Charts
DataOn-chain
VIP
Market Cap
API
Rankings
CoinOSNew
CoinClaw🦞
Language
  • 简体中文
  • 繁体中文
  • English
Leader in global market data applications, committed to providing valuable information more efficiently.

Features

  • Real-time Data
  • Special Features
  • AI Grid

Services

  • News
  • Open Data(API)
  • Institutional Services

Downloads

  • Desktop
  • Android
  • iOS

Contact Us

  • Chat Room
  • Business Email
  • Official Email
  • Official Verification

Join Community

  • Telegram
  • Twitter
  • Discord

© Copyright 2013-2026. All rights reserved.

简体繁體English
|Legacy

Japan’s Ruling Party Pushes On-Chain Finance Plan to Protect Yen

CN
Decrypt
Follow
1 hour ago
AI summarizes in 5 seconds.

Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party is pushing stablecoins, tokenized deposits and blockchain settlement as financial infrastructure, warning that Japan risks falling behind foreign payment systems.


The proposal asks the Financial Services Agency to draw up a five-year roadmap, position finance as Japan’s 18th growth investment field, and clarify how stablecoins could be used for payroll, tax payments, corporate funding and cross-border transfers.



“The accumulation of such efforts will help secure Japan’s on-chain financial sovereignty and safeguard its monetary sovereignty,” a rough translation of the proposal reads.


Drafts were prepared by a digital policy working group within the LDP, chaired by party lawmaker Seiji Kihara, after meetings with banks, stablecoin issuers, tokenization firms, regulators and academics from March. The party’s Policy Research Council formally approved it Tuesday.


To get there, the country’s central bank needs to study tokenized current account deposits, including a wholesale CBDC, while officials review bank-issued stablecoins, cross-border yen stablecoin use, and shared Asian rules for tokenized assets, audits, KYC, AML and counter-terrorist financing, the proposal reads.


Building on momentum


Industry observers said the proposal would place Japan’s crypto policy inside familiar financial guardrails, instead of a looser market experiment.


“Japan isn’t freelancing here,” Joshua Chu, lawyer, lecturer, and co-chair of the Hong Kong Web3 Association, told Decrypt. The country’s push for on-chain finance would operate under regulated money movement and market structure “wrapped in code,” he added.


Tokyo’s bet is that a conservative, fully KYC’d stack can become a 24/7 system “scalable enough” for both money-laundering and securities regulators, Chu said, turning Japan’s overseas capital “paradox” into a stronger entry point for foreign institutions.





“The momentum here cannot be ignored,” Samar Sen, head of international markets at Talos, told Decrypt. Japan’s three-bank stablecoin initiative shows the kind of bank-led effort that can move pilots into real infrastructure, he said.


Singapore and Hong Kong are further ahead on live tokenization and stablecoin activity, Sen said, but Japan “brings something different”: large financial institutions, deep capital markets and a regulatory culture focused on long-term stability.


Those countries are “moving more aggressively” on commercialization, Wish Wu, CEO and co-founder of Pharos, told Decrypt, leaving Japan’s edge dependent on how quickly it can move from policy alignment and pilots to real on-chain financial usage at scale.


Such a shift could also have broader implications for Japan’s financial system.


Stablecoins could serve as “a programmable layer for money movement and liquidity distribution” in Japan, increasing “settlement velocity” and giving banks a new channel for monetary policy transmission after decades of near-zero rates, Al Qureshi, CEO and co-founder at Black Lake, told Decrypt.


Japan’s banking and corporate ties could help adoption if major institutions move together, Qureshi said, pointing out how execution remains a constraint, with legacy systems, manual processes and “institutional inertia” all risking delay.


Still, regulators would need to clarify how banks account for stablecoins, while tokenized deposits need a shared clearing layer between institutions, Max Grabner, head of product at Range, told Decrypt.


Japan’s “more open economy and financial system” could give it an edge over South Korea and China, he said, while foreign adoption of tokenized assets could create new demand for Japanese government bonds.


免责声明:本文章仅代表作者个人观点,不代表本平台的立场和观点。本文章仅供信息分享,不构成对任何人的任何投资建议。用户与作者之间的任何争议,与本平台无关。如网页中刊载的文章或图片涉及侵权,请提供相关的权利证明和身份证明发送邮件到support@aicoin.com,本平台相关工作人员将会进行核查。

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

Selected Articles by Decrypt

56 seconds ago
Canaan Shares Plunge as CEO Says Middle East Conflict Is Clouding Outlook for Bitcoin Miners
1 hour ago
Bitcoin Giant Strategy Gets Price Target Boost From TD Cowen After $2 Billion BTC Buy
2 hours ago
AI Slop Floods Bug Bounty Programs as Companies Struggle with Fake Reports
View More

Table of Contents

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

Related Articles

avatar
avatarDecrypt
56 seconds ago
Canaan Shares Plunge as CEO Says Middle East Conflict Is Clouding Outlook for Bitcoin Miners
avatar
avatarbitcoin.com
29 minutes ago
Bitcoin Prediction Markets Show $84K Ceiling as Traders Stack Bets on Polymarket, Kalshi, and Myriad
avatar
avatarDecrypt
1 hour ago
Bitcoin Giant Strategy Gets Price Target Boost From TD Cowen After $2 Billion BTC Buy
avatar
avatarbitcoin.com
1 hour ago
Bitcoin ETFs Post Third-Biggest 2026 Outflow as Blackrock Loses $448M
APP
Windows
Mac

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink