CME Group has turned on around-the-clock trading for its cryptocurrency futures and options, opening the regulated derivatives markets through the weekend for the first time.
The change took effect on Friday, May 29, and lets clients trade the contracts at any hour, any day, on the CME Globex platform.
The shift ends a long-standing quirk of regulated crypto derivatives, which until now shut down on weekends and outside set daily hours even as the underlying tokens kept trading nonstop.
Weekend Debut Draws Modest Volume
Over the opening weekend, more than 7,200 crypto futures and options contracts traded, worth roughly $50 million in notional value, CME Group said. The company described the activity as evidence of immediate liquidity and demand, though it offered no comparison figure.
That total is small set against CME's weekday crypto business. The exchange's crypto derivatives averaged about 407,200 contracts a day this year, up 46% from a year earlier, when it signaled the round-the-clock plan and named May 29 as the start date.
CME first floated the idea late last year, pitching weekend access as a way to give traders confidence to transact whenever they choose.
"By offering continuous liquidity over the weekend, we are meeting client demand and bridging the gap between traditional regulated venues and the 24/7 nature of crypto assets," said Tim McCourt, Global Head of Equities, FX and Alternative Products at CME Group.
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Robinhood, Ripple Prime and Wedbush Back the Rollout
Several brokers and clearing firms lined up behind the launch. Robinhood, which began offering CME futures to its app users in early 2025, framed the weekend opening as a way for customers to react to price moves in real time.
"Crypto is a 24/7 asset class, and this rollout by CME Group marks the first time our users will be able to trade regulated futures contracts at any hour of the day, any day of the week," said JB Mackenzie, VP and GM of Futures and International at Robinhood Markets.
Ripple Prime, acting as a futures commission merchant for the contracts, and Wedbush Securities also said they would support weekend trading. Wedbush noted it had already been serving clients on a 24/7 basis for more than a year.
Exchanges Race to Close the Weekend Gap
CME is not the first to chase the always-on crowd, and its move lands in a market that has been drifting toward weekend trading for more than a year.
Coinbase told regulators in 2025 it planned to launch 24/7 Bitcoin and Ethereum futures in the US, part of a wider push that prompted the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to seek public comment on round-the-clock derivatives.
Retail brokers moved faster on the contracts-for-difference side. FOREX.com, a StoneX subsidiary, rolled out 24/7 crypto CFDs in 2025, following similar steps by Hantec Markets and CMC Markets, while ThinkMarkets had opened weekend crypto CFD trading earlier still.
What sets CME apart is the venue. The contracts are exchange-traded, centrally cleared US futures rather than CFDs or crypto-native perpetuals, so the weekend opening extends regulated, cleared infrastructure into hours that were previously dark. Not everyone is convinced the direction is settled.
The World Federation of Exchanges has argued that 24/7 trading is neither inevitable nor universally desirable, saying trading hours should stay with individual market operators.
Bitcoin Volatility Futures Join the Schedule
Alongside the broader change, CME said its Bitcoin Volatility futures are now also available to trade 24/7. The company described the contracts as a way to take a position on the 30-day implied volatility of bitcoin without betting on price direction.
The expansion caps a steady build-out that began when CME listed its first Bitcoin futures in 2017 and later added ether, Solana and XRP products.