As of January 31, 2026, U.S. financial regulation has come to a near standstill.
This comes as the government has failed to pass a budget, forcing the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to operate under its shutdown plan.
Importantly, the SEC is not completely closed; it barely functions. For example, the EDGAR system, where companies submit declarations, is still running.
At the same time, most SEC employees are not working, which means few people actually review or approve these filings.
As a result, the staff who normally approve crypto ETFs, review registration statements and explain new rules are largely unavailable.
Instead, only a small emergency team remains active, which may only intervene if there is an emergency related to ‘market integrity and investor protection’.
Outside of these rare cases, everything else is paused.
The approach is not new
In fact, it is the same process as the SEC follows during every government shutdown. If there is no immediate emergency, normal regulatory work simply stops.
It goes without saying that this has real consequences for the crypto industry.
Recent regulatory progress has suddenly been put on pause, meaning decisions, approvals and regulatory clarity are now on hold until the government reopens.
At the leadership level, SEC Chairman Paul Atkins has already had to postpone several important updates that the crypto industry was waiting for.
Many people hoped that 2026 would finally bring clear crypto laws from Congress. But the shutdown makes it much harder for lawmakers from both parties to work together.
Market in bloodstains
That said, this regulatory pause comes at a bad time for the crypto market.
Prices have already fallen, with the total market down more than 6% all around $2.64 trillion. Bitcoin [BTC] recently dropped to around $78,000, while Ethereum [ETH] dropped to almost $2,400.
At the same time, the ETF market is also feeling the pressure.
What’s more?
This further coincided with the US finally entering a new phase of action in crypto regulation.
Senior officials from the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission met and agreed to work more closely together.
Their goal was to end the long-running battles, create clearer rules, reduce duplication of efforts for companies, and finally give the crypto market the guidance it has been asking for.
But with the government shutdown, those plans are essentially on hold.
Final thoughts
- The shutdown has turned regulatory momentum into uncertainty, wiping out weeks of progress in just days.
- Market pressure is mounting, with falling prices and stalled ETF momentum worsening investor sentiment.
