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Alright, so I keep seeing traders talk about cme gaps and honestly it took me a while to understand what the hype was about. Let me break it down because it's actually pretty interesting if you trade Bitcoin futures.
So here's the thing - the CME (Chicago Mercantile Exchange) is where Bitcoin futures trade during regular business hours. That's Monday through Friday, 5 PM to 4 PM CT. But crypto markets? They never sleep. They're running 24/7, even when CME shuts down for the weekend.
This is where what is a cme gap becomes relevant. When Bitcoin makes a big move over the weekend while CME is closed, there's this gap between where it closed on Friday and where it's actually trading Sunday night. That untraded space on the chart? That's your cme gap right there.
Now why does this matter for traders like us? Here's the interesting part - Bitcoin has this historical tendency to "fill" these gaps. Meaning the price usually comes back and revisits that gap zone at some point. It's not some magic signal that guarantees anything, but a lot of traders watch for it because it can signal short-term reversals or continuation moves.
Let me give you a practical example of how cme gaps work. Say Bitcoin closes Friday at 63K on CME, then pumps to 65K by Sunday night. You've got a 2K upside gap. More often than not, price will eventually retrace back down to fill that 63K zone.
I'm not saying it's foolproof or anything, but these gaps act like price magnets. They're worth keeping an eye on if you're into futures trading. Not magic, but definitely a pattern worth monitoring on your charts.