Gold and Silver Futures Now Trade 24/7 in the US
(Originally posted on : Bitcoin News )
Key Takeaways
- Coinbase Derivatives logged over $52 billion in Q1 2026 commodity futures volume as metals demand rose.
- The CFTC cleared Coinbase on June 11 as the first FCM offering U.S. traders global crypto perpetual futures.
- Coinbase’s 24/7 metals add overnight leverage risk, a key adoption test for the exchange through 2026.
A ‘World First’ for Metals
Armstrong announced the change on June 13, telling followers the company was “setting a lot of world firsts recently” and that the latest was 24/7 U.S. trading for gold and silver futures. The shift extends a market that has traditionally paused on nights and weekends into the continuous schedule crypto traders already expect.
The futures run through Coinbase Derivatives (CDE), a Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) regulated Designated Contract Market. Coinbase has said it is working with the CFTC to move eligible U.S. traders to round-the-clock access, with customers reaching CDE products through approved futures commission merchants and broker platforms, subject to maintenance windows and eligibility rules.
The announcement lands just weeks after Coinbase Financial Markets became the first futures commission merchant cleared by the CFTC to offer onshore U.S. traders direct access to global crypto perpetual futures. The decision opens the door to the kind of always-on derivatives the exchange is now extending to metals.
Smaller Contracts, USDC Settlement
Coinbase has pitched its metals push as a way to lower the barriers that keep many traders out of traditional commodity futures. The company cited a gold market valued above $13 trillion and a silver market near $1.4 trillion, arguing that legacy contracts can be hard to access because of large contract sizes, limited trading windows, and brokerage requirements.
Its answer is a crypto-style design where the exchange has added gold and silver products built to make 24/7 commodity exposure as capital-efficient as trading perpetual contracts, with small order sizes and risk-management controls aimed at both retail and institutional users.
For traders outside the United States, Coinbase had already moved first. In May, it launched GOLD-PERP and SILVER-PERP perpetual futures for eligible non-U.S. users, settled in USD Coin (USDC) and offering up to 25x leverage.
The metals expansion fits a broader strategy Armstrong has branded the “Everything Exchange,” an effort to place crypto assets, equities-linked products, and commodities under one roof. Coinbase Derivatives reported more than $52 billion in notional volume across traditional commodity futures in the first quarter of 2026, a figure the company has used to argue that demand for always-open, real-world-asset markets is climbing.
The timing also reflects a shift in Washington, given that after years of friction between U.S. regulators and crypto firms, the CFTC has begun clearing a faster route for regulated perpetual-style products, including the first bitcoin perpetual on a registered U.S. exchange.
Always-On Markets Become the Norm
Coinbase is not alone in betting that “market close” is becoming a relic. Data provider Pyth Network this month launched 24/7 index products spanning metals, oil, and U.S. equities, and rival platforms have rolled out continuous reference prices for assets that historically traded only during set sessions. The common thread is a push to make every market behave like crypto: open at all hours, settled onchain or in stablecoins, and accessible without a traditional brokerage account.

Risks travel with that convenience. Round-the-clock leverage can amplify losses during thin overnight liquidity, and metals can move sharply on macro headlines that break outside U.S. hours. Coinbase has said its contracts include risk controls, but 24/7 access means margin calls no longer wait for a market open.
Whether 24/7 metals trading draws meaningful volume (or mostly mirrors the speculative flows already seen in crypto perpetuals) will become clearer as the contracts mature, but regardless, the next big test for Coinbase’s new offering will be mainstream adoption.