The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has drastically curtailed operations due to a federal government shutdown, stalling critical cryptocurrency regulatory work. As of January 31, 2026, a skeletal staff remains for emergencies only, halting approvals for crypto ETFs and registrations. This regulatory pause coincides with a declining market and delays a new collaborative effort between the SEC and the CFTC.
A U.S. federal budget impasse has forced the Securities and Exchange Commission to enact its shutdown plan, slowing financial regulation to a near halt. While systems like EDGAR remain operational, most staff are furloughed and unavailable to review filings or advance new rules.
This has directly paused the agency’s work on cryptocurrency ETFs and registration statements. SEC Chair Paul Atkins has already delayed several important updates anticipated by the industry.
The regulatory stall arrives during a period of market decline. The total cryptocurrency market capitalization fell more than 6%, according to data, to around $2.64 trillion.
Bitcoin recently dropped to approximately $78,000, while Ethereum declined to nearly $2,400. The ETF market is also reportedly feeling strain from the broader conditions.
The shutdown also suspends a recent inter-agency agreement aimed at providing regulatory clarity. Officials from the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission had agreed to collaborate more closely to end jurisdictional disputes and reduce duplicate work for companies.
Those plans are now effectively on hold until the government reopens.

