The Japanese Minister of Finance stated: 2026 will become the "Year of Digital Assets," with the key idea being one — "digital assets such as Bitcoin must be listed on stock and commodity exchanges."



Essentially, this is an attempt to break down the wall that exists between traditional finance and crypto assets. Previously, regulators considered Bitcoin to be "something chaotic and unpredictable," but now they want to make it part of the official financial market.

The logic here is quite simple — the Japanese aim to make big money. The total financial assets of Japanese households nearly reach 2.3 quadrillion yen #数字资产动态追踪 approximately 15 trillion US dollars(, with more than half of this money — about 1.1 quadrillion yen — simply sitting in banks and earning almost zero interest. This is the so-called "sleeping capital."

If these deposits are transferred to the stock exchange even by 1%, it could bring over $75 billion in real money to the cryptocurrency market. This is not only a matter of increasing liquidity but also a serious intention of Asia to use digital assets for hedging against the dollar.

Watch the timeline — by the end of March. That is when the parliamentary budget session will take place, and issues regarding taxation and reforming the classification of crypto assets may be approved — and this will be the true "signal." If this happens, the logic of a bullish market will become entirely plausible.
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#数字资产动态追踪 Japanese Finance Minister announces: By 2026, the goal is to become the "Year of Digital Assets," with the core highlight being—"Digital assets like Bitcoin must be listed on stock and commodity exchanges."

In simple terms, this is about breaking down the wall between traditional finance and crypto assets. Previously, Bitcoin was seen as a "mess of miscellaneous things" by regulators; now, it will sit at the same table as stocks and become a legitimate financial product.

The underlying logic is quite clear—Japanese people are planning to move a large sum of money. The total financial assets of Japanese households are nearly 2300 trillion yen (roughly $15 trillion USD). The problem is that over half of that—about 1100 trillion yen—is sitting in banks earning almost zero interest. This is what’s called "sleeping capital."

Once the threshold of listing on an exchange is crossed, just by moving 1% of these deposits, over $75 billion can be injected into the crypto market. This is not just about increasing liquidity; more importantly, Asia is seriously considering using digital assets to hedge against the dollar risk.

The timeline to watch is the end of March. At that time, the parliament will hold a budget meeting, and whether the crypto asset tax and classification reform plan passes will be the real "starting gun." If it passes, the bull market logic will truly be in place. $BTC
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