A Senate-approved continuing resolution has reopened the U.S. government, ending a 41-day shutdown and restoring the flow of official economic data critical for markets, including Bitcoin.
The measure funds agencies through January 30, 2026, and is expected to normalize Treasury auctions and macroeconomic reporting.
Why reopening matters for bitcoin liquidity
The restart means agencies like the Bureau of Labor Statistics and Bureau of Economic Analysis will resume releasing data such as the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Real Earnings reports, both scheduled for November 13.
The Producer Price Index (PPI) follows on November 14.
These releases shift market focus back to inflation and labor trends, with the 10-year real yield remaining a key indicator for Bitcoin risk appetite and spot ETF flows.
Macro plumbing, Treasury auctions, and liquidity
Treasury auctions will return to their regular cadence, with $125 billion in coupon issuance across 3-, 10-, and 30-year notes and bonds this week.
The Treasury General Account stands at $943 billion, providing a liquidity buffer. If the account draws down slowly and CPI eases, conditions could turn positive for risk assets like Bitcoin.
Bitcoin ETF flows and market depth
Spot Bitcoin ETFs experienced record inflows in early October, but saw net outflows into November.
Kaiko data indicates improved order book depth, which can amplify macro-driven moves as ETF flows and cross-asset shifts in rates play out.