Cheaper cash, higher risk as a key US funding rate suddenly collapses


The Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) just fell off a cliff. For most people outside financial circles, that means absolutely nothing. For markets, it’s seismic.

Borrowing money overnight in U.S. markets suddenly got much cheaper. And in the plumbing of the global financial system, that’s the equivalent of someone opening the floodgates a little wider.

A falling SOFR looks good on paper.

On paper, this appears to be a win for liquidity. Cheaper short-term financing suggests that banks can breathe easier, businesses can roll credit more affordably, and risk appetite can expand again. That’s historically good news for risk-on assets like Bitcoin and crypto.

But as analysis from End Game Macro points out, this isn’t just another statistical blip. The financial system quietly adjusted itself, and not by coincidence.

SOFR dropping like a stone
SOFR dropping like a stone

When the cost of borrowing against Treasuries drops this quickly, “it usually means there’s too much cash and not enough collateral, money chasing safety.” That imbalance doesn’t appear out of nowhere. It often stems from Treasury spending surges or institutions front-running a policy shift that has not yet been made public.

In simple terms? Liquidity got cheaper not because risk declined, but because someone (or something) turned the tap back on.

The quiet stimulus

Liquidity waves like this have a history of jolting risk assets higher. As End Game Macro points out, the same mechanics that helped soothe repo markets in 2019 and kept credit flowing after the 2023 bank failures are back in motion.

With a low SOFR, treasury dealers and leveraged funds suddenly face easier financing conditions, and that relief ripples into equities, tech, and increasingly, digital assets.

Bitcoin, in particular, tends to love this kind of stealth easing. When cash is abundant and interest rates ease unexpectedly, investors shift toward assets that thrive in a liquidity-rich environment.

As Ray Dalio recently warned, when policymakers stimulate “into a bubble,” risk markets often overshoot in the short term before reality catches up.

That dynamic is unfolding again: a liquidity jolt that lifts everything, disguising fragility as strength.

Control, not stability. We’ve seen this movie before. In 2020, the system was flooded in response to a crisis. In 2023, it quietly loosened again after regional bank tremors. Each time, calm returned through intervention rather than resilience. This time is no different. The fall in SOFR gives markets a shot of calm but signals that true normalization never arrived.

For traders and asset managers, that translates to lower funding costs and a temporary window of risk-on conditions. For retirees, savers, or small businesses financed at floating rates, it serves as another reminder that yield is fleeting and prices remain policy-dependent.

The illusion holds for now.

The immediate effect is that asset prices are buoyant, credit spreads are tightening, and market sentiment is turning optimistic again. Bitcoin and other risk assets are likely to catch a bid as SOFR liquidity returns to the market. However, this isn’t organic growth; it’s a revival of leverage.

As End Game Macro concludes, liquidity hides risk; it doesn’t erase it. A system that depends on ever-larger fixes becomes numb to fundamentals. Each injection of liquidity feels good while it lasts. Markets rally, confidence builds, and the illusion feels real. Until it doesn’t.

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Bitcoin Eyes $112K as Traders Expect US Government To Reopen This Week.


Key takeaways:

  • Bitcoin price rebounded as traders expected the US government shutdown to end this week.

  • Bitcoin market analysis sees a squeeze toward $112,000 after a bullish weekly close.

Bitcoin (BTC) rebounded overnight, rising as much as 5% to trade above $106,000 during the Asian trading session on Monday as bulls targeted sell liquidity. Traders expected that the US government shutdown would end soon, lifting risk sentiment. 

BTC/USD one-hour chart. Source: Cointelegraph/TradingView

Will the US government reopen this week?

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed the BTC/USD pair trading at $106,438 on Bitstamp.

On Sunday, US President Donald Trump announced that most Americans will receive a $2,000 “dividend” from the tariff revenue, sparking a late-weekend rebound.

Related: Bitcoin treasury bear market tipped to end as short seller backs off MSTR

This recovery is expected to continue this week following news that the US Senate has reached a bipartisan deal to end the longest government shutdown in American history, which has lasted 40 days so far. 

Following this news, prediction markets flipped sharply, with Polymarket bettors placing the odds of the government shutdown ending between Nov. 12 and Nov. 15 at 85%. 

Just 24 hours earlier, traders saw a 63% chance the shutdown would drag beyond Nov. 16 and into Thanksgiving.

Probability targets of when US government shutdown will end. Source: Polymarket

Odds on competitor platform Kalshi are similar, estimating a 90% chance the government shutdown will end on Friday, 44 days into the shutdown.

The end of the US government shutdown will free up billions in Treasury cash, injecting the market with liquidity and boosting risk assets, such as Bitcoin. 

“It’s going to be an interesting week. Government shutdown potentially close to ending,” said Bitcoin trader Daan Crypto Trades in an X post on X, adding:

“This would mean we’d see a boost back in liquidity and also get economic data like CPI and such soon.”

The last US government shutdown occurred between late December 2018 and late January 2019 in Trump’s first term. After it ended on Jan. 25, 2019, Bitcoin rose over 265% from $3,550 to $13,000 over the next five months.

Liquidity cluster sits above $112,000

Several traders eye a potential upward liquidity grab with ask orders building above $112,000. 

The latest data from monitoring resource CoinGlass showed the price eating away liquidity around $106,000, with the bulk of interest clustered above $112,000.

Bitcoin liquidation heatmap. Source: CoinGlass

The bulk of the liquidity is sitting between $111,500 and $115,000. If the $115,000 level is broken, it could spark a liquidation squeeze, forcing short sellers to close positions and driving prices toward $117,000, which is the next major liquidity cluster.

“BTC is at resistance, back testing the broken year-long trendline,” said analyst AlphaBTC in an X post on Monday. 

An accompanying chart showed an “obvious area to target is where the liquidity is resting above the early November consolidation” around $112,000, the analyst said.

“$110K-$112K is the area to watch if Bitcoin can push through $107K resistance.” 

BTC/USD four-hour chart. Source: AlphaBTC

As Cointelegraph reported, Bitcoin’s bullish weekly close above the 50-week SMA increased the odds of BTC price reaching $112,000 or higher.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.