Crypto is winning the race to own oil trading after hours as Wintermute launches 24/7 trading

For decades, the oil market moved on a very familiar and very predictable schedule. The biggest signals came from legacy futures venues; traders knew where the deepest pools of liquidity were and when they’d come alive.

But, like almost everything else, oil too hasn’t been immune to the modern market’s hunger.

Its rhythm has started to break as war pushed energy onto a much different kind of schedule.

Headlines are now landing at unexpected hours, risk is building on weekends, and an announcement from Washington can send crude surging hours before exchanges are open for business.

As those gaps kept widening, crypto companies saw an opportunity that was too good to miss out on: 24/7 oil trading.

While this has been in the works for quite a while, it was Wintermute’s new 24/7 WTF crude oil CFD offering that pushed it into the mainstream. On the surface, this might look like just another product launch, another massive company expanding its menu. But set against the past few months, it looks like a land grab.

Wintermute is the latest of many companies trying to capture a slice of the oil market, which has become far more valuable than it was just a few months ago. Geopolitical risk doesn’t care for office hours, and traders want exposure to oil immediately. That’s why its product will enable users to post both fiat and crypto as collateral and trade around the clock through OTC channels.

Legacy venues are too far and too slow to deal with the kind of demand that’s coming from the market right now.

On March 24, traders placed more than $500 million in crude bets just before President Donald Trump announced that the US would delay attacks on Iran’s energy infrastructure. The market swung hard: Brent fell from about $112 to $99, while WTI dropped from roughly $99 to $86. But in spite of this drop, oil prices were still more than 40% above their pre-Iran levels, which gives a sense of how sharply the Middle East crisis has changed the market.

When price moves start arriving on that kind of schedule, traders will naturally go looking for a venue that’s already open.

Where does oil risk go first?

That search has already produced one of the most interesting stories of the year.

Earlier in March, an oil-linked perpetual contract on Hyperliquid generated more than $1.2 billion in 24-hour volume, enough to become the platform’s second-most traded market. The surge came after a jump in oil futures during the escalation in Iran. Just a few days earlier, oil, gold, and silver contracts on Hyperliquid grew so much over the weekend that they started acting as a live signal for how those markets might respond once trading resumed on Monday.

Having an oil-linked perp on Hyperliquid turn $1.2 billion in 24 hours means this isn’t a niche crypto experiment. We already have oil-linked products, so companies are now racing to be the first to quell this insatiable thirst for oil risk when traders in London, Singapore, Dubai, or New York want to react right away and refuse to wait for the next regular session.

Hyperliquid showed us what one model for that future might look like. Its product is very open, highly visible, and built around perpetuals that turn price discovery into a spectacle. The road Wintermute’s taken is more tailored. It’s dealer-led and more suited to clients who want customized access through OTC channels, rather than a public venue.

While the style might be different, the target is the same: both want the trader who now thinks of oil as a 24/7 macro asset.

That split deserves attention because it hints at where this market may be heading next. One version is crypto-native and public-facing, shaped by crowds, leverage, and speed. The other version is more institutional in tone, closer to the traditions of dealer markets, even as it relies on crypto’s always-on trading.

Both will most likely grow at the same time, with one becoming the loud front end of off-hours oil speculation, and the other becoming the smoother route for institutions that want exposure without the theater.

The bigger push toward all-hours markets

This is also why the Wintermute move fits into something broader than commodities.

The financial industry as a whole is moving toward longer trading days and tokenized formats across multiple asset classes.

Last week, the SEC approved a Nasdaq proposal allowing certain stocks to trade and settle in tokenized form. The New York Stock Exchange is working with Securitize on a tokenized securities platform. DTCC has said NSCC plans to shift to 24×5 operations in late June, if approved. Nasdaq has said it plans to introduce 24-hour trading on its primary US exchange in the second half of 2026. CME Group said in February that it would launch 24/7 cryptocurrency futures and options trading on May 29.

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