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Government Shutdown Enters Final 48 Hours as Markets Brace for What’s Next
Abstract:[Figure 1: U.S. Federal Government Illustration]The U.S. federal government shutdown standoff has entered its final 48-hour countdown. A procedural vote in the Senate on Thursday suffered a decisive d
[Figure 1: U.S. Federal Government Illustration]
The U.S. federal government shutdown standoff has entered its final 48-hour countdown. A procedural vote in the Senate on Thursday suffered a decisive defeat, securing only 45 votes, well short of the 60 required. Seven Republican senators crossed party lines to side with Democrats, leaving the USD 64 billion Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding package at the center of the impasse. As of now, the probability of a shutdown beginning early Saturday morning remains elevated at 65%. While Donald Trump has signaled a willingness to compromise at the eleventh hour, risk-off sentiment continues to dominate market positioning.
We assess the situation from three key perspectives:
1. Political Negotiations at a Critical Juncture
The White House and Democrats appear to be converging on a potential framework. Five spending bills already passed by the House, covering 96% of federal agencies through the end of the fiscal year, could move forward, while DHS funding would be addressed separately via a short-term continuing resolution to allow additional time for negotiations on immigration enforcement reforms.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has stressed that DHS funding will not advance without meaningful accountability measures. Democrats are pushing to codify requirements such as the use of body cameras, tighter warrant standards, and the termination of roaming enforcement operations. Trump has stated that bipartisan cooperation is “close” and emphasized his desire to avoid a shutdown. Senate Minority Whip John Thune echoed that talks are “moving in the right direction,” though no final agreement has been reached. The remaining point of contention centers on the duration of the temporary DHS funding, ranging from several weeks to one month.
2. Time Constraints and House-Side Risks
The House is adjourned until next Monday, meaning any Senate amendments would require another round of voting. Speaker Mike Johnson would face significant challenges in recalling lawmakers on short notice. Should funding lapse early Saturday, multiple agencies including the Pentagon, DHS, and the Department of Education would face partial shutdowns, potentially sending hundreds of thousands of federal employees on unpaid leave, echoing last year‘s 43-day shutdown. Delays in Q1 nonfarm payrolls data and distortions in inflation readings could further complicate the Federal Reserve’s policy trajectory.
3. Market Pricing and Recent Developments
Although shutdown probabilities have edged slightly lower, U.S. equity futures remain volatile. The S&P 500 has stabilized near the 5,700 support level, the VIX has retreated to around 25, gold is holding above USD 5,200, and Bitcoin has rebounded toward the USD 85,000 threshold. Markets have largely digested the inflationary impact of a 25% tariff on South Korean goods, while the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield remains stable at approximately 4.45%. Risk appetite has seen a brief rebound, but the political risk premium has yet to fully dissipate.
[Figure 2: VIX Index Data | Source: MacroMicro (M平方)]
The probability of an optimistic scenario has risen to 45%, reflecting a wider compromise window. Under this scenario, a short-term enforcement reform funding bill would pass, Q1 consumer resilience would remain intact, and the Federal Reserve would maintain a hawkish stance, potentially paving the way for the S&P 500 to challenge the 6,000 level.
Conversely, the probability of a pessimistic scenario stands at 55%. A breakdown in negotiations would trigger a government shutdown, push the inflation baseline higher by approximately 0.3 percentage points, reduce the likelihood of a soft landing to 25%, and sustain golds advance toward USD 5,100.
Against the backdrop of the final 48-hour shutdown countdown, gold pulled back from record highs above USD 5,200 on Thursday before swiftly rebounding and stabilizing near USD 5,400 per ounce. UBS has raised its long-term gold price target to USD 6,200, underscoring that profit-taking at elevated levels has failed to derail the structural inflow of diversified safe-haven demand.
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