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Trading tournaments in Japan

Japan's tournament scene is dominated by FX-broker demo contests. Gaitame.com's バーチャルFX runs quarterly (currently 第57回), and moomoo×JPX runs the major annual stock paper-trading contest. JFSA inducement rules limit live-money rank contests on regulated brokers, so offshore platforms (FXGT, XMTrading, Fintokei prop) carry most of the cash-prize action with grey-zone disclaimers. Japanese crypto exchanges (bitFlyer, Coincheck, GMO Coin) run only キャンペーン deposit lotteries, not rank tournaments.

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JFSA-licensed brokers run mostly virtual contests. Offshore brokers (FXGT, XMTrading) operate in grey-zone — JFSA 無登録海外業者 warnings apply.

Regulation

The Japan Financial Services Agency (JFSA) regulates trading-tournament participation under the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act (FIEA). FIEA Article 38-2 prohibits inducement bonuses to Japanese residents — meaning JFSA-licensed brokers cannot offer welcome bonuses, deposit matches, cashback promotions, or PnL-leaderboard cash prizes that function as inducements to trade. Retail forex leverage is capped at 25:1 across all pairs. Crypto-asset gains are treated as miscellaneous income (雑所得) and taxed at progressive Japanese income-tax rates up to roughly 55% inclusive of resident tax. Tournament prize income follows similar miscellaneous-income treatment unless characterized as business income for professional traders.

Trading culture

The contest culture splits cleanly: JFSA-licensed brokers run virtual / paper contests (Gaitame バーチャルFX, moomoo × JPX 日本株デモ, 日経STOCKリーグ for students); offshore platforms (FXGT, XMTrading, Fintokei) carry the live-money cash-prize action under JFSA 無登録海外業者 disclaimers. Fintokei in particular has grown rapidly since entering Japan in early 2023 — it is now the firm's most active market by trader count, with significant aggregate payouts to Japanese traders. Japanese crypto exchanges (bitFlyer, Coincheck, GMO Coin) tend toward キャンペーン deposit lotteries rather than rank-based PnL tournaments because of regulatory-inducement-rule overlap.

Not available to Japan residents

Most JFSA-licensed brokers cannot legally offer cash-prize rank tournaments due to the FIEA Article 38-2 inducement-bonus prohibition. Offshore brokers (FXGT, XMTrading) operate in regulatory grey zone with JFSA-issued 無登録海外業者 warnings — Japanese residents can technically use them but lack JFSA investor-protection coverage if disputes arise. Bybit, OKX, and Binance.com do not hold JFSA crypto-exchange registrations and are not legally able to serve Japanese residents directly; they have at various points blocked Japanese-resident accounts in response to JFSA notices.

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Frequently asked questions about Japan

Why do JFSA-licensed brokers only run virtual / demo trading contests?

Because FIEA Article 38-2 prohibits inducement bonuses to Japanese residents — including welcome bonuses, deposit matches, cashback, and most cash-prize PnL leaderboards. JFSA-licensed brokers can run virtual / paper-trading contests (which don't involve inducement to trade with money) but generally avoid live-money rank competitions for compliance reasons.

Are offshore brokers like FXGT or XMTrading legal in Japan?

They operate in a grey zone. The JFSA issues 無登録海外業者 (unregistered offshore broker) warnings about platforms not holding JFSA registration. Japanese residents can technically use these brokers but receive no JFSA investor-protection coverage. Many Japanese traders use offshore brokers despite the warnings, but the legal status of contest winnings from those platforms is less clean than from JFSA-licensed venues.

How are crypto and trading tournament winnings taxed in Japan?

Crypto gains are treated as miscellaneous income (雑所得) and taxed at progressive Japanese income-tax rates that can reach approximately 55% inclusive of resident tax, depending on total income bracket. Tournament prize income from trading platforms typically follows miscellaneous-income treatment. Professional traders may have business-income classification — consult a Japanese 税理士 (certified tax accountant) for amounts above modest thresholds.

What's Fintokei and is it available to Japanese residents?

Fintokei is a proprietary-trading firm that entered Japan in early 2023 and has grown rapidly since — Japan is now Fintokei's most active market. They offer evaluation challenges with funded accounts following the standard prop-firm model. Yes, Japanese residents can participate; the firm operates via offshore structures rather than as a JFSA-licensed broker.

Can Japanese traders enter international championships like WCTC?

Yes — the World Cup Trading Championships and the U.S. Investing Championship accept Japanese residents as international entrants. The audited-statement requirement and contest-year structure are the same regardless of residency; you'd file Japanese tax on any prize income according to the miscellaneous-income / business-income classification.

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