CME launches 24/7 futures trading for XRP on May 29
The world's largest derivatives exchange is eliminating weekend closures for its entire crypto futures suite, starting at 4:00 p.m. CT on May 29.
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Add us on Google by Editorial Team May. 26, 2026CME Group is flipping the switch to round-the-clock trading for its crypto futures products, including XRP, starting May 29 at 4:00 p.m. CT. The move effectively kills the last remaining gap between traditional derivatives markets and the never-sleeping world of digital assets.
Think of it this way: crypto markets have always been a 24/7 operation, but the biggest regulated derivatives exchange on the planet was still taking weekends off. That mismatch created blind spots for institutional traders who couldn’t hedge or adjust positions when weekend volatility hit. Now that gap closes entirely.
What’s actually changing
The 24/7 trading expansion doesn’t just cover XRP. It applies across CME’s full digital asset futures and options lineup, including Bitcoin, Ether, Solana, and a growing roster of altcoin contracts covering ADA, LINK, XLM, SUI, and AVAX.
For XRP specifically, CME will offer continuous trading on both its standard XRP futures and Micro XRP contracts. The CFTC self-certification for the program was filed on May 13, confirming the launch date and including a market-maker program that extends through January 31, 2027.
That market-maker incentive structure matters. Here’s the thing: liquidity doesn’t just appear because you keep the lights on longer. CME is actively paying participants to provide tight spreads and consistent order book depth during what would have previously been off-hours. It’s a deliberate strategy to make sure 3 a.m. on a Sunday doesn’t feel like a ghost town compared to Tuesday afternoon.
CME Group first announced its intentions to go 24/7 on February 19, framing it as a natural evolution of its digital asset offerings. The exchange has been methodically building out its crypto derivatives infrastructure over the past year, and continuous trading is the capstone of that effort.
AdvertisementXRP futures have already proven their appetite
CME’s XRP futures first began trading on May 18-19, 2025. Options on those contracts followed in October 2025. In the roughly twelve months since launch, the numbers tell a compelling story about institutional demand.
Cumulative XRP futures trading volume in the first year reached 1.32 million contracts, representing $62.87 billion in notional value. By September 2025, just a few months after launch, the contracts had already generated over 370,000 contracts valued at $16.2 billion.
For context, $62.87 billion in notional volume across a single year for a relatively new altcoin futures product is significant. It signals that institutional traders aren’t just dabbling in XRP exposure. They’re building it into their regular strategies.
The progression from futures to options to 24/7 trading follows a familiar CME playbook. Bitcoin futures launched in 2017, options came later, and the exchange has steadily expanded access over the years. XRP is now running through that same lifecycle at a compressed pace, reflecting both broader institutional appetite for crypto and CME’s confidence in the product’s viability.
Why institutions care about continuous trading
Look, the crypto-native crowd has had 24/7 trading on unregulated exchanges since day one. The significance here is specifically about regulated access.
Institutional players, think pension funds, asset managers, and hedge funds, generally can’t park client money on offshore crypto exchanges. They need CFTC-regulated venues with proper clearing infrastructure. CME provides that, but until now, those institutions were stuck watching weekend price action from the sidelines, unable to react through their preferred (and compliance-approved) trading channels.
The practical impact is most obvious in hedging. A fund holding spot XRP through a regulated vehicle couldn’t adjust its futures hedge on a Saturday when prices moved 8%. That’s not a hypothetical scenario. Weekend gaps in crypto have historically produced some of the sharpest moves in the market, and institutional traders were essentially flying blind during those windows.
Continuous trading also changes the calculus for algorithmic and systematic strategies. Many quantitative funds avoid instruments with trading gaps because those gaps introduce execution risk that’s difficult to model. Removing that friction could unlock a new tier of institutional capital that was previously sitting on the sidelines.
The competitive angle is worth noting too. CME isn’t operating in a vacuum. Crypto-native derivatives platforms have been offering perpetual contracts around the clock for years. By matching those hours on a regulated venue, CME is making a direct play for volume that might otherwise flow to less-regulated competitors.
The market-maker program running through January 2027 suggests CME expects it will take time to build deep liquidity across all hours. Early trading sessions during previously closed windows might show thinner order books and wider spreads. Traders should watch for how quickly those off-peak hours develop real depth, because that will determine whether 24/7 trading on CME becomes genuinely useful or just technically available.
For XRP holders specifically, the availability of continuous regulated futures trading adds another layer of price discovery and hedging capability. Whether that translates to reduced volatility or increased speculative activity is an open question, but it undeniably marks XRP’s continued maturation as an institutional-grade asset class within traditional financial infrastructure.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.