Bitcoin's First CME Gap-Free Week Tests Popular Trading Signal

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Bitcoin’s first full week without a CME futures gap marks a shift in a long-used trading signal. The CME’s 24/7 launch on May 29 erased weekend-driven price gaps, ending an eight-year trend. Trading activity remains strong, with three legacy gaps still visible on charts. Traders are watching how continuous trading affects price behavior and trading volume. The market will test whether these old gaps still hold relevance under the new system.

Bitcoin (BTC) starts its first full trading week with no new CME futures gap on the chart. The shift ends an eight-year market quirk that traders relied on to forecast short-term price targets.

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) moved its regulated cryptocurrency futures and options to around-the-clock trading on May 29. The change removed the weekend closure that had produced visible price gaps since Bitcoin futures launched in December 2017.

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Why the CME Gap Mattered for Bitcoin Traders

For nearly nine years, CME Bitcoin futures closed every weekend while spot exchanges and offshore perpetual markets kept trading.

Any weekend move produced a chart gap when futures reopened. Price often returned to fill it within days or weeks.

Historical fill rates ranged from 70% to more than 90%. The pattern became one of the most watched short-term signals in crypto.

The structure also frustrated institutions, which could not adjust hedges over weekends on a regulated venue.

Bitcoin CME Futures
Bitcoin CME Futures. Source: X/Daan Crypto Trades

“BTC Closed last weekend’s CME gap and is now trading in the big area between the other few remaining gaps. This weekend, 24/7 trading starts for the Bitcoin CME futures so there won’t be any new gaps created anymore going forward. The ones left standing will of course still sit there on the chart,” wrote analyst Daan Crypto Trades.

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What Changes Under Continuous Trading

CME now runs Bitcoin, Ether (ETH), Solana (SOL), and six other contracts continuously. Daily maintenance windows run two minutes on weekdays and two hours on Saturdays.

The shift gives portfolio managers, ETF issuers, and corporate treasuries a regulated channel to hedge weekend exposure in real time.

“Client demand for risk management in the digital asset market is at an all-time high, driving a record $3 trillion in notional volume across our Cryptocurrency futures and options in 2025,” read an excerpt in the announcement, citing Tim McCourt, CME Group’s Global Head of Equities, FX and Alternative Products.

The expansion follows record activity across CME crypto products during 2025.

Bitcoin Volatility futures, a new contract tracking 30-day implied volatility, are scheduled to debut on June 1.

Where the Market Sits Now

BTC traded near $73,441 on Sunday, down 3.7% on the week, after the quietest weekend in recent memory.

Bitcoin (BTC) Price Performance
Bitcoin (BTC) Price Performance. Source: BeInCrypto

Three legacy gaps stay open on the chart. Two sit above current price near $78,500 and $80,000, and one below in the $67,000 to $70,000 zone.

Whether those gaps still pull price action under continuous trading is the first real test of the post-gap era.

Early CME volume and open interest on Monday will signal how quickly institutions adapt their playbooks.

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