Regulation & Policy
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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has begun shutting down operations following a lapse in government funding, forcing most staff to secure their work and prepare for what could be a prolonged pause.
According to an official notice posted Wednesday on X, about nine hours after lawmakers failed to pass a funding bill, the SEC confirmed it would operate with an “extremely limited number of staff” under contingency plans set in August. Many of the agency’s systems are now running under modified conditions.
The agency clarified that it will not review or approve pending applications during the closure. That includes over 90 applications for altcoin-based exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which were widely expected to see decisions in early October.
The SEC is currently reviewing proposals for funds tracking Solana, XRP, Cardano, Litecoin, Dogecoin, and various token strategies. Analysts at Bloomberg had predicted that the first approvals, likely Solana-focused ETFs, could arrive this month.
But with the government shutdown, that timeline is in jeopardy. “ETF Cryptober might be on hold for a bit,” wrote Nate Geraci, co-founder of the ETF Institute, in a post on Wednesday.
Bloomberg Senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas also noted earlier this week: “Crypto ETF approval season has officially arrived!” — but the government shutdown is set to delay momentum.
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The pause in SEC activity follows a deepening budget standoff in Washington. As of late Wednesday, Republicans and Democrats remained entrenched, with neither side able to secure enough votes to overcome a filibuster.
House Speaker Mike Johnson said the chamber would return next week but ruled out changes to the Republican-backed funding bill. Democrats, meanwhile, continue to push for a reversal of healthcare cuts included in the July legislation.
The suspension comes at a critical time for the ETF market. Over the past 18 months, issuers from both traditional finance and crypto have rushed to launch products tied to digital assets, spurred by the success of spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs.
The SEC’s decisions on altcoin ETFs are seen as the next frontier, with Solana drawing significant attention. The cryptocurrency, ranked sixth by market capitalization, was trading above $222 on Wednesday, up over amid broader market gains.
Despite political gridlock, crypto prices appeared resilient, with some investors viewing digital assets as a potential safe-haven play.
Until lawmakers reach a funding deal, the SEC will remain short-staffed and unable to process critical applications. Acting under its contingency plan, the agency noted it would provide only “emergency support” to registrants until funding resumes.
For crypto investors and ETF issuers, the delay underscores how political disputes in Washington can ripple through global financial markets.




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