Articles
Trading Strategies

Japan approves bill to classify crypto as financial instruments

User Image

Av Anonym

Skapad April 10, 2026|2 minuter lästid
Main Image

Japan tightens oversight with insider-trading bans and new disclosure rules as crypto markets attract more institutional participation.

The Japanese government amended the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act on Friday to classify crypto assets as financial instruments.

The amendment also bans insider trading and other activities that involve buying and selling based on undisclosed information, Nikkei reported.

The amended act will also now require cryptocurrency “issuers” to be more transparent and disclose information once a year.

Japan’s Financial Services Agency has previously regulated crypto assets under the Payment and Settlement Act, citing their potential use as a means of payment. However, the regulations and classifications have been updated to reflect increasing institutional investment in the asset class.

By reclassifying crypto as a financial instrument rather than just a payment method, Japan is moving crypto out of the experimental payments category and into the same league as its stock market.

“We will expand the supply of growth capital in response to changes in financial and capital markets, and ensure market fairness, transparency, and investor protection,” said Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama at a press conference after the Cabinet meeting. 

Fines and sentences for unregistered crypto exchanges have also increased under the amendment. 

Related: Prediction markets are testing legal limits in strict Asian markets

Japan signaled that it was bringing crypto under the same umbrella as traditional finance in January when Katayama said, “To ensure citizens benefit from digital and blockchain-based assets, the role of exchanges and market infrastructure will be essential.” 

The government backed plans in December to significantly reduce Japan’s maximum tax rate on crypto profits, with a flat rate of 20% across the board.  

Japan is also planning to legalize crypto exchange-traded funds (ETFs) by 2028, marking a major shift toward mainstream crypto adoption, according to a January report. 

Major financial groups, including Nomura Holdings and SBI Holdings, are among the first companies expected to develop crypto-linked exchange-traded products. 

Asia Express: Phantom Bitcoin checks, China tracks tax on blockchain

Source: CoinTelegraph


Andra artiklar publicerade nyligen

Tether trades at 7% to 10% premium in India. Exchanges say its just supply and demand
Tether trades at 7% to 10% premium in India. Exchanges say its just supply and demand

Crypto Market Analysis

Executives at major platforms CoinDCX and CoinSwitch say the premium reflects a demand-supply imbala...

Ether, solana and dogecoin slide as Strategy's bitcoin sales plan pressures market
Ether, solana and dogecoin slide as Strategy's bitcoin sales plan pressures market

Bitcoin

Bitcoin held below $60,000 as a surging dollar kept crypto pinned. Onchain demand stayed quiet throu...

XRP holds $1 support as network activity rises and leverage clears out
XRP holds $1 support as network activity rises and leverage clears out

Crypto Market Analysis

Active addresses jumped 72% in two weeks while open interest fell to its lowest level since July 202...

Singapore's Hyperliquid warning, Indonesia's FinFluencer licence: Asia Express
Singapore's Hyperliquid warning, Indonesia's FinFluencer licence: Asia Express

Crypto Market Analysis

Hyperliquid follows Bybit onto Singapore's "naughty" list, Indonesia's new scheme to certify social ...

SEC wins $5.4M judgment in NanoBit crypto fraud case
SEC wins $5.4M judgment in NanoBit crypto fraud case

Trading Strategies

The SEC alleged that NanoBit’s crypto trading platform was fake and that hundreds of thousands of ...

Sovereign funds see Bitcoin discount as entry point: MidChains CEO
Sovereign funds see Bitcoin discount as entry point: MidChains CEO

Bitcoin

It sends “a very clear signal” to other institutions that may be sitting on the sidelines and lo...