On Tuesday, two sources revealed that Japan's Ministry of Finance is contemplating adjustments to the auction framework for Japanese government bonds to enhance liquidity. According to Jin10, this move aims to alleviate the supply pressure of ultra-long-term bonds and stabilize the Japanese government bond market. Despite the Japanese government's issuance plan set for 2026, market volatility persists. The plan has reduced the issuance scale of new ultra-long-term bonds to the lowest level in 17 years to address weak investor demand. Currently, the bond issuance terms are divided into three intervals: 1 to 5 years, 5 to 15.5 years, and over 15.5 to under 39 years, with a total annual issuance scale of 13.5 trillion yen (approximately $87.15 billion). From April, the ministry plans to narrow the medium-term investment range to '5 to 11 years' and expand the ultra-long-term investment range to 'over 11 to under 39 years.'