Government Mechanics
Continuing Resolution
A stopgap that keeps the government funded at prior-year levels when Congress misses its appropriations deadline.
Also known as: CR, Stopgap Funding
- What it is
- A continuing resolution is temporary legislation extending existing funding levels to avoid a lapse in appropriations. It typically freezes spending at the prior year's rate and blocks new-start programs. CRs can last days or months.
- How it moves markets
- A CR removes shutdown risk short term but freezes new program starts, delaying fresh contract awards and ramp-ups. That is a headwind for contractors counting on growth line items. Markets often relieve on a CR passing but discount delayed new business.
- Track record
- Government-services and defense stocks tend to catch a relief bid when a CR averts a shutdown, even as new-start delays cap upside.
- Who it affects
- Gov-services and defense names like LDOS, SAIC, BAH, GD.
- Related terms
- appropriations, government-shutdown, debt-ceiling
- Common misread
- A CR is not a win for growth; it caps new starts, so treating it as bullish for ramping programs misreads the mechanics.
- Watch out for
- CRs often stack, so the resolution can itself become a recurring source of uncertainty.
General information, not medical advice. Ingredient effects vary by formulation, concentration, and skin. Patch-test new actives and consult a qualified provider before starting prescription ingredients.
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