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Just realized a lot of traders are obsessed with something called a CME Gap and I finally get why. So here's the thing — the CME (Chicago Mercantile Exchange) is basically the only place where Bitcoin futures trade during normal business hours. Monday through Friday, 5 PM to 4 PM CT. Pretty specific window, right?
Now here's where it gets interesting. Crypto markets never sleep — they're 24/7. But the CME does. It closes over the weekends. So when Bitcoin decides to make a massive move while the CME is sleeping, you get this weird situation where Friday's closing price on the CME doesn't match what's actually happening in the crypto market by Sunday night. That gap between the two? That's your CME Gap.
Why does everyone care about this? Because Bitcoin has this weird habit of filling these gaps. Like, price will go back and revisit that zone eventually. It's not guaranteed or anything, but historically it happens enough that traders use it to predict short-term price action. Could signal a reversal, could signal continuation — depends on the setup.
Let me give you a practical example. Say Bitcoin closes on CME Friday at $63K. But over the weekend, it pumps to $65K in the spot market. You've got a $2K gap up. Traders watch this closely because Bitcoin often retraces back to fill that $63K level at some point. Not magic, but more like a price magnet that the market keeps coming back to.
So yeah, if you're watching Bitcoin price action, keep an eye on where these gaps form. They're one of those technical patterns that actually shows up in real trading — worth monitoring if you're trying to time entries or exits on the futures side.