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Recently, I noticed a pretty interesting change in market structure. The CME announced that starting May 29, it will launch 24-hour, around-the-clock trading of cryptocurrency futures and options—behind this, in fact, lies a long-standing pain point for institutional investors.
Speaking of it, the crypto market itself has always operated 24/7, but CME’s derivatives trading closes on Friday evening and only reopens on Sunday. This creates the well-known CME gap phenomenon—an actual price vacuum between the Friday close and the Sunday open. During this time, institutional investors are completely unable to hedge, leaving them fully exposed to the violent volatility over the weekend. This flaw of dark pool trading has long troubled professional capital.
Tim McCourt, global equities and foreign exchange head at CME, revealed that last year CME’s trading volume in crypto derivatives reached $3 trillion. The demand is there, so they ultimately decided to fill this gap. I agree with the view of Bobby Ong, co-founder of CoinGecko— the most intense price swings happen precisely when institutional trading venues are in dark pool trading mode. CME’s move is essentially confirming this phenomenon.
From the perspective of Adam Haeems, head of asset management at Tesseract Group, this closes the final structural gap between the native crypto market and regulated derivatives infrastructure. Institutional capital flows are no longer interrupted by weekend shutdowns, which directly reduces the risk and cost of holding positions across weekends. Weekend volatility is precisely the direct consequence of this kind of mismatch, and continuous trading helps compress the magnitude of price swings.
However, Haeems also gave a realistic reminder—simply keeping the trading venue open cannot guarantee deep liquidity. On weekends, the extent to which institutional trading desks take on risk may not be as aggressive as during weekdays. So, the improvement is real, but it will be gradual. For retail traders, the most direct benefit is that Monday price gaps will be reduced, and traders who are watching the CME futures structure should clearly feel the weakening of the signals.
Maxime Seiler, CEO of STS Digital, offered an interesting angle— as other markets are closed, Bitcoin may increasingly act as an alternative indicator of macro risk. During dark pool trading hours, when the stock market and bond market are closed, Bitcoin becomes a tool that reflects global events in real time. This is a trend shift worth paying attention to.
As for specific coins, XRP has recently edged higher, driven by strong trading volume and accumulation by large holders. However, overall it is still within a broader downtrend, and a sustained bullish reversal has not yet been confirmed. Rakuten has integrated XRP into a payments app aimed at 44 million users, including features such as earning points and spending XRP— a major step for real-world adoption in Japan. From a technical perspective, traders are watching $1.37 as a key turning point; only a break above the $1.40 to $1.42 range can show stronger upward momentum. The current XRP price is around $1.36, and falling below $1.32 to $1.30 could cause the breakout to fail.
Overall, CME’s move marks a further deepening of traditional institutions’ participation in the crypto market. As the restrictions on dark pool trading are broken, the market’s overall liquidity structure will undergo significant changes, with far-reaching implications for both institutions and retail traders.