A major outage at CME Group on Friday halted trading across some of the world’s most actively used futures products, freezing price discovery in foreign exchange, commodities, Treasuries, and equity index futures. The disruption struck during early Asian hours—typically slower following the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday—but the absence of functioning benchmarks amplified uncertainty for traders seeking to hedge or execute month-end flows.
CME blamed the halt on a cooling failure at CyrusOne, a large U.S.-based data-center operator. “Support is working to resolve the issue and will advise clients of Pre-Open details,” CME said. The incident forced a shutdown of both CME’s Globex platform and the EBS FX trading system, a critical venue for global currency liquidity.
Technical Failure Knocks Out FX and Futures Benchmarks
CyrusOne, which operates more than 55 data centers across the U.S., Europe, and Japan, did not immediately comment. Traders in Asia said they received notice just before 0300 GMT, confirming that all futures and options contracts on Globex had stopped updating.
Prices in several major products went static, including:
- West Texas Intermediate crude
- U.S. Treasury futures
- S&P 500 equity index futures
- Gold and palm oil futures
- Euro/dollar and dollar/yen pairs on EBS
While traders were able to route FX orders through alternative platforms, the outage removed a central benchmark for liquidity and pricing—especially significant for pairs like EUR/USD and USD/JPY, which dominate global FX turnover.
One trader described the moment bluntly: “It’s a nightmare.”
For Asia-Pacific markets already dealing with thin post-holiday liquidity, the timing added to the disruption. CME derivatives serve as cornerstone reference points across asset classes, making even short outages consequential for risk management.
Market Impact Limited by Holiday Lull—For Now
Despite the scale of the halt, broader volatility remained contained thanks to subdued U.S. participation. With U.S. markets closed Thursday for Thanksgiving and scheduled for only a half-day session on Friday, volumes were expected to be light even before the outage.
Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG, noted that Friday was already shaping up to be “a very slow day,” adding that the halt “hasn’t helped at all, especially at the end of a volatile month.”
Still, the outage underscores ongoing concerns about the fragility of market infrastructure as trading grows increasingly dependent on third-party data centers. A prolonged halt would risk widening bid-ask spreads and distorting month-end pricing across major asset classes.


