Japanese institutions are finally warming up to crypto — and they’re not tiptoeing in. Nomura Holdings and Laser Digital dropped a survey on April 16, 2026, and the numbers are hard to ignore. Nearly 80% of Japanese institutional investors plan to allocate between 2% and 5% of their total assets under management to cryptocurrency. That’s not pocket change.
Nearly 80% of Japanese institutional investors are planning crypto allocations. This isn’t speculation — it’s scheduled.
The survey pulled responses from 518 investment professionals between December 2025 and January 2026. Participants included institutional investors, family offices, and public-interest organizations managing over $60 billion in assets. These aren’t crypto Twitter speculators. These are suits with spreadsheets.
Seventy-nine percent of those considering crypto over the next three years already have concrete plans. Nearly 80% intend to invest within a one-year horizon — though the survey suggests most are still in prep mode rather than pulling triggers immediately. So the money isn’t here yet. But it’s coming.
Sentiment shifted noticeably. Positive outlook on crypto climbed to 31%, up 6 points from the prior survey. Negative sentiment dropped to 18%. Japan’s evolving regulatory framework gets partial credit for that mood swing.
Why crypto? Diversification, mostly. Sixty-five percent now view crypto as a legitimate diversification tool sitting alongside equities, bonds, and commodities — up from 62%. Low correlation with traditional assets is doing the heavy lifting in that argument. Institutions are increasingly applying sector-based diversification strategies across DeFi, privacy coins, and tokenized assets to maximize exposure while managing systemic risk.
These institutions aren’t just buying and holding, either. Over two-thirds are eyeing DeFi strategies like staking and mining for returns. Sixty-five percent want exposure to lending and tokenized assets. Sixty-three percent are exploring derivatives and stablecoins. Stablecoins from major financial institutions are the most trusted, apparently. Shocking. Institutions also cite regulatory clarity as a critical factor that must be addressed before they fully commit capital to the space.
Markets noticed. After the survey dropped, Polymarket odds for Bitcoin hitting $100,000 by December 2026 jumped 4 points to 38%. Bitcoin was sitting at $74,681 amid the buzz. Correlation isn’t causation, but the timing isn’t subtle. Geopolitical tensions and inflation are further amplifying Bitcoin’s appeal as a reserve asset, adding another layer of urgency to institutional allocation decisions.
Finance is watching Japan. When institutions managing tens of billions start penciling in crypto allocations with this kind of specificity, it’s not a trend anymore. It’s a shift.