Government Mechanics
Government Shutdown
A funding lapse that furloughs federal workers and pauses non-essential operations until Congress acts.
Also known as: Funding Lapse, Shutdown
- What it is
- A government shutdown occurs when appropriations lapse and agencies must halt non-essential functions. Federal employees are furloughed or work without pay, and many services stop. It ends when Congress passes funding.
- How it moves markets
- Shutdowns delay contract awards, permit reviews, IPO approvals, and data releases, creating uncertainty that can pressure gov-exposed stocks and broad risk sentiment. Some services (SEC filings, agency reviews) stall, delaying catalysts. Markets often shrug off short lapses but price prolonged ones.
- Track record
- Prolonged shutdowns have historically delayed SEC processing and federal reviews, pushing back catalysts for affected filers and contractors.
- Who it affects
- Gov-services and regulatory-dependent names like LDOS, SAIC; broad exposure via SPY.
- Related terms
- continuing-resolution, appropriations, debt-ceiling
- Common misread
- Historically markets have looked through short shutdowns; assuming automatic broad selloffs often disappoints.
- Watch out for
- Back-pay and post-shutdown catch-up can blunt the earnings hit, so the fundamental damage is often smaller than headlines imply.
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.
Know what's coming before your patients ask for it.
New actives, device launches, and the FDA calls that change what you can offer — distilled into a two-minute brief, twice a week. Money Racket Pro.
Go Pro · $40/mo