Bitcoin keeps trading when Wall Street stops. Independence Day turns that design choice into a market demonstration.
Official exchange calendars list all NYSE markets as closed Friday, July 3, while Nasdaq lists U.S. equity and options markets as closed for the Independence Day observance. Meanwhile, Bitcoin is available to trade freely on hundreds (if not thousands) of exchanges, wallets, and apps 24/7/365.
The setup makes the “freedom money” moniker fit quite nicely. Bitcoin does not need a bank branch, a U.S. exchange session, or an ETF trading day to keep settling globally. But the same independence leaves price discovery running while some of the largest U.S. institutional access channels are offline.
The root problem with conventional currency is all the trust that’s required to make it work. The central bank must be trusted not to debase the currency, but the history of fiat currencies is full of breaches of that trust.
Satoshi Nakamoto wrote that passage in a February 2009 P2P Foundation post, and the quoted wording still explains why Bitcoin advocates reach for Independence Day language.
The phrase “freedom money” appears in Bitcoin writing at least as early as Hector Rosenkrans’ July 4, 2020 essay on Bitcoin and the First Amendment, and later gained a broader human-rights framing through writers such as Alex Gladstein.
The ETF pause
The holiday benchmark, however, is less philosophical than mechanical. The latest Bitcoin ETF flows showed U.S. spot Bitcoin funds swinging from $222 million in net outflows on June 30 and $296 million in outflows on July 1 to $223.5 million in inflows on July 2. Then the U.S. market holiday removed the normal exchange-traded fund window just as Bitcoin itself kept moving.
The same feature now does two jobs. Holders and global traders still have access when NYSE and Nasdaq markets are closed. Yet ETF creations and redemptions, U.S. equity market liquidity, and much of traditional market-making capacity are paused or reduced.
Banking is also more complicated than a simple on-off switch. Federal Reserve Financial Services says in its holiday schedule that Federal Reserve Banks and branches are open the preceding Friday when a holiday falls on Saturday, while Independence Day processing has a scheduled pause late July 3 and resumes July 5. In practice, payment and banking services move onto holiday schedules while Bitcoin’s settlement clock keeps running.
That leaves a cleaner answer than either side of the debate usually wants. Bitcoin’s always-on design is a real advantage during a U.S. holiday, but it can also become a holiday liquidity trap if price moves accelerate while ETF buyers and traditional liquidity providers are away.
The weekend test is whether BTC can maintain orderly price discovery when the very rails that helped institutionalize the asset are absent to absorb the move.
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