March 21, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
What the Collapse of the U.S. Bitcoin ETF Cash-and-Carry Trade Means for Investors Bakkt Names Akshay Naheta as Co-CEO Amid Stablecoin Payments Push Bitcoin Sinks Amid Profit-Taking After FOMC Rally, Options Traders Still Eye $100K Australia Proposes New Crypto Regulation Structure, Plans to Integrate Digital Assets Into the Economy Metaplanet, Japan’s Biggest Corporate Bitcoin Holder, Adds Eric Trump as Advisor North Korea-Linked Lazarus Group Holds More Bitcoin Than Elon Musk’s Tesla Polymarket is 90% Accurate in Predicting World Events: Research U.S. Bank Agency Cuts ‘Reputational Risk’ From Exams After Crypto Sector Cites Issues SEC Chair Nominee Paul Atkins to Face Senate Panel Next Week Proof-of-Work Crypto Mining Doesn’t Trigger Securities Laws, SEC Says

Nasdaq’s Shift To Round-The-Clock Stock Trading Due to Crypto, Says Exchange Executive

Stock and other traditional financial asset traders across the world are wanting to be able to buy and sell assets around the clock, resulting in two of the biggest stock markets in the U.S., Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) making moves to offer round-the-clock trading soon.

“We definitely see that this is where the markets are moving,” said Giang Bui, Nasdaq’s head of U.S. Equities & Exchange-Traded Products, speaking at the Digital Asset Summit in New York on Thursday. “There’s a lot of demand globally for U.S. stocks and people want to trade within the hours that they’re typically awake, and I think a lot of it is because people are used to trading crypto 24/7.”

Both Nasdaq and the NYSE are in the process of receiving approval to open their venues 24 hours a day, for five or even seven days a week. Nasdaq recently announced that it had begun engaging with regulators about the change while the NYSE has already received the green light.

Round-the-clock trading can have several advantages for markets, including increased volume and market liquidity as traders aren’t tied to specific time zones. Currently, the U.S. stock market opens for trading at 9:30 a.m. ET and closes at 4 p.m. ET.

“We’re hearing it across the board from global broker dealers, clients who they’re servicing, even within the U.S., there’s a number of U.S. brokers that already are offering overnight trading because their customers are used to trading crypto in those hours,” Bui added.

Nasdaq lists a number of crypto-related products, including the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), the spot ETF issued by BlackRock, which saw the most successful ETF debut in the history of U.S. ETF launches. Earlier today, the exchange listed two Solana (SOL) futures ETFs issued by Volatility Shares.

This post was originally published on this site