January 31, 2026
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Bitcoin, ether fall as shutdown clock hits and markets brace for a messy Monday

Bitcoin fell toward $83,000 as the US entered a partial shutdown, with traders leaning defensive ahead of a House vote expected Monday.”, — write: www.coindesk.com

Bitcoin, ether fall as shutdown clock hits and markets brace for a messy MondayBitcoin fell toward $83,000 as the US entered a partial shutdown, with traders leaning defensive ahead of a House vote expected Monday.Updated Jan 31, 2026, 7:31 am Published Jan 31, 2026, 7:29 am

Crypto prices remained under pressure on Friday as the US government entered a partial shutdown after lawmakers missed a midnight funding deadline, adding another layer of uncertainty to a market that has already been struggling to find bids.

Bitcoin traded around $83,559, up about 1% on the day but down roughly 6.8% over the past week, according to the price screen.

Ether sat near $2,686, down about 1.9% in the past 24 hours and 9% on the week. XRP changed hands near $1.72, down about 1.6% on the day and close to 10% lower over seven days.

The shutdown itself looks short. The Senate passed a funding package, but the House is out until Monday, so the government still hits a technical lapse over the weekend.

That timing matters for risk assets because it lands right into thin weekend liquidity and a heavy headline cycle, which may pressure bitcoin and the broader crypto market over the weekend.

There is also a clean crypto angle here that is not just “risk off.” Prediction markets have spent the past 24 hours showing how messy the definition of “shutdown” can get.

Traders on Polymarket and Kalshi were forced to think like lawyers. The government can be “shut” on paper at 12:01 am and still look normal to most people for two days. That gap between legal status and real-world impact is exactly where contract wording and settlement rules start to bite.

For crypto, the shutdown headline is more like a stress test for sentiment than a direct economic shock. It keeps traders cautious, pushes people toward smaller position sizes, and makes dips feel heavier because buyers don’t want to step in front of a weekend news tape.

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