Supreme Court Delays Trump Tariff Decision - Bitcoin Rockets Towards $97K

The U.S. Supreme Court delayed its ruling on the Trump tariffs, triggering a rally that pushed crypto market leader Bitcoin (BTC) above $97,200.

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The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to rule on one of the most consequential cases on its docket: the challenge to President Donald Trump’s sweeping global tariffs. 

The decision to delay, without announcing when the next batch of rulings will arrive, has intensified speculation across legal, political, and financial circles as markets brace for what could become a landmark definition of presidential power.

The dispute centers on Trump’s expansive use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), a 1977 law designed for national security crises, to justify a broad array of tariffs on global trading partners. Lower courts have previously ruled that the current president exceeded his authority in invoking emergency powers to impose tariffs that functioned more like long-term trade policy.

During Nov. 5 oral arguments, justices from both the conservative and liberal wings signaled deep skepticism about the administration’s legal rationale. Several questioned whether IEEPA authorizes such a sweeping reconfiguration of U.S. trade relationships without explicit congressional approval, with some references to the “Major Questions Doctrine.”

The Trump administration is appealing lower-court rulings that found the tariffs unlawful, and the Supreme Court’s eventual decision is expected to serve as a defining test of the limits of presidential emergency authority.

But on Wednesday, the Court decided to remain silent.

Missing Trump Tariff Ruling Has Global Stakes

The absence of a decision has only added to mounting uncertainty. 

A ruling against the tariffs would have immediate and far-reaching implications. Analysts warn the federal government could be forced to unwind months of tariff collections, a process Trump has previously described as a “complete mess,” citing concerns about the logistics of refunding hundreds of billions of dollars to importers.

Trade economists note that such refunds would be complex but technically feasible, with the Treasury expected to have the funds necessary to process them. Still, the administrative burden alone could create short-term disruptions across supply chains, pricing models, and corporate balance sheets.

Beyond the balance sheets, the ruling may reshape long-standing assumptions about executive power. If the Court finds that Trump exceeded his authority under IEEPA, it would send a strong signal that presidents cannot unilaterally overhaul trade policy under the guise of emergency action. 

Market Reactions: Crypto Rallies

In financial markets, the Court’s non-decision triggered a counterintuitive reaction: relief.

With no ruling issued and no immediate risk of forced tariff unwinding, investors pushed risk assets higher. 

Bitcoin rallied sharply following the Court’s release schedule update, soaring to above $97,200 as traders interpreted the delay as a sign that the status quo will hold a little longer.

The rest of the crypto market rallied off the development as well, with all of the other top 10 largest digital assets by market cap jumping in the hour after the development. 

That’s after fear of an adverse ruling had weighed on sentiment in recent weeks. 

Several macro traders warned that a surprise invalidation of Trump’s tariffs could trigger a period of volatility as markets digested the economic implications, from potential corporate tax adjustments to trade-linked inflation forecasts.

Prediction markets, which have been tracking the tariff litigation closely, had priced in a meaningful probability that the Court would strike down Trump’s authority. The absence of a ruling temporarily eased those expectations, though not the underlying uncertainty.