CME Group has launched 24/7 trading for cryptocurrency futures and options, ending the traditional weekend closure that left institutional traders unable to react to crypto market moves throu
CME Group has launched 24/7 trading for cryptocurrency futures and options, ending the traditional weekend closure that left institutional traders unable to react to crypto market moves through listed derivatives from Friday evening to Sunday evening.
The exchange operator said on June 1, 2026 that expanded hours went live on Friday, May 29, covering futures and options on Bitcoin, Ether, Solana and XRP. Bitcoin Volatility futures also became available for around-the-clock trading starting June 1.
More than 7,200 cryptocurrency futures and options contracts traded over the inaugural weekend, representing approximately $50 million in notional value.
CME launch weekend 7,200+ Crypto futures and options contracts traded across CME's first weekend of 24/7 access, with about $50 million in notional value.
What CME Group's 24/7 crypto futures move changes
Before the switch, CME's crypto derivatives followed the same weekday schedule as its broader Globex platform, shutting down Friday evening and reopening Sunday evening. That gap created a mismatch: crypto spot markets traded continuously while the largest U.S.-regulated futures venue sat idle for roughly 48 hours each week.
The new schedule runs nearly nonstop. CME's crypto contracts now trade 24/7 except for a two-minute weekday maintenance window from 4:00 p.m. to 4:02 p.m. CT, Monday through Friday, and a Saturday maintenance period from 2:00 a.m. to 4:00 a.m. CT.
All weekend and holiday trades carry the following business day's trade date. Clearing, settlement and regulatory reporting for those sessions are processed on the next business day as well.
Tim McCourt, CME Group's Global Head of Financial and OTC Products, said the shift represents "the next natural evolution for the marketplace."
"Shifting to an always-on model represents the next natural evolution for the marketplace."
Tim McCourt, CME Group
Why nonstop futures access matters for crypto traders
The weekend closure had long produced the so-called "CME gap," a price discrepancy between Friday's close and Sunday's reopen that traders watched closely. CoinDesk described the move as ending the traditional closure that created this widely tracked phenomenon in bitcoin futures.
For institutional hedgers and active traders, that gap represented real risk. Weekend volatility in spot crypto markets could move prices significantly, but participants had no way to adjust listed futures positions until Sunday evening. The new schedule removes that blind spot.
Bitcoin traded near $66,944 as the 24/7 shift took effect, down 3.26% over 24 hours, a reminder of the kind of price swings that can occur at any hour. The broader crypto market carried a total capitalization near $2.4 trillion, with the Fear & Greed Index sitting at 11, deep in "Extreme Fear" territory.
Market snapshot $66,944 Bitcoin's 24-hour move was -3.26% in the supplied research data, giving readers immediate price context for CME's around-the-clock crypto futures shift.
That kind of backdrop, with bitcoin falling below $66,000 amid broad risk-off sentiment, is exactly the type of weekend scenario where futures hedging access would matter most.
What CME Group's decision signals for crypto market structure
The launch arrived alongside fresh regulatory backing. On May 29, 2026, the CFTC issued a staff advisory on 24/7 trading, clearing and settlement. The agency's divisions explicitly stated that derivatives referencing crypto assets may be well-suited to round-the-clock trading because of their digital infrastructure and global reach.
That regulatory endorsement matters. CME is not simply extending hours for convenience; it is aligning a CFTC-regulated venue with the reality that crypto's underlying markets never close. The move narrows the structural gap between traditional derivatives infrastructure and the always-on nature of digital assets.
The expansion also broadens the product set available around the clock. With Bitcoin, Ether, Solana, XRP and Bitcoin Volatility futures all included, CME now offers continuous access to derivatives on several of the assets drawing the most institutional product development this year.
Whether the inaugural weekend's 7,200-plus contracts grow into meaningful continuous volume will depend on how quickly clearing firms and trading desks staff for weekend coverage. But the infrastructure is now in place, and as regulatory frameworks evolve around digital asset markets globally, CME's move sets a precedent that other regulated venues will face pressure to match.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
Read original article on coinlineup.com