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Just caught wind of something interesting happening with traditional stock markets. CBOE is planning to roll out a 24x5 trading model for U.S. stocks by December next year, and honestly, this could be a bigger shift than people realize.
For context, they're essentially looking to extend trading hours across the full week - round-the-clock access from Monday through Friday. The stated goal is to accommodate global investors who are currently locked out during standard market hours. Makes sense when you think about it: someone in Asia or Europe has to wait for U.S. market open just to trade U.S. equities.
What's interesting here is the timing and the reasoning. CBOE sees growing demand for more flexible trading options, and they're positioning this 24x5 model as a way to tap into that. More trading hours theoretically means better liquidity, tighter spreads, and more opportunities for active traders.
This feels like part of a larger trend we're seeing across financial markets - the push to remove temporal barriers. In crypto, we've had 24/7 trading forever, and it's one of the reasons the space attracts so many traders. Traditional markets are slowly catching up to that reality.
If CBOE actually pulls off the 24x5 launch by December 2026, it could reshape how people interact with U.S. stocks. We'll probably see other exchanges follow suit eventually. Curious to see how this actually plays out and whether retail investors will actually use those extended hours or if it remains mostly an institutional play.