CME Group says it will move its regulated crypto futures and options to 24 hours a day, seven days a week trading on May 29, pending regulatory review.
CME Group announced that its cryptocurrency futures and options will soon be available for continuous trading, expanding access beyond traditional market hours. The rollout is scheduled to begin on May 29, as long as regulators sign off.
The exchange framed the move as a response to rising demand for regulated tools that let investors manage crypto exposure at any time.
CME Group, widely known as the world’s largest derivatives exchange, is preparing to extend trading hours for its regulated cryptocurrency futures and options so clients can trade around the clock. The contracts will trade continuously on CME Globex, with at least a two hour maintenance period each week over the weekend.
CME executive Tim McCourt tied the decision directly to market demand and the exchange’s growth in crypto derivatives activity.
Tim McCourt said:
CME also outlined how trade processing will be handled during weekends and holidays. Beginning Friday, May 29 at 4:00 p.m. CT, trading will be available continuously, but transactions executed from Friday evening through Sunday evening will carry a trade date of the following business day.
CME said clearing, settlement, and regulatory reporting for that weekend activity will also be processed the following business day. This approach keeps the trading experience always available while maintaining standard post trade workflows.
The expanded schedule will support trading in Bitcoin and Ether futures and options, and CME has also highlighted other crypto coverage within its derivatives lineup. The exchange currently offers futures and options tied to Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, and Solana, and it has continued adding new contracts as demand broadens.
CME has steadily expanded its crypto derivatives catalog since launching Bitcoin futures in 2017 and Ether futures several years later. More recently, it added contracts tied to Cardano, Chainlink, and Stellar, which could also benefit from the always on schedule once implemented.
The push for regulated crypto trading venues comes as activity patterns in crypto continue to differ from traditional markets. Spot crypto trading often peaks outside standard United States business hours, and CME’s move is designed to meet that reality with regulated instruments built for hedging and exposure management.
I see this as a big step toward making crypto feel like a true global asset class inside traditional finance. In my experience, the biggest pain point for institutions is not just volatility, it is the time mismatch between crypto markets and legacy trading hours. If CME delivers 24/7 access with the same regulated structure clients expect, it could make hedging far more practical and reduce the awkward timing issues traders deal with on weekends. I also think the psychological impact matters. When a venue like CME adapts to crypto’s schedule, it sends a message that the market is maturing, even if the policy landscape is still moving.
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