Author: Sean Lee, Co-founder, OSN
Compiler: AididiaoJP, Foresight News
Cryptocurrency has always operated on a different clock. Bitcoin doesn't close for the weekend, liquidity doesn't pause for holidays, and leverage isn't put on hold until clearing departments reopen on Monday morning. For years, this difference has distinguished crypto-native trading venues from regulated financial infrastructure.
Now, this boundary is shrinking. CME Group has announced that, subject to regulatory review, its regulated cryptocurrency futures and options will begin offering 24/7, full-week trading starting May 29th. Trading will run continuously on the CME Globex platform, with only a weekly maintenance window reserved. This move is far more than an extension of operating hours; it signifies traditional finance being pulled towards the market structure that cryptocurrency pioneered.
The harder question is not whether institutions can trade crypto around the clock—they already can, via offshore platforms, market makers, and liquidity providers. The harder question is: Can the regulated financial systems for clearing, custody, surveillance, privacy, and risk function properly in a market where leverage, information, and volatility never switch off?
Cryptocurrency's 24/7 derivatives era is not only making digital assets appear more institutional; it's forcing traditional finance to become more continuous.
Derivatives Are Becoming Cryptocurrency's Institutional Layer
The center of gravity in the cryptocurrency market has been shifting away from simple spot trading for years. Spot markets remain important, especially for retail fund flows, exchange liquidity, and ETF-related demand. But derivatives are now the primary venue where the institutional market manages risk, hedges exposures, prices volatility, and handles leverage.
This shift is clear in the data. CCData's January 2026 Exchange Report shows total centralized exchange volume reached $5.26 trillion, of which spot trading accounted for just $1.27 trillion. This means: derivatives constituted the majority of activity on centralized exchanges that month.
This matters because derivatives don't just reflect price discovery; in crypto, they increasingly *shape* price discovery. Futures, perpetual swaps, and options influence liquidity, funding rates, volatility expectations, and institutional positioning. When derivatives become the primary venue for market expression, trading hours are no longer just a matter of convenience; they become a structural issue.
This is why CME's move is significant. Regulated access is no longer just about listing Bitcoin or Ethereum contracts; it's about matching the operating rhythm of the assets themselves.
CME also noted that client demand for digital asset risk management drove record cryptocurrency futures and options nominal value volume to $3 trillion in 2025. This isn't a fringe market asking for extended access; it's a regulated derivatives market responding to institutional demand for more continuous risk management.
Continuous Trading Still Collides with Traditional Settlement Systems
The paradox is that continuous execution does not automatically mean continuous settlement. CME's model expands trading access but retains familiar institutional mechanisms. Trades on weekends and holidays will be assigned to the next business day's trade date, with clearing, settlement, and regulatory reporting still handled within the next business day framework.
This is the bridge traditional finance is trying to build: providing crypto-speed execution on top of regulated market infrastructure. It's a pragmatic compromise, but it also reveals a fact—crypto markets solved continuous trading first, then considered institutional controls; traditional finance is trying to do the reverse.
There are good reasons for this. Regulated derivatives markets cannot simply abandon reporting obligations, margin discipline, risk controls, and clearing protocols. Their core value proposition is precisely that institutions can trade within a transparent, supervised framework.
But 24/7 markets compress reaction times. A price move on Sunday morning can affect collateral requirements, counterparty exposure, hedge ratios, and liquidity conditions before traditional workflows fully resume. In this environment, operational preparedness itself becomes part of the market structure.
The next competitive advantage may lie not in who lists a product first, but in who can monitor risk, margin exposure, custody flows, and compliance anomalies in real-time without diluting the controls institutions rely on.
Transparency Is Becoming a Risk Surface
Cryptocurrency's "always-on" design also presents a second challenge: information also flows continuously. Public blockchains make settlement visible, auditable, and difficult to forge, which can reduce certain intermediary risks. But that same transparency exposes information flows that businesses typically treat as confidential.
When asked whether public blockchain transparency reduces systemic risk or creates new attack surfaces, Natalie Newson, Senior Blockchain Investigator at CertiK, said: "It does both. Settlement finality is publicly auditable, but front-running and MEV (Miner Extractable Value) remain persistent issues on blockchains."
This duality is central to institutional adoption. Public auditability is useful when markets need trust in settlement, but it's less straightforward when market participants expose treasury movements, collateral positions, payroll flows, or vendor payments in real-time.
Newson directly pointed out the business risk: "If your treasury wallet is known and on-chain, then counterparties, suppliers, and competitors can eventually watch your liquidity position in real-time."
For trading firms, this visibility impacts execution; for businesses, it exposes working capital strategies; for institutions, it turns settlement infrastructure into a source of market intelligence for competitors. In a 24/7 derivatives environment, information leaks don't wait for business hours either.
This goes beyond cybersecurity. The issue is no longer just hacks, exploits, or smart contract risk, but whether an always-on financial system can protect commercially sensitive behavior while preserving the auditability that blockchain infrastructure relies on.
Privacy Is Becoming Part of Market Infrastructure
Early crypto views treated transparency as a feature. This was true for open monetary networks and early DeFi systems; public verification helped build trust. But what works for speculative or experimental markets doesn't automatically translate to corporate finance.
Varun Kabra, Chief Growth Officer at Concordium, stated: "When enterprises try to use blockchain for real operations, transparency immediately becomes a structural constraint. Payroll, supplier contracts, treasury flows, pricing structures—these are not marketing data points."
This is the institutional bottleneck hidden beneath the 24/7 trading discussion. It's not enough for markets to stay open; the systems around them need to be able to prove identity, authorization, eligibility, and compliance without revealing too much information.
Kabra's broader point is that the next stage of adoption hinges on combining privacy with accountability. "The next stage of adoption won't come from arguing with regulators; it will come from building systems where privacy coexists with accountability."
This logic extends beyond financial markets. Concordium's Verified Fan Programme with the Danish Ice Hockey Union, which uses zero-knowledge proofs, and its Agentic Commerce initiative around verified AI agents demonstrate how users or automated agents can prove access rights or authorization without disclosing unnecessary personal data.
The sports example itself isn't the point; the infrastructure model is. As markets become more automated and continuous, identity and selective disclosure are becoming control-stack components as important as margin, custody, and surveillance.
Traditional Finance Is Learning to Run on Cryptocurrency's Clock
The most straightforward reading of CME's 24/7 move is that cryptocurrency is becoming more institutional. That's true, but incomplete. The more telling reading is this: Traditional finance is beginning to adopt parts of the crypto-native market structure because client demand, volatility, and liquidity have already moved in that direction.
This doesn't mean regulated finance will become decentralized—it won't. Institutions will still need clearinghouses, custodians, reporting systems, market surveillance, and legal accountability. What's changing is the tempo. Risk systems designed around market closes and weekday workflows now need to operate in markets where exposure evolves continuously.
This shift won't happen overnight. Execution times can expand faster than settlement systems, trading access can move faster than compliance architecture, and liquidity can move faster than privacy standards. The result is a hybrid market structure: crypto assets trading on crypto time, through increasingly regulated venues, while traditional finance rebuilds its control layers around a more continuous environment.
For investors, this means crypto derivatives are no longer just a trading product; they are becoming a test case for how traditional market infrastructure adapts to 24/7 finance.
The next phase of institutional crypto adoption will be defined not just by which assets get listed or which venues gain market share, but by whether the financial system can manage risk, identity, privacy, and settlement at the speed crypto markets already demand.





