Japan is accelerating its push into blockchain-based finance after the Japan Blockchain Foundation announced plans to launch a new yen-backed stablecoin called EJPY on both Ethereum and Japan Open Chain (JOC). The project represents another major step in Japan’s growing effort to build regulated digital currency infrastructure tied directly to the Japanese yen.
EJPY Will Launch on Ethereum and Japan Open Chain
According to the announcement, EJPY will initially operate on Japan Open Chain, an Ethereum-compatible Layer 1 blockchain supported by major Japanese enterprises, while also expanding onto Ethereum itself. The project is being developed under a trust-based structure designed to comply with Japan’s increasingly strict stablecoin regulations. The Japan Blockchain Foundation said EJPY is primarily focused on real-world financial utility rather than retail speculation. Planned use cases include:
- B2B settlements
- Cross-border payments
- Digital asset transactions
- Web3 payment services
- Enterprise treasury operations
The foundation stated that issuance and circulation on Japan Open Chain is targeted for fiscal year 2026, although final launch dates and banking partners have not yet been officially confirmed.
Japan Continues Building Regulated Stablecoin Infrastructure
EJPY joins a rapidly growing list of yen-backed stablecoin initiatives emerging throughout Japan. Over the past year, Japanese regulators and financial institutions have aggressively expanded efforts to modernize payment infrastructure using blockchain technology.
Earlier stablecoin projects already launched or announced in Japan include:
- JPYC
- JPYSC by SBI Holdings and Startale
- Multiple megabank-backed stablecoin pilots
Japan’s stablecoin market has accelerated significantly since revisions to the country’s Payment Services Act created formal legal frameworks for regulated fiat-backed stablecoins. Unlike many countries still debating stablecoin policy, Japan has emerged as one of the first major economies actively integrating stablecoins into regulated financial infrastructure.
Why Japan Open Chain Matters
A major part of the announcement revolves around Japan Open Chain, which positions itself as an enterprise-focused Ethereum-compatible blockchain operated by large Japanese corporations including NTT Communications, Dentsu, and SBINFT. The network is designed to combine public blockchain interoperability with enterprise-grade compliance and operational controls.
Developers believe JOC could become important infrastructure for:
- Tokenized finance
- Enterprise blockchain systems
- Stablecoin settlement
- Government-approved Web3 services
- Institutional digital payments
The launch of EJPY could help drive actual transactional demand onto the network rather than purely speculative activity.
Japan Wants the Yen to Stay Relevant in Digital Finance
One of the broader goals behind Japan’s stablecoin push is preserving the global relevance of the Japanese yen as digital finance increasingly shifts toward blockchain infrastructure dominated by U.S. dollar stablecoins like USDT and USDC. Today, roughly 99% of global stablecoin supply remains tied to the U.S. dollar. Japanese policymakers and financial firms increasingly fear that without local-currency stablecoins, global digital commerce could become heavily dollarized.
Analysts believe yen-backed stablecoins could eventually support:
- Onchain FX markets
- Asian trade settlement
- Cross-border remittances
- Institutional tokenized asset settlement
- Blockchain-based capital markets
Several Japanese financial institutions also see stablecoins as a way to modernize payment infrastructure while maintaining regulatory oversight and domestic monetary influence.
Stablecoin Competition Is Intensifying Across Asia
Japan’s latest stablecoin initiative arrives as Asian governments and financial institutions increasingly compete to develop local-currency blockchain payment systems. South Korea is now expanding won-backed stablecoin projects, while discussions involving yuan-linked digital settlement systems continue growing in China and Hong Kong.
The competition reflects a broader global trend where countries increasingly view stablecoins as strategic financial infrastructure rather than simply crypto trading tools. Many analysts now believe the next phase of stablecoin growth will involve regional currencies expanding alongside dominant dollar-backed assets.
The Bigger Picture
EJPY’s launch highlights how quickly Japan is moving to integrate blockchain infrastructure into mainstream finance. Rather than resisting stablecoins, Japanese regulators and enterprises are actively building compliant digital currency systems designed for real-world economic activity.
As stablecoins evolve into global payment infrastructure, Japan appears determined to ensure the yen remains competitive inside the emerging onchain economy. The expansion of projects like EJPY also reinforces a much larger trend becoming increasingly clear worldwide: stablecoins are no longer just crypto products — they are becoming foundational infrastructure for the future of global finance.
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