For more than a decade, U.S. equities dominated global markets. American technology leaders delivered exceptional earnings growth, attracted global capital and left most international markets trailing behind. But market leadership is cyclical. By 2025, stretched valuations, widening fiscal deficits and rising concentration risk began to narrow the gap. Quietly, returns outside the United States improved. In some cases, they surpassed them.
This is the point in the cycle when investors start looking for markets where the narrative is changing faster than positioning. Japan stands out as one of the clearest beneficiaries of this rotation.
Many investors still associate Japan with deflation, stagnation and an unsustainable debt burden. That narrative is increasingly outdated. Japan was one of the global equity bright spots in 2025, and the forces driving its performance appear durable enough to extend into 2026 and beyond. The country has entered a genuine reflationary phase, supported by rising wages, improving growth and sustained price momentum conditions Japan has not experienced in decades.
That shift has prompted a historic response from the Bank of Japan, which raised interest rates to 0.75%, the highest level in more than 30 years. Some investors worry tighter policy could derail the recovery. A more accurate interpretation is that Japan no longer requires emergency monetary support. The economy is strong enough to normalize.
Markets have responded accordingly. The Nikkei 225 rose roughly 26% in 2025, comfortably outperforming the S&P 500’s 17% gain. In past cycles, Japanese equity strength often coincided with a sharply weaker yen, boosting exporters but diluting returns for dollar-based investors. This time, the yen ended the year roughly flat against the dollar, suggesting Japan’s gains were driven by fundamentals rather than currency effects.
Japan’s renewed momentum rests on three reinforcing pillars.
A Quiet Winner in the Global Technology Buildout
Japan remains a critical node in the global technology and industrial supply chain. Its companies play essential roles in semiconductors, precision manufacturing, factory automation and advanced materials. As global capital spending accelerates around artificial intelligence, robotics and electrification, Japanese firms are capturing a meaningful share of that investment cycle.
This positioning allows investors to benefit from AI-driven growth without relying exclusively on high-multiple U.S. software companies. Japan offers exposure to the physical and industrial backbone of the next technology wave.
Industrial Policy With a Competitive Purpose
Fiscal policy under Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has been more targeted than critics suggest. While the government’s stimulus package includes near-term tax relief, a substantial portion of spending is directed toward strategic sectors such as semiconductors, shipbuilding and defense areas where Japan’s global competitors are also investing aggressively.
This is industrial policy designed to strengthen competitiveness and supply chain resilience rather than indiscriminate fiscal expansion. In a region marked by rising geopolitical risk, increasing defense spending toward 2% of GDP represents a rational recalibration, not excess.
Corporate Japan Finally Embraces Shareholders
Japan’s long-running corporate governance reforms are now producing tangible results. Initiated during the second tenure of Shinzo Abe, these reforms encouraged companies to improve capital efficiency, raise returns on equity and unwind entrenched cross-shareholdings.
Over time, they have reshaped corporate behavior. Japanese firms today are more focused on shareholder returns, balance-sheet discipline and transparent capital allocation than at any point in the past three decades. This shift is a critical and often under appreciated driver of Japan’s equity re-rating.
Debt Context, Not Crisis
Skeptics inevitably point to Japan’s public debt, which still stands near 200% of GDP. The figure is large, but context matters. Japan’s average government debt maturity exceeds nine years, meaning higher bond yields affect financing costs only gradually as existing debt rolls over.
It is also worth remembering what drove Japan’s debt ratio so high in the first place. Decades of deflation and stagnant nominal growth compressed the denominator of the debt-to-GDP equation, making the burden look heavier even when financing costs remained contained. That dynamic has reversed. Nominal GDP growth has averaged just over 3% in recent years, and Japan’s debt ratio has already declined from above 210% of GDP in 2022 to around 200% today. By several measures, Japan is deleveraging faster than any other major advanced economy.
Some investors worry that rising Japanese bond yields could pull domestic savings home, reducing demand for U.S. Treasurys. That risk is frequently overstated. Japanese yields remain well below U.S. equivalents, and recent Treasury volatility reflects domestic U.S. concerns including fiscal deficits, dollar debasement risks and institutional credibility rather than anything originating in Tokyo.
Ironically, those same concerns strengthen the case for international diversification.
(Photo by RICHARD A. BROOKS/AFP via Getty Images)
AFP via Getty Images
How U.S. Investors Can Gain Exposure to Japan
For most U.S. investors, exchange-traded funds remain the most practical way to access Japanese equities.
Broad market ETFs offer diversified exposure across Japan’s largest companies and are readily available through standard brokerage accounts. Examples include the iShares MSCI Japan ETF and the JPMorgan BetaBuilders Japan ETF.
For investors concerned about currency volatility, currency-hedged ETFs provide a way to participate in Japan’s equity upside while reducing yen exposure. Popular options include the WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Fund and the Xtrackers MSCI Japan Hedged Equity ETF.
After years of false starts, Japan’s economic transformation is gaining traction. For investors looking beyond a fully valued U.S. market, Japan may be one of the most compelling places to deploy capital in 2026.


