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U.S. Vice President Vance: The Reason Political Leaders From Various Countries Are Here Today Is, Firstly, To Establish The Framework For These Technical Negotiations, And Secondly, To Ensure That Our Teams Are Fully Supported And Know That They Can Seek Our Help Whenever Any Obstacles Arise
US Vice President Vance: US President Trump’s Vision Is That The Middle East Will Be Completely Different In Ten Years
U.S. Vice President Vance: Technical Negotiations May Not Resolve All Differences, But This Will Allow US To Sit Down As A Team For The First Time In History
US Vice President Vance: US President Trump Is Committed To Achieving A Comprehensive Regional Ceasefire
U.S. Vice President Vance: President Trump Has Asked US To 'turn A New Page' To Transform Our Relationship With The Iranian People
U.S. Vice President Vance: We Now See A Shared Future Where We Can Work Together To Promote Peace And Prosperity
U.S. Vice President Vance: Trump Has Authorized US To Seek Diplomatic Solutions To A Range Of Issues
Pakistani Prime Minister: I Believe We Will Have Fruitful Discussions And The Results Will Be Very Good
The China Earthquake Networks Center Officially Determined That A Magnitude 3.1 Earthquake Occurred At 19:43 On June 21 In Haixi Prefecture, Qinghai Province (37.78 Degrees North Latitude, 95.37 Degrees East Longitude), With A Focal Depth Of 10 Kilometers
National Flood Control Office: Over The Next Three Days, Heavy Rainfall In Many Areas Will Pose A High Risk Of Disasters; Enhanced Precautions Are Required
British Media Report That The British Foreign Secretary Has Called For Prime Minister Starmer To Resign
Pan Gongsheng, Governor Of China's Central Bank, Met With Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa, Minister Of Finance Of Indonesia
According To Al Arabiya Satellite Television: Pakistani Prime Minister Sharif Met With US Vice President Vance, And Kushner, Vitkov And The Pakistan Army Chief Of Staff Were Also Present
According To Pakistan's State Television, Preliminary Technical Consultations At The Quartet Meeting With Switzerland Have Commenced, With Members Of The Four Delegations Participating. The Technical Talks Are Expected To Continue Until Monday

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Precision is vital in energy trading. Master the CME crude oil trading hours to navigate margin, liquidity gaps, and critical session resets.
Navigating the global energy markets requires a precise understanding of when liquidity is available and when the exchange officially pauses. For participants trading West Texas Intermediate (WTI) futures, mastering the CME crude oil trading hours is critical for managing margin requirements, executing complex spreads, and avoiding forced liquidations. This guide breaks down the complete electronic schedule, detailing the impact of daily maintenance windows, holiday adjustments, and how the CME timeline aligns with other major international benchmarks.

CME crude oil futures trade electronically 23 hours a day, six days a week on the CME Globex platform. Listed under the NYMEX exchange, the market opens on Sunday evening to capture the start of the Asian trading week and closes on Friday afternoon at the end of the U.S. session.
The regular trading week opens on Sunday at 6:00 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) and runs continuously until Friday at 5:00 p.m. ET, paused only by a brief daily halt. Trading operates on a T+1 schedule, meaning a trading session for the next calendar day officially begins at 6:00 p.m. ET the night before.
| Trading Day | Open Time (ET) | Close Time (ET) | Session Represented |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sunday | 6:00 p.m. | Continuous | Monday |
| Monday–Thursday | 6:00 p.m. | 5:00 p.m. (Next Day) | Tuesday–Friday |
| Friday | N/A (Already open) | 5:00 p.m. | Friday |
While electronic trading continues until the 5:00 p.m. ET close, the designated daily settlement price is determined earlier at 2:30 p.m. ET. This settlement figure is calculated using the volume-weighted average price (VWAP) of trades executed between 2:28 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. ET. Institutions and brokers use this 2:30 p.m. settlement—not the 5:00 p.m. final trade—for daily mark-to-market account valuations and margin calculations.
The CME Globex exchange halts crude oil trading for 60 minutes every day from 5:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. ET (4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Central Time), Monday through Thursday.
This maintenance period acts as the hard boundary between daily trading sessions. During this hour, the matching engine goes offline. Resting orders remain in the electronic book, but no execution occurs, and traders cannot enter new market or limit orders until the system reopens.
For short-term speculators, this break dictates intra-day margin requirements. Most retail brokerages and proprietary trading firms (such as Topstep) require traders utilizing reduced day-trading margins to flatten all open crude oil positions 10 to 15 minutes prior to the 5:00 p.m. ET halt. Holding a position into the maintenance break typically triggers a margin violation, forcing the account into higher overnight margin requirements or resulting in auto-liquidation.
Yes, all three tiers of NYMEX WTI crude oil futures operate on the exact same Globex electronic schedule.
This synchronization prevents pricing discrepancies and maintains tight arbitrage opportunities across contract sizes during off-hours. A trader hedging a standard contract with micro contracts will not face liquidity lockouts on one leg of the trade.
| Contract Type | Ticker | Contract Size | Trading Schedule (ET) | Daily Maintenance Halt |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard WTI | CL | 1,000 barrels | Sun 6:00 p.m. – Fri 5:00 p.m. | 5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. |
| E-mini WTI | QM | 500 barrels | Sun 6:00 p.m. – Fri 5:00 p.m. | 5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. |
| Micro WTI | MCL | 100 barrels | Sun 6:00 p.m. – Fri 5:00 p.m. | 5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. |
While the CME futures trading hours are identical across these products, overnight liquidity varies significantly. The standard CL contract maintains deep, continuous liquidity throughout the Asian and European sessions. The Micro (MCL) and E-mini (QM) contracts experience wider bid-ask spreads and lower volume during these off-peak hours, increasing slippage risk for limit orders placed outside the core U.S. morning session.
Beyond the regular weekly schedule, traders must also account for trading adjustments during U.S. holidays. U.S. federal holidays disrupt standard CME crude oil trading hours by triggering either complete session closures or abbreviated trading days. Because NYMEX WTI Crude Oil (CL) relies on the nearly 24-hour Globex electronic system, holiday schedules rarely result in full 24-hour blackouts; instead, the exchange implements staggered intra-day halts.
Good Friday and Christmas Day typically force full market closures, while holidays like Thanksgiving, Labor Day, and Presidents' Day result in early halts. A common trap for new traders is assuming crude oil follows the equity index schedule. While equity futures (like the E-mini S&P 500) generally halt at 1:00 p.m. ET on partial holidays, NYMEX energy products typically remain open until 2:30 p.m. ET.
During a standard Monday holiday, the Globex system opens at its normal Sunday evening time (6:00 p.m. ET) to initiate the Monday trade date. Electronic trading then halts midday on Monday, resuming that evening at 6:00 p.m. ET to begin the Tuesday session.
| U.S. Holiday | NYMEX Crude Oil Status | Typical Schedule Disruption (Eastern Time) |
|---|---|---|
| New Year's Day | Full Closure | Closed all day; reopens evening of observed date |
| Martin Luther King Jr. Day | Early Halt | Halts Monday at 2:30 p.m.; reopens 6:00 p.m. |
| Presidents' Day | Early Halt | Halts Monday at 2:30 p.m.; reopens 6:00 p.m. |
| Good Friday | Full Closure | Closed all day Friday |
| Memorial Day | Early Halt | Halts Monday at 2:30 p.m.; reopens 6:00 p.m. |
| Juneteenth | Early Halt | Halts at 2:30 p.m. on the observed date |
| Independence Day | Early Halt | Halts at 2:30 p.m. on the observed date |
| Labor Day | Early Halt | Halts Monday at 2:30 p.m.; reopens 6:00 p.m. |
| Thanksgiving | Early Halt | Halts Thursday at 2:30 p.m.; Friday hours vary |
| Christmas Day | Full Closure | Closed all day; reopens evening of observed date |
Note: When fixed-date holidays (like Independence Day or Christmas) fall on a weekend, CME applies observed date logic, typically shifting the trading disruption to the adjacent Friday or Monday.
Traders must use the official CME Group Holiday Calendar page to verify exact session times, as early halt schedules can shift based on liquidity conditions or clearing firm requirements. Third-party websites often incorrectly list Globex equity hours for energy products, leading to miscalculated entry and exit times.
To find the exact hours for your specific contract, follow these steps:
Relying on this official tool prevents forced liquidations by retail brokerages, which typically require margin requirements to be met 15 to 30 minutes prior to any scheduled holiday early close.
Just as holidays alter the broader calendar, routine daily maintenance pauses dictate how individual trades and margins are managed. The daily 60-minute break from 4:00 PM to 5:00 PM Central Time (CT) dictates when day orders expire, when daily margin requirements are calculated, and when the electronic matching engine pauses. Managing positions over this hour requires exact accounting, as the physical calendar date and the official exchange trade date diverge immediately after the pause.
The status of an unfilled order during the 4:00 PM to 5:00 PM CT maintenance window depends strictly on its time-in-force designation. During this hour, the CME Globex matching engine halts continuous trading, and existing orders are processed according to their specific states.
The official CME trading day for crude oil futures (CL) begins at 5:00 PM CT, a full seven hours before the calendar date changes. This structure means the trade date and the calendar date rarely align for evening and overnight participants.
For example, a crude oil contract purchased at 6:30 PM CT on Tuesday is officially recorded on Wednesday’s trade date. This offset directly dictates end-of-day P&L calculations, margin call timelines, and daily candlestick charting aggregations. Because the daily settlement price is locked in prior to the 4:00 PM CT break (calculated based on volume-weighted trading between 1:28 PM and 1:30 PM CT for crude oil, even though electronic trading continues), any position initiated after 5:00 PM CT is immediately subjected to the next calendar day's market cycle and margin requirements.
While these daily rhythms govern WTI contracts on the CME, the schedule differs slightly across other global benchmark exchanges. CME Group operates its West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil contract almost continuously, but its schedule slightly trails the other major global benchmark, ICE Brent crude. While CME crude oil trading hours enforce a 60-minute daily break, ICE Brent requires a 120-minute daily pause. Asian benchmark contracts, such as the Shanghai International Energy Exchange (INE) crude, operate on heavily segmented, regional daytime schedules rather than continuous 24-hour loops.
The table below outlines the specific schedule differences between the three largest global crude oil futures markets.
| Exchange & Benchmark | Trading Hours (ET) | Daily Maintenance Break (ET) | Contract Size |
|---|---|---|---|
| CME Group (WTI) | Sunday – Friday: 6:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. | 5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. | 1,000 barrels |
| ICE Europe (Brent) | Sunday: 6:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. Mon – Fri: 8:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. | 6:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. | 1,000 barrels |
| Shanghai INE (Yuan) | Mon – Fri: 9:00 p.m. – 3:00 a.m.* | Segmented into regional blocks | 1,000 barrels |
\Shanghai INE hours are converted to Eastern Time for direct comparison; local trading occurs 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Beijing Time.*
CME WTI and ICE Brent futures are simultaneously open for 21 hours each trading day, beginning at 8:00 p.m. ET and continuing until CME closes at 5:00 p.m. ET the following afternoon. This massive overlap is necessary for the continuous pricing of the global oil market and allows physical hedgers and speculators to execute the WTI/Brent intercommodity spread.
Because the two exchanges utilize staggered daily maintenance breaks, market participants must navigate two distinct windows where only one major benchmark is actively pricing:
Traders managing cross-market exposure cannot offset positions across both exchanges during these three hours. Sudden geopolitical developments or crude oil market shocks during these asynchronous windows will trigger outsized volatility on the active exchange, resulting in pricing gaps on the closed exchange once it reopens.
Peak liquidity for CME crude oil futures occurs between 8:00 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. ET. This specific window captures the simultaneous activity of North American and European institutional desks. Outside of this global overlap, volume thins predictably based on regional time zones.
Traders executing large orders categorize the daily CME schedule into four distinct liquidity phases:
CME WTI crude oil futures trade Sunday through Friday from 5:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Central Time (CT). There is a one-hour daily maintenance break in trading from 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. CT.
Holiday trading hours for CME crude oil futures vary depending on the specific U.S. holiday being observed. On partial holidays, such as the day after Thanksgiving, energy contracts often close early at 12:30 p.m. CT (1:30 p.m. ET). Traders should always consult the official CME Group Holiday Calendar for exact details on market halts and early closures.
Crude oil trades nearly 24 hours a day during the business week, but not continuously. It operates 23 hours a day from Sunday evening to Friday afternoon, pausing for a one-hour daily break. The market is closed entirely over the weekend from Friday afternoon until it reopens on Sunday evening.
Historically, most traditional CME markets operate 23 hours a day, five days a week, with a one-hour daily break and weekend closures. However, CME Group is launching 24/7 trading for its regulated cryptocurrency futures and options starting on May 29, 2026. This allows continuous trading for specific digital assets throughout the weekend, aside from a brief mandatory maintenance window.
Successfully trading WTI futures demands strict adherence to the CME's specific timeline, from peak overlap periods to the rigid daily maintenance halts. Missing a session cutoff or miscalculating a holiday closure can instantly expose accounts to margin violations and unexpected gap risk. By mapping out regular hours, daily resets, and global liquidity windows, traders can confidently sequence their entries and exits while safeguarding their capital against off-hours volatility.
The risk of loss in trading financial instruments such as stocks, FX, commodities, futures, bonds, ETFs and crypto can be substantial. You may sustain a total loss of the funds that you deposit with your broker. Therefore, you should carefully consider whether such trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances and financial resources.
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