(Bloomberg) — The Chicago Mercantile Exchange was poised to restore most trading operations after an hours-long outage that crippled key parts of financial markets.
The exchange said its Globex Futures & Options markets, which handles futures, options, and commodities trading and accounts for 90% of CME Group’s volume, will open at 7:30 a.m. central time, according to an update on its website.
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Earlier, the EBS market, a platform used in foreign exchange, reopened at noon London time, according to a notice on the CME Group Inc.’s website.
The halt had gone on longer than a similar outage due to a technical error back in 2019 and underscores the reach of CME Group and its Globex electronic trading platform. It triggered widespread frustration as market participants contemplated the prospect of a lost trading session for millions of contracts tracking the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq 100 on one of the world’s largest derivatives exchanges.
Foreign-exchange markets, which had continued to trade throughout the day, saw no major volatility after the noon reopening. Moves in G-10 currencies were fairly contained on Friday, with the dollar little changed against the yen and up 0.2% against the euro.
The trading halt was caused by a cooling system malfunction at a data center in the Chicago area, according to facility operator CyrusOne. Engineering teams have restarted several chillers and deployed temporary cooling equipment, a spokesperson said, without giving a time for the resumption of normal operations at the site.
For markets affected by the outage, the impact was significant. Trading of US Treasury futures remained halted, while cash bonds saw limited activity. European and UK bond markets that trade on a different exchange were unaffected.
For some, the timing of the disruption on Friday could cause particular inconvenience if it lasts, due to the need to roll positions from one contract to another.
Gold saw erratic moves in early London trading, with the gap between bids and offers briefly surging amid thin liquidity. US crude and palm oil on the Bursa Malaysia exchange were also affected. Friday is the expiry day for gasoline and diesel futures that can be settled with delivery of the actual physical fuel, adding a further potential complication for some traders.
Lost Liquidity
Others reported that volumes had shifted onto alternative platforms as liquidity and price transparency evaporated.
Most US markets were closed on Thursday for the Thanksgiving holiday, and are due to reopen later for a shortened trading day. Thankfully for traders, there is limited news expected on Friday with no economic data scheduled for release in the US, and no expected Federal Reserve speakers ahead of a blackout period leading up to their anticipated December interest rate decision.
November has been a volatile month for equities, with the S&P 500 slumping as much as 4.7% amid concerns about the path of Fed rate cuts and valuations of artificial intelligence-linked stocks. The index has clawed back those losses and volatility has been falling all week, back near October lows. The US stock benchmark is close to erasing its monthly drop with one more session left before the final month of the year.
Bourses operated by CME include the Chicago Board of Trade, the New York Mercantile Exchange and the Commodity Exchange. CME also has a stake in other exchanges, including the Gulf Mercantile Exchange, which said in a notice to the market that it had also seen trade halted due to the cooling issue.
–With assistance from Alex Longley, Blaise Robinson, James Hirai, Weilun Soon, Michael Msika, Jack Ryan, Ruth Carson, Serene Cheong, Yongchang Chin, Hallie Gu and Julien Ponthus.
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