
- Japan’s cabinet has approved a bill that would classify crypto assets as financial products under securities law.
- The proposed changes would ban insider trading in crypto and require issuers to make annual disclosures.
Japan is moving closer to bringing crypto into its mainstream financial rulebook, with the cabinet approving legislation that would, for the first time, treat digital assets as financial products under the country’s securities framework.
According to Nikkei, the government approved the amendments at a cabinet meeting on Friday. If the bill clears the current Diet session, the new regime could take effect as early as fiscal 2027.
From payment tool to financial instrument
That is a meaningful shift in how Japan sees the sector. Until now, the Financial Services Agency has mainly regulated crypto under the Payment Services Act, a framework that treats digital assets more like a means of payment than an investment product.
The proposed amendments would change that balance. Crypto assets would move into the orbit of securities-style oversight, which in practice means tighter conduct rules, broader disclosure obligations and a more familiar compliance structure for market participants coming from traditional finance.
One of the clearest consequences is insider trading. The bill would prohibit trading and other transactions based on non-public information, extending a core market abuse concept into crypto. That has been discussed in other jurisdictions too, but Japan appears ready to write it directly into law.
Issuers face a more formal disclosure regime
The legislation would also require crypto issuers to disclose relevant information annually, according to the report. That may sound procedural, but it pushes the market toward a more standardized reporting culture, something the sector has often lacked outside listed vehicles and a handful of large projects.
For exchanges, token issuers and crypto-related businesses operating in Japan, the message is fairly plain. The days of treating digital assets as a regulatory side category are fading.
What Tokyo seems to be building now is a broader oversight model, one that recognizes crypto not only as a payment mechanism or technical asset class, but as a financial market activity that sits much closer to securities regulation than before.
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