HomeCoinsBitcoinAre 24/7 CME Bitcoin futures a volatility cure — or a new...

Are 24/7 CME Bitcoin futures a volatility cure — or a new leverage trap?

Wall Street got to trade Bitcoin around the clock just in time to watch the market fall apart. CME Group launched 24/7 trading for its crypto futures and options on May 29, and over the first weekend, more than 7,200 contracts changed hands, worth roughly $50 million in notional value.

Within days, Bitcoin had slid below $70,000 for the first time in two months, and the market had to absorb one of its sharpest deleveraging waves of the year, with almost $10 billion in long-futures liquidations over a single week.

Could CME’s always-on market become the volatility equalizer Bitcoin has needed for years, giving institutions regulated tools to hedge through the exact windows that used to belong to offshore exchanges, perpetual futures, and retail leverage? Possibly, but the first week of 24/7 trading left us only with more questions.

Wall Street opened its weekend hedge window in the middle of a leverage shakeout, and it remains genuinely unclear whether professional access calmed weekend crypto risk or simply made it trade faster.

CME crypto futures and options now trade continuously on Globex, with a weekly maintenance window, while weekend and holiday trades carry the following business day’s trade date, clearing, and regulatory reporting.

As CryptoSlate reported ahead of the launch, execution goes 24/7 while the back office stays tied to business days, which means the famous CME gap effectively dies, and the quality of liquidity and Monday post-trade processing become the biggest problems.

Given the amount of money that changes hands when it comes to crypto futures, it’s no wonder CME jumped onto the 24/7 bandwagon. CME’s crypto futures and options generated $3 trillion in notional volume in 2025, and 2026 average daily volume reached 407,200 contracts, up 46% year over year, with average daily open interest of 335,400 contracts, up 7%.

Read More:  Elon Musk's SpaceX IPO fever sparks $1 billion crypto bet before Nasdaq debut

Tim McCourt, CME’s global head of equities, FX, and alternative products, said the company was “bridging the gap between regulated venues and the always-on nature of crypto assets.”

Launching 24/7 futures in a deleveraging market

The equalizer thesis could have played out in CME’s favor if it weren’t for the volatility.

The first weekend’s $50 million in notional volume looks respectable until you set it against the broader derivatives market. CME Bitcoin open interest had been rolling over since late May, sliding from the 115,000 to 120,000 BTC area toward roughly 100,000 BTC by June 9, and open interest across crypto exchanges fell sharply over the same stretch. Positioning was shrinking, leverage was being forced out, and the new weekend trading window opened directly into that unwind.

The liquidation data showed a concrete sequence of forced exits. Between June 1 and June 5, daily liquidations repeatedly spiked toward and above the $1 billion mark, with the worst days approaching $1.8 billion, and long positions dominated the wreckage.

Bloomberg reported nearly $1.5 billion in liquidations in a single 24-hour window on June 2 as Bitcoin sank to a two-month low, the heaviest forced selling we’ve seen since February.

CryptoSlate has covered this before: falling prices combined with collapsing open interest usually signal positions being closed through liquidation rather than choice, and that’s the pattern the first 24/7 week produced.

The result is a far more interesting natural experiment than a clean institutional debut would have been, because the new weekend market got tested under stress from its very first session.

The volatility we’ve seen in options won’t help in the coming weeks and months either. Deribit’s expiry calendar shows large notional clusters around June 26, Sept. 25, and Dec. 25, with the max pain for key expiries near the $75,000 level.

Read More:  CLARITY Act moves to a fight between cops and coders

Investing.com reported that the May 29 Deribit expiry alone involved about $7.5 billion in BTC and ETH options notional, including $6.2 billion tied to Bitcoin contracts, with the spot price trading below its $75,000 max-pain level at the time.

Max pain is a positioning map, a snapshot of where options sellers face the least payout pressure. Traders watch it because strike concentration and dealer hedging can pull attention toward certain price zones around big expiries, and that influence tends to fade once the expiry passes.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

Daily signals, zero noise.

Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.