#WTICrudeFallsBelow90Dollars #CBOEIntroducesExtendedTradingForStockOptions
📈 CBOE Extends Options Trading Hours — A New Era of 24H Market Volatility Begins
The SEC approving Cboe’s plan to extend trading hours for select stock options is a bigger shift than it might look at first glance. Starting July 13, traders will no longer be confined strictly to traditional market hours for some of the most actively traded U.S. equities.
We’re talking about names like Nvidia, Tesla, Apple, AMD, and Broadcom — basically the core of modern market volatility.
The structure is interesting:
Pre-market: 7:30–9:25 ET
Post-market: 16:00–16:15 ET
And while the time windows look short at first, the psychological impact is much bigger — it opens the door for near-continuous options pricing pressure across global sessions.
From a trader’s perspective, this changes behavior more than mechanics. Earnings reactions, macro data releases, and geopolitical headlines will now have more immediate derivatives pricing impact, instead of waiting for the next session open.
That means volatility won’t just be higher — it will be more fragmented. Liquidity spikes, thinner order books, and sharper intraday dislocations are all likely outcomes, especially in the early rollout phase.
Personally, I see this as a double-edged opportunity. On one hand, it allows better risk management around events like earnings without holding overnight blind exposure. On the other hand, it increases the complexity of execution — especially for retail traders who aren’t used to reacting outside standard market hours.
The bigger picture here is clear: traditional market structure is slowly moving toward near-24/5 derivatives trading, aligning more with crypto-style continuous markets.
The question is whether traders are ready for it — because the market is definitely moving in that direction whether we are prepared or not.
How do you see this affecting your strategy — more control over risk, or more stress from constant market pressure?
#CBOE #OptionsTrading #GateSquare
📈 CBOE Extends Options Trading Hours — A New Era of 24H Market Volatility Begins
The SEC approving Cboe’s plan to extend trading hours for select stock options is a bigger shift than it might look at first glance. Starting July 13, traders will no longer be confined strictly to traditional market hours for some of the most actively traded U.S. equities.
We’re talking about names like Nvidia, Tesla, Apple, AMD, and Broadcom — basically the core of modern market volatility.
The structure is interesting:
Pre-market: 7:30–9:25 ET
Post-market: 16:00–16:15 ET
And while the time windows look short at first, the psychological impact is much bigger — it opens the door for near-continuous options pricing pressure across global sessions.
From a trader’s perspective, this changes behavior more than mechanics. Earnings reactions, macro data releases, and geopolitical headlines will now have more immediate derivatives pricing impact, instead of waiting for the next session open.
That means volatility won’t just be higher — it will be more fragmented. Liquidity spikes, thinner order books, and sharper intraday dislocations are all likely outcomes, especially in the early rollout phase.
Personally, I see this as a double-edged opportunity. On one hand, it allows better risk management around events like earnings without holding overnight blind exposure. On the other hand, it increases the complexity of execution — especially for retail traders who aren’t used to reacting outside standard market hours.
The bigger picture here is clear: traditional market structure is slowly moving toward near-24/5 derivatives trading, aligning more with crypto-style continuous markets.
The question is whether traders are ready for it — because the market is definitely moving in that direction whether we are prepared or not.
How do you see this affecting your strategy — more control over risk, or more stress from constant market pressure?
#CBOE #OptionsTrading #GateSquare




















