
Bitcoin’s CME futures closed near $67,000 on Friday afternoon, and the spot market has since drifted to around $66,500 over the weekend. That $500 difference is the latest example of a CME gap, a price discrepancy that forms every time the traditional futures market shuts down while crypto keeps trading. Roughly 77% of these gaps eventually get filled, making them one of the most watched technical signals among institutional and retail traders alike.
This is one of the few patterns in crypto with a genuinely useful historical fill rate, and knowing how to read it correctly gives you an edge on Monday morning that most weekend traders ignore completely.
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Why CME Gaps Exist in the First Place
The Chicago Mercantile Exchange trades…






