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Just realized something interesting about how crypto actually trades. Everyone says Bitcoin and crypto do trade 24/7, right? But there's been this weird gap in the institutional side that most retail traders probably don't even notice.
CME, the big derivatives platform that Wall Street uses, is finally fixing something that's been broken for years. Starting May 29, they're going 24/7 with crypto futures and options. Sounds simple, but it's actually a pretty big deal.
Here's the thing - while spot crypto markets never close, CME's derivatives shut down Friday evening and reopen Sunday. That gap creates these wild price swings over weekends when institutions can't hedge. Tim McCourt from CME mentioned they hit $3 trillion in notional volume last year on crypto derivatives, so there's serious institutional money moving through their platform.
Bobby Ong from CoinGecko actually studied this. He says the most violent price moves happen precisely when institutional venues go dark. Those liquidation cascades on weekends aren't random - they're a predictable consequence of thin liquidity when the big players can't trade. So technically Bitcoin does trade 24/7 on spot markets, but the institutional infrastructure wasn't matching that reality.
What changes now is that institutional flows won't pause anymore. Adam Haeems at Tesseract Group pointed out this closes one of the last structural gaps between crypto-native markets and regulated derivatives. Weekend volatility has basically been a side effect of this mismatch. When continuous trading kicks in, you should see tighter spreads and less dramatic price action.
That said, it won't eliminate big swings entirely. Institutional desks might not staff weekend risk-taking at the same intensity as weekdays, so the improvement will be real but gradual. For retail traders though, this could mean fewer of those jarring Monday morning gaps that have historically filled over 90% of the time.
One more angle worth considering - Maxime Seiler from STS Digital mentioned that Bitcoin could increasingly function as a macro risk hedge over weekends when other markets are closed. With everything else shut down, crypto could become the tool institutions use to price in global events in real time.
So does Bitcoin trade 24/7? Technically yes on spot markets, but the institutional infrastructure is finally catching up to make that actually meaningful.