Bitcoin steadies in thin trade during U.S. holiday

Bitcoin steadies in thin trade during U.S. holiday

Yes, Bitcoin trades 24/7, so holidays can spark volatility

U.S. banks, offices, and stock exchanges pause on federal holidays, but Bitcoin’s market remains continuously open. On a recent holiday Monday, low-volume conditions coincided with rapid long-and-short liquidations, as reported by Cointelegraph, highlighting how reduced participation can translate into sharper, short-lived price moves.

This pattern reflects a structural contrast: a global, always-on crypto venue interacting with temporarily offline U.S. market counterparts. When large institutional players step back, thinner order books and wider spreads can make Bitcoin more sensitive to modest flows.

Thin liquidity on U.S. holidays amplifies BTC price swings

Analysts have long flagged U.S. holiday periods, such as Thanksgiving or long weekends, for thinner liquidity and, at times, modified trading schedules in related venues, which can heighten intraday swings, according to Blockchain.News. In these sessions, spot markets may react more to global macro headlines and positioning than to routine institutional flows.

Industry executives often underscore the structural backdrop before drawing conclusions about price behavior. Michael Saylor, executive chairman of MicroStrategy, said, “Bitcoin never takes holidays.”

Macro data can still set the tone even when Wall Street is shut. For the Presidents’ Day week, four U.S. indicators, including FOMC minutes and PCE inflation, were flagged as potential volatility catalysts for Bitcoin, as reported by BeInCrypto.

Holiday closures in traditional markets also shape context. U.S. stock exchanges were closed for Presidents’ Day and reopened Tuesday, while Bitcoin slipped during the lull in activity, according to TS2.Tech.

CME futures and ETF flows shape holiday market dynamics

CME Group’s Bitcoin futures operate on U.S. market schedules, so full closures or modified holiday hours can create timing gaps relative to 24/7 spot markets. When futures reopen after a holiday pause, price alignment with an always-trading spot market can be choppy, especially if liquidity remains thin.

U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs settle on exchange hours, so their primary creation/redemption windows close on holidays. Research around year-end and holiday periods shows that ETF activity can turn subdued or even see net outflows, while offshore spot trading continues, an effect visible in flows coverage that included the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), as reported by Traders Union.

At the time of this writing, Bitcoin hovered near the $68,000 level amid holiday-thinned conditions, and crypto market liquidations were cited at roughly $261 million in one update, as reported by Benzinga. Such snapshots illustrate how leverage and sparse order books can interact to amplify otherwise modest moves.

In practice, holiday sessions tend to reward preparation over prediction. Watching order book depth, spreads, funding rates, and the macro calendar helps frame risk; still, outcomes remain path-dependent, and exceptions to these tendencies do occur.

Disclaimer:

The content on The CCPress is provided for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry inherent risks. Please consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
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