The CME Group has suspended trading in major asset classes because of a systems failure in its data centers. Activity in currencies, stock futures, and commodities has been paused amid post-holiday volatility.
CME Group Stops Trading After Data Center Failure
According to Reuters, the firm confirmed on Friday that it was forced to freeze trading activity after a cooling malfunction hit the CyrusOne facilities that power its systems.
The problem caused a complete standstill across futures, options, and foreign exchange markets operating on Globex. This has left traders without refreshed benchmarks for the S&P 500, the Nasdaq 100, or major currency pairs.
The exchange operator says support teams are working on restoring systems. Market participants said the halt notice was received shortly before 0300 GMT.
“Support is working to resolve the issue in the near term and will advise clients of Pre-Open details as soon as they are available,” CME said.
This comes as liquidity vanished during an already quiet post-Thanksgiving session in Asia.
The outage also affected EBS. This is a broadly used electronic FX platform that sees substantial volumes in dollar/euro and dollar/yen pairs. Pricing data from LSEG showed that quotes across equities and currencies had not refreshed since 0344 GMT.
Analysts said the freeze increased uncertainty in a month of volatile swings. “This hasn’t helped at all, especially on a day when there was real interest to transact,” said IG Markets analyst Tony Sycamore.
The incident comes at a time when CME Group has been investing actively in its infrastructure. In March, for instance, the exchange partnered with Google Cloud to determine how tokenization can boost traditional finance. Through this, it leveraged Google Cloud’s Universal Ledger to experiment with new ledger mechanisms that could allow efficient management of assets.
CME Expands Crypto Derivatives Lineup
The trading outage also comes a week after CME Group introduced two new spot-quoted futures contracts for XRP and Solana. These futures are expected to go live on December 15 pending regulatory sign-off.
The contract would track real-time spot prices. It also intends to give institutions more flexible hedging tools at lower margin requirements. CME had also said it would roll out options tied to these contracts.
Despite the temporary shutdown, CME Group said it has recorded record volumes in crypto and U.S. Treasury trading.
This strong operational performance of the platform has been reflected in its stock price. It has risen over 20% year-to-date. Long-term shareholders have also benefited with returns approaching 90% over five years.
Breaking: CME Group Suspends Trading Amid System Failure at Data Center
