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Been seeing a lot of buzz around CME gaps lately, so figured I'd share what's actually going on here.
Basically, there's this thing called a CME gap that most traders pay attention to, and honestly it makes sense once you understand the mechanics. See, the CME (Chicago Mercantile Exchange) only operates Monday through Friday from 5 PM to 4 PM CT. Crypto markets? They never sleep—trading 24/7. So when Bitcoin makes a major move over the weekend while CME is closed, you get this gap on the chart when the market reopens on Sunday night.
Think of it like this: Bitcoin closes Friday at $63K on CME, then pumps to $65K by Sunday while CME is offline. When CME opens, boom—there's a $2K gap between where it closed and where the market actually is. That untraded space? That's your CME gap meaning in action.
Now here's the interesting part. Historically, Bitcoin has this tendency to "fill" these gaps eventually. Price often revisits that gap zone, sometimes quickly, sometimes over a longer timeframe. It's not guaranteed, but traders watch CME gaps closely because they can signal potential reversals or continuation moves. If you understand how this gap formation works, you can anticipate where price might retrace to.
Obviously it's not magic—gaps don't always fill immediately or at all. But the pattern is strong enough that serious traders keep tracking them as part of their TA toolkit. Worth monitoring if you're thinking about short-term positioning, especially around those weekend Bitcoin moves.