japan and the consequences of prolonged low interest rates

For many years, Japan has kept bond yields at extremely low levels to support the economy. Cheap capital has been pumped globally, contributing to a significant increase in global assets.

But then problems arose:

  • inflation returns
  • Yen is in free fall
  • energy and commodities soar

Japan has discovered something unavoidable:

You can print money, but you cannot print oil, gas, wheat, or metals.

When the currency weakens, everything becomes more expensive.

Finally, to save the Yen, Japan is forced to raise yields — a risky move as the country has the highest public debt in the world.

What if the US follows this path?

Many people believe that the US will:

  • sharply lower interest rates
  • pump money back
  • or fixed bond yield

But Japan has shown:

👉 Low interest rates for too long lead to inflation getting out of control

👉 Inflation devalues the currency and makes the financial system unstable.

If the US goes down this path, the global market could face a very severe repricing cycle.

Assets inflated by cheap money will need to be revalued

In the past 10-15 years, the US stock market has surged thanks to:

  • cheap loans
  • company buyback shares
  • nearly unlimited cash flow

But when high interest rates persist, many assets may:

  • slow down
  • or decrease sharply if measured by “real” standards, such as gold or commodities

One signal: despite the strong rise of AI stocks, gold is still up 32% compared to the Nasdaq this year — proving that money is flowing towards hard assets.

Fiat currency is silently depreciating

The Fed could cause stocks to soar, creating an illusion of prosperity. But when measured in gold, oil, energy:

➡️ financial assets are depreciating in real value.

The value of a coin is always based on:

  • goods
  • energy
  • gold
  • assets with real production costs

No government can print these.

So what should investors do when yields are forced to be fixed?

They look at Japan.

They recognize that the fiat system is reaching its limit.

And they turn to assets that cannot be printed infinitely, such as:

  • gold
  • Bitcoin
  • assets linked to energy and real production

Gold has stood firm through every currency system change.

As for Bitcoin, with its absolutely scarce supply, it is increasingly viewed as the new “pillar of value” of the digital age — a form of digital gold that global investors will have to re-evaluate in the coming years.

Of course, because Bitcoin does not have any central bank backing it:

➡️ The road ahead will be full of volatility.

But it is also because of this that Bitcoin is seen as an asset representing the future — where value no longer comes from infinite money printing, but from true scarcity.

Thach Sanh

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