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CFTC Blocks CME’s 24/7 Crude Oil Futures Plan One Day…

by admin July 10, 2026
July 10, 2026

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission will stay a self-certified CME crude oil futures contract that would have allowed around-the-clock trading as soon as July 10, escalating a dispute over whether traditional energy derivatives should move toward the 24/7 model already common in crypto markets. The CFTC said CME filed to self-certify the contract on July 8 despite an active public comment process on 24/7 futures trading and related risks in energy markets. The CFTC announced the stay on July 9.

The move matters because crude oil is not just another listed product. It is one of the world’s most important macro contracts, used by producers, refiners, airlines, hedge funds, CTAs, retail traders and market makers to manage risk around geopolitical shocks, inventory data, OPEC decisions and U.S. policy announcements. Extending that market to continuous trading could change liquidity patterns, weekend risk management and surveillance obligations across the futures industry.

CFTC Says CME Moved Too Fast

The CFTC said it issued a request for comment on June 22 seeking public input on whether standard futures contracts should be extended to 24/7 trading, including crude oil. The same request also asked for views on perpetual contracts referencing physically delivered or storable energy commodities such as crude oil. The Federal Register notice set a July 27 comment deadline, meaning CME’s July 8 self-certification came while the review process was still open.

Chairman Michael S. Selig said the agency was still assessing whether 24/7 futures trading across asset classes is consistent with statutory Core Principles under the Commodity Exchange Act.

“As I’ve said repeatedly, we do not take a one-size-fits all approach to 24/7 trading. CME’s decision to disregard the Commission’s effort to undertake a reasoned analysis of the critical issues at stake is wholly inappropriate and necessitates Commission action to stay the certification. The Commission encourages exchanges to work with agency staff to address potential legal issues before seeking to list novel contracts,” Selig said.

Self-Certification Becomes The Flashpoint

The dispute turns on how exchanges bring new products to market. CFTC rules allow exchanges to list contracts by self-certification under Regulation 40.2 or to seek formal Commission review and approval under Regulation 40.3. CME made separate filings under both provisions, according to the agency.

By staying the 40.2 filing, the CFTC is preventing CME from launching the contract before the Commission completes its review. The agency said it will conduct a full review under its 40.3 authority to determine whether the product complies with the Commodity Exchange Act and CFTC regulations.

That distinction is important for market operators. Self-certification allows speed, but it also puts pressure on the regulator to intervene quickly if it believes a product raises unresolved legal or market structure questions. In this case, the CFTC acted because the product could have gone live as soon as the following day.

Why 24/7 Energy Trading Is Different From Crypto

CME has already moved toward continuous trading in digital assets. Its first 24/7 crypto futures weekend drew 7,200 contracts and $50 million in notional volume, showing that regulated derivatives venues are trying to adapt to markets where the underlying asset never closes. FinanceFeeds has also covered how CME’s around-the-clock crypto derivatives were designed to reduce weekend price gaps in Bitcoin and Ether markets.

Crude oil is different. Energy futures are tied to physical supply chains, storage constraints, delivery mechanisms, refinery demand, shipping disruptions and government decisions. A weekend price move in crude can reflect real geopolitical developments, but it can also occur when staffing, liquidity and surveillance coverage are thinner than during standard trading hours.

The CFTC’s June request for comment asked for data on price reliability, market integrity, clearing, settlement, customer protection and the effect on underlying physical energy markets. Those questions go beyond whether traders want more hours. They go to whether the market can support continuous trading without degrading price discovery or increasing operational risk.

The Fight Comes Amid A Wider Perps And Prediction Markets Battle

The stay also lands in the middle of a broader fight over how quickly U.S. derivatives markets should adopt structures associated with crypto and prediction markets. CME has sued the CFTC over the agency’s approval of perpetual futures in the U.S., while Kalshi has pushed further into products tied to gold, FX and energy. That dispute has already raised questions about whether new contract designs should be treated as futures, swaps or something else.

For CME, the commercial logic is clear. Retail traders increasingly expect markets to react in real time, especially when geopolitical events move crude, gold and crypto outside traditional hours. CFD brokers have also pushed 24/7 gold trading as client demand shifts toward continuous access. For the CFTC, the question is whether regulated futures markets can extend access without importing the weakest features of offshore crypto trading, including fragmented liquidity, leverage stress and uneven customer protection.

Takeaway

The CFTC’s decision does not kill CME’s 24/7 crude oil futures plan, but it blocks the fast-track route. The agency is forcing the product through a fuller review at a time when always-on trading, perpetual contracts and retail access are reshaping derivatives markets. The outcome will matter beyond crude oil because it may set the template for how U.S. regulators handle 24/7 futures across commodities, FX, rates and digital assets.

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