
Japan’s National Business Corporate Pension Fund (Okayama City) has announced plans to allocate approximately 1% of its assets to cryptocurrency starting in fiscal year 2026.
The move makes it the first domestic Japanese corporate pension fund to invest in digital assets — and frames the allocation not as a speculative bet, but as a currency diversification tool amid growing concerns over the US dollar’s reserve status.
Inside the Allocation: Passive Exposure Through Hedge Funds
According to Japanese media reports, the National Business Corporate Pension Fund will invest through passive funds managed by major hedge funds that hold multiple cryptocurrencies.
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The fund manages approximately 21.3 billion yen ($140 million) on behalf of more than 20,000 members from around 1,200 small and medium-sized enterprises.
Its fiscal 2025 allocation consisted of 80% Japanese yen-denominated assets, 15% US dollar exposure, and 5% other currencies. Under the proposed fiscal 2026 allocation, yen exposure will be reduced to 70%, while developed-market currencies will receive a new 10% allocation. The remaining 5% will be divided among emerging market currencies, gold, and cryptocurrencies.
Japan Builds Institutional Framework for Bitcoin
The pension fund’s move comes as Japan advances several initiatives aimed at integrating cryptocurrencies into traditional financial markets.
Earlier this month, Japan’s lower house advanced a bill that would classify cryptocurrencies as financial instruments under the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act — legislation expected to take effect next year if approved by the upper house.Policymakers are also considering replacing the current progressive taxation framework with a flat 20% tax rate on crypto gains.
The Osaka Exchange plans to launch Bitcoin futures contracts by 2028 if spot Bitcoin ETFs receive regulatory approval. Japan’s Financial Services Agency is also working toward classifying cryptocurrencies as eligible assets for investment trusts.
Major brokerage firms, including SBI Securities and Rakuten Securities, have reportedly prepared to offer crypto-related investment trusts once regulatory details are finalized.
Why This Matters
Pension funds rank among the most conservative institutional investors globally, meaning even a small allocation by a Japanese corporate pension fund sends a credibility signal to the broader fiduciary community that crypto qualifies as a legitimate diversification asset.
Combined with Japan’s parallel regulatory overhaul, which includes reclassifying crypto as a financial instrument, targeting Bitcoin ETF approval by 2028, and lowering crypto tax rates to 20%, this move represents another significant step in the institutionalization of crypto in the world’s fourth-largest economy.
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The fund cited currency diversification and Bitcoin’s low correlation with the U.S. dollar as key reasons for the allocation.
Current regulatory discussions point toward a possible framework around 2028, though final approval has not yet been granted.
Yes. This is the first confirmed crypto allocation by a domestic Japanese corporate pension fund, according to Nikkei Shimbun reporting.

