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#CBOEIntroducesExtendedTradingForStockOptions
Cboe's decision to extend trading hours for options is not a cosmetic market update. It is an infrastructural shift that changes how risk is formed in real time. The market is effectively moving from a "session-based pricing" model to a "continuous risk recalculation" model. And that means one thing: volatility no longer waits for the exchange to open. It circulates constantly.
📊 What exactly is changing:
• access to options is expanding beyond the standard US session;
• overnight risk (overnight gap risk) is partially transferred into active trading;
• global investors gain access during their local hours (Asia/Europe);
• market makers are forced to quote volatility longer throughout the day;
• reactions to CPI, PPI, the Fed, and geopolitics become almost instantaneous;
• liquidity is stretched over time, not concentrated in open/close.
The essence is simple: information has long been 24/7, but hedging tools remained 6.5 hours. This created a structural gap, which is now beginning to close.
📉 OLD MARKET MODEL (before changes):
• news → overnight pause → gap at open;
• volatility concentrates between 9:30–10:30 ET;
• options are "recalculated" with a delay;
• liquidity sharply drops outside the session.
📈 NEW MODEL (after expansion):
• news → immediate derivative pricing;
• volatility is distributed over a 24-hour cycle;
• implied volatility updates without an "opening jump";
• hedging occurs in real time.
📊 MARKET FACTS THAT SUPPORT THE CHANGE:
• over 40% of daily S&P 500 moves are historically linked to news outside the main session;
• the US options market exceeds $700 billion+ in daily risk volume;
• during peak periods, 60%+ of trading is in derivatives rather than spot;
• VIX reacts to macro shocks faster than the underlying index;
• algorithmic trading in options is estimated at 50–70%, depending on the segment.
This means: the market has long been “not just daily,” but the infrastructure is only now catching up with reality.
⚙️ KEY EFFECT — REASSESSMENT OF VOLATILITY.
Extended trading does not eliminate volatility. It changes its form.
It was:
• sharp gap moves;
• concentrated spikes;
• nighttime inefficiency.
It becomes:
• constant micro-volatility;
• frequent price corrections;
• fewer “shocks,” but more noise;
• harder to identify the true trend.
This is critical for options, where price = a function of expected volatility.
💡 IMPACT ON MARKET MAKERS AND LIQUIDITY.
Market makers now are forced to:
• quote 16–23 hours instead of 6.5;
• hold risk longer in unstable conditions;
• recalibrate implied volatility more often;
• respond to global events (EU/Asia) without pauses.
Result:
• spreads outside regular hours can widen by 20–60%;
• liquidity becomes uneven;
• algorithmic dominance intensifies.
🌍 GLOBAL EFFECT.
The biggest change is not in the US, but outside it.
Asia and Europe gain:
• access to US options during their trading hours;
• the ability to hedge events without waiting for NY open;
• faster arbitrage between futures, stocks, and derivatives.
This creates a new structure:
• three liquidity zones;
• one continuous risk price.
⚠️ RISK SIDE.
Extended hours do not mean stability.
On the contrary:
• thinner liquidity during nighttime hours;
• greater sensitivity to individual orders;
• faster “spikes” in volatility;
• increased risk of mispricing.
Especially in conditions of:
• macro shocks (CPI / Fed rates);
• geopolitics;
• sharp moves in Nasdaq-heavy stocks (NVDA, TSLA, AAPL).
🔄 SYSTEMIC SHIFT.
The market is moving toward a model:
NOT:
“market open / market close.”
BUT:
“the market is always partially open, but with varying liquidity density.”
This is an important change:
• time no longer defines risk;
• liquidity defines risk.
📌 CONCLUSION.
Cboe is not just expanding options trading hours. It is changing the architecture of risk in the global financial system.
The market is entering a phase where:
• information → instant;
• hedging → continuous;
• volatility → distributed;
• liquidity → global.
And most importantly — the concept of “night” as a market notion is gradually disappearing.
❓ Question for traders: if the market never fully closes again — where is the real point of risk now: in time or in liquidity?
#OptionsTrading
#CBOE
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