Japan's central bank just announced it's planning to offload its ETF holdings. Sounds straightforward, right? Not quite. At the pace they're currently talking about, this unwinding process could stretch for over 100 years.
Think about what that actually means. The Bank of Japan has accumulated massive ETF positions over years of aggressive monetary policy. Now they're facing the practical reality of how to exit those positions without destabilizing markets. The math is brutal—even at a measured, deliberate selling pace, you're looking at a time horizon that extends well beyond anyone currently working in finance.
This isn't just about one central bank either. It reflects a bigger picture: what happens when years of stimulus programs need to unwind? Asset holders—whether governments, institutions, or markets—are grappling with liquidity constraints and exit strategies. The gradual approach signals caution, but it also hints at just how large these holdings have become.
For anyone tracking monetary policy flows and their ripple effects across asset classes, this is a reminder that central bank actions cast very long shadows.
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just_another_wallet
· 4h ago
100 years? Haha, you're hilarious. The Bank of Japan, what are they playing at? We'll be stuck forever.
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degenonymous
· 4h ago
100 years? Haha, running a marathon here. The Bank of Japan's moves are absolutely on point.
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SatoshiHeir
· 4h ago
It should be pointed out that Japan's central bank's hundred-year plan essentially falsifies the ultimate dilemma of Keynesianism. Based on the following argument—when monetary policy tools are exhausted, the exit mechanism itself becomes an impossible trinity.
Obviously, this is just another concentrated exposure of the inherent contradictions within the fiat currency system. The inflation trap that Satoshi Nakamoto discussed in the white paper is now playing out in reality in this ridiculous way... A hundred years, gentlemen, this already explains everything.
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GasSavingMaster
· 4h ago
100 years? Laughing out loud, the Bank of Japan is digging a hole for future generations.
Japan's central bank just announced it's planning to offload its ETF holdings. Sounds straightforward, right? Not quite. At the pace they're currently talking about, this unwinding process could stretch for over 100 years.
Think about what that actually means. The Bank of Japan has accumulated massive ETF positions over years of aggressive monetary policy. Now they're facing the practical reality of how to exit those positions without destabilizing markets. The math is brutal—even at a measured, deliberate selling pace, you're looking at a time horizon that extends well beyond anyone currently working in finance.
This isn't just about one central bank either. It reflects a bigger picture: what happens when years of stimulus programs need to unwind? Asset holders—whether governments, institutions, or markets—are grappling with liquidity constraints and exit strategies. The gradual approach signals caution, but it also hints at just how large these holdings have become.
For anyone tracking monetary policy flows and their ripple effects across asset classes, this is a reminder that central bank actions cast very long shadows.