The Commodity Futures Trading Commission has opened a public consultation on whether standard energy futures should trade 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and whether perpetual contracts could be listed on physically delivered or storable commodities such as crude oil. The agency’s request for comment goes far beyond a routine market structure review. It asks whether crypto-style derivatives models can be applied to some of the most important physical commodity markets in the world.
The consultation covers two separate questions. The first is whether existing futures contracts, including energy contracts with fixed expirations and delivery or settlement terms, can safely trade continuously without changing their core economics. The second is whether perpetual contracts, which have no fixed expiry and rely on funding rates to keep prices tied to a reference market, can work for physical commodities whose prices depend on storage, delivery, logistics, seasonality, and commercial hedging demand.
Michael S. Selig, Chairman of the CFTC, commented, “As registered entities extend trading hours and introduce new contract designs, a clear, data-driven record will help the Commission better understand these developments’ implications and impact in the market.” He added that the request is designed to support innovation while preserving protections against manipulation and market disruption.
The CFTC Is Looking At Two Very Different Market Structure Changes
The first issue under review is extended trading. A crude oil future could keep its current expiration date, delivery mechanism, margin framework, and settlement process, but trade through weekends and holidays. That sounds simple until the contract’s price starts forming while the physical oil market, banks, payment systems, ETF markets, and many commercial desks are closed.
The second issue is more radical. A perpetual energy contract would not expire. In crypto markets, perpetual contracts dominate derivatives activity because traders can maintain leveraged exposure without rolling from one monthly contract to the next. Instead of convergence through delivery or expiration, the contract relies on a funding mechanism that transfers payments between longs and shorts to keep the perpetual price aligned with a reference price.
| Proposal | What Changes | Main Market Question |
|---|---|---|
| 24/7 Standard Futures | Existing futures trade through nights, weekends and holidays | Can reliable prices form when cash markets and payment systems are closed? |
| Energy Perpetuals | No fixed expiration and no delivery date | Can a crypto-style contract work for physical commodities with storage and delivery constraints? |
The CFTC’s document contains 67 questions. The first 30 concern 24/7 trading of standard futures. The remaining 37 focus on perpetual energy contracts. The split matters because the agency is not simply asking whether more trading hours are useful. It is asking whether the structure of crypto derivatives can migrate into regulated energy markets.
CFTC Consultation Questions By Topic
24/7 standard futures: 30 questions
Perpetual energy contracts: 37 questions
The consultation follows the CFTC’s recent work on 24/7 trading and perpetual-style derivatives. FinanceFeeds recently covered the legal fight over CFTC approval of crypto perpetual futures, where one of the central questions was whether a contract with no expiry can still be treated as a futures contract. The new energy review extends that debate into a market where physical delivery, commercial hedging, storage capacity and benchmark integrity carry direct economic consequences.
Why Crude Oil Is Not Bitcoin
The CFTC makes clear that its recent bitcoin perpetual analysis was based on features that do not easily transfer to oil. Bitcoin trades continuously across a large global spot market. A reference price can be observed at any hour. Crude oil is different. Physical oil markets are assessed during defined windows, storage matters, delivery points matter, and benchmark futures are used by producers, refiners, airlines, commodity merchants, ETFs, swap desks and corporate hedgers.
This is the core tension in the document. A crypto perpetual depends on continuous price observability. An oil perpetual would need a reliable reference price at every funding interval, including weekends and holidays. The CFTC asks whether any crude oil cash price series can meet that test and whether a futures-based reference would create new manipulation risks. That question goes directly to the integrity of the contract.
| Market Feature | Bitcoin Perpetuals | Crude Oil Perpetuals |
|---|---|---|
| Spot Market | Trades continuously | Physical market does not trade continuously |
| Storage | No physical storage constraint | Storage capacity affects price formation |
| Delivery | No physical delivery process | Delivery points and logistics matter |
| Reference Price | Continuous spot price available | Physical prices often rely on assessment windows |
| Stress History | No negative physical delivery event | WTI traded below zero in April 2020 |
| Commercial Users | Mostly financial and crypto-native | Producers, refiners, airlines, merchants and end users |
The April 2020 negative WTI episode sits at the center of the CFTC’s concern. When the expiring crude oil futures contract settled below zero amid constrained storage at Cushing, later-dated contracts remained positive. The standard futures structure eventually resolved the dislocation through expiration and delivery. A perpetual contract has no such terminal event. The agency is asking whether a no-expiry oil contract could handle negative prices, extreme storage stress, funding payments and automatic liquidations without creating a broader market problem.
That is why this consultation matters to retail traders as well as commercial users. A weekend oil market may appear to give traders more flexibility, but it could also expose leveraged accounts to margin calls, forced liquidations and price moves during periods when liquidity is thinner and traditional payment systems are closed. FinanceFeeds has reported on the risks around weekend and after-hours perpetual trading in crypto markets, including liquidation cascades and thin liquidity. The CFTC is now asking whether similar dynamics could affect energy markets.
The Real Issue Is Weekend Price Discovery And Who Bears The Risk
The most important section of the request concerns prices formed outside normal market hours. The CFTC asks whether weekend prices in a smaller or retail-heavy contract could influence larger benchmark futures when traditional markets reopen. It also asks whether those prices could affect OTC derivatives, barrier options, structured products, swaps, ETFs, mutual funds, pension valuations, financing agreements, collateral requirements and commercial contracts linked to energy benchmarks.
This is where 24/7 trading becomes more than a technology upgrade. Oil futures are not isolated speculative products. They help set prices throughout the real economy. Commercial contracts for fuel, transportation, refining, procurement, financing and risk transfer can reference futures prices directly or indirectly. A weekend price spike or collapse could therefore influence valuations and contractual triggers before many institutional risk systems, treasury teams and payment rails are operating normally.
| Affected Area | CFTC Concern |
|---|---|
| Energy Producers | Hedging tools may become less reliable if weekend liquidity is thin |
| Refiners And End Users | Commercial contracts may pick up off-hours benchmark moves |
| Options Markets | Weekend price formation could change time value, implied volatility and barrier triggers |
| ETFs And Funds | Valuation and daily reset models may need recalibration |
| Clearing Members | Margin calls may occur when Fedwire and CHIPS are closed |
| Retail Traders | Continuous leverage could increase liquidation risk during geopolitical events |
| DCMs And Clearing Houses | Surveillance and operational readiness may need true 24/7 coverage |
The payment issue is especially important. Futures markets can already move quickly, but the traditional margin and settlement process still depends heavily on banking infrastructure. The CFTC asks how a clearing organization would handle margin calls during weekends and holidays when payment systems such as Fedwire and CHIPS are not operating. It also asks whether tokenized cash, stablecoins, tokenized Treasuries or additional weekend margin buffers would be needed.
That question connects energy derivatives to a wider market structure shift. FinanceFeeds recently reported on tokenised oil trading infrastructure and on the expansion of perpetual futures into pre-IPO exposure. The common thread is that crypto-native design features are moving toward traditional markets. The CFTC’s request shows that regulators are not rejecting that movement outright, but they want evidence before allowing it into physical commodity benchmarks.
The agency is also focused on position limits. NYMEX WTI crude oil is already subject to federal speculative position limits. A perpetual contract has no expiration and no delivery month, which makes it difficult to map into a regime built around spot-month limits and deliverable supply. The CFTC asks whether a perpetual should be treated as continuously in the spot month, never in the spot month, or mapped to the referenced futures contract as it rolls. Each choice could affect manipulation risk and commercial hedging capacity.
The broader competitive context is clear. Traders increasingly expect continuous markets. Brokers and venues are responding. FinanceFeeds has covered the move toward 24/5 stock CFD trading and institutional infrastructure moving into prediction markets. Energy futures may be next, but the consequences are larger because crude oil prices touch the real economy in ways that crypto and event contracts do not.
Comments are due within 30 days of publication in the Federal Register. The CFTC is specifically asking commenters to provide data, empirical analysis, transaction statistics and supporting documents rather than broad claims. That wording suggests the Commission wants a record that can support future decisions on contract approvals, exchange filings, clearing models and possible limits on retail access.
Takeaway
The CFTC’s request is not just a consultation on trading hours. It is a test of whether crypto market structure can move into physical commodity derivatives. Standard oil futures trading 24/7 would raise questions about weekend liquidity, clearing, margin and benchmark use. Perpetual oil contracts would go further by removing expiration from a market where delivery, storage and commercial hedging remain central to price formation. The agency’s 67 questions show that regulators are open to innovation, but not yet convinced that bitcoin-style derivatives can be safely applied to crude oil and other energy commodities.

