Bitcoin traders have long relied on a particular feature of the futures market: the CME gap. For years, CME Group’s Bitcoin futures contracts only traded at specific times, closing on Friday afternoon and reopening on Sunday evening. This gap often created predictable price movements as spot markets continued to operate while futures contracts were suspended. But that era is ending now.
CME Group has officially moved to 24-hour trading. Starting this Friday, Bitcoin futures and options on Globex, its electronic platform, will operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The only break is a one-hour maintenance window between 10:00 p.m. and 11:00 p.m. UTC every Sunday. Weekend trades still clear the next business day, but the structural inefficiency that defined Bitcoin’s weekend gaps has largely disappeared.
The change is more than technical. For years, closing on Friday until reopening on Sunday created one of Bitcoin’s most recognizable inefficiencies. Traders regularly position themselves around “gap filling,” exploiting the lag between CME’s limited hours and the continuous spot market. Weekend liquidity was low and moves were often exaggerated. Volatility would increase sharply upon Sunday’s reopening at 11 p.m. UTC, as futures recalibrate to where the spot had drifted.
What weekend shift means
With the CME maintenance window now scheduled for this same Sunday slot, some old characters may persist. Liquidity will decrease as Globex goes offline, and the 11 p.m. reopening could still see brief bursts of volatility. But the broader dynamic has now largely disappeared. By aligning futures trading with the native 24/7 bitcoin market, CME reduces weekend risk premiums and improves hedging efficiency. Asset managers, hedge funds and corporate desks can manage exposure on an ongoing basis instead of waiting for markets to reopen.
Yet CME remains behind where liquidity actually lies. Cole Kennelly, founder and CEO of Volmex Labs, told CoinDesk that BlackRock’s IBIT Bitcoin ETF options hold approximately $27 billion to $30 billion in open interest. This dwarfs CME Bitcoin futures options, which range between $800 million and $900 million. This imbalance partly explains why the BVIV-US Index (BVUS), derived from the IBIT deeper options market, has become the preferred institutional benchmark for Bitcoin volatility.
Offshore perpetual futures and ETF options will likely maintain their dominance for now. But CME’s move to 24/7 trading removes a critical sticking point.
Three gaps remain unresolved
Despite the change, three CME gaps are still open, all created this year. Two of them are above the current Bitcoin spot price of around $73,000: one formed in late January at almost $80,000 and another at around $78,500. The third remains open below market, at just under $70,000. These gaps may eventually close, but the forced volatility of reopening that once defined the weekends is now a thing of the past.
![]()



