America’s First 24-Hour Stock Exchange Gets Operational Approval

The exchange will allow investors to get out of risky positions beyond official market timings, according to 24X National Exchange.
America’s First 24-Hour Stock Exchange Gets Operational Approval
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in Washington on Sept. 18, 2008. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Naveen Athrappully
Updated:
0:00

U.S. regulators have approved a nonstop stock exchange to begin operations in the country, which is expected to boost overnight liquidity available to traders.

“24 Exchange announced today that it has received approval from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to operate 24X National Exchange as the first national securities exchange in the U.S. that allows trading of U.S. securities 23 hours each workday,” the company said in a Nov. 27 statement.

The exchange will be introduced in two steps. In the first stage, it will operate between 4 a.m. EDT and 7 p.m. EDT on weekdays beginning in the second half of 2025.

In the second stage, trading will be offered between 8 p.m. EDT on Sundays and 7 p.m. EDT on Fridays. Every trading day will have a one-hour operational pause aimed at allowing the company to conduct tests and upgrades.

Dmitri Galinov, founder and CEO of 24 Exchange, called the SEC approval a “thrilling development.”

“With this historic SEC approval in place, we will build and operate a customer-driven Exchange that can rapidly align with market demands and adapt quickly to client feedback,” he said.

According to Galinov, traders are often at risk when markets remain closed at their geographical location. Traders are not able to quit positions when major and sudden events unfold, he said.

The 24X National Exchange seeks to solve this issue by offering around-the-clock trading. Initially, the exchange will seek to boost overnight liquidity for U.S. equities by tapping into trading volumes from the Asia-Pacific region.

Some procedures are pending—including making additional filings with the SEC—before the 24-hour trading is activated, according to the company.

Benjamin Schiffrin, director of securities policy at market advocacy group Better Markets, criticized the SEC approval of 24X National Exchange, warning that this will harm investors and damage markets.

“Retail investors trading during an overnight session will be trading in a market where there are few buyers and sellers, and where prices will be more volatile and less favorable than during normal hours,” he said.

“This means that, during overnight sessions, retail investors will only get the best prices in a bad market, thereby losing money if they had traded during normal business hours.”

Risky Behaviors

Schiffrin noted that people tend to engage in “riskier behaviors” during nighttime.

Trading platforms may send notifications and prompts at night when traders are “particularly susceptible” to inducements and allow people to trade with just the push of a button.

He provided an example of legalized sports betting that entices people to bet with ease, thus leading to a “gambling addiction crisis.” The financial industry could use similar tactics to hook investors into trading that can have “potentially serious consequences,” Schiffrin said.

In comments submitted to the SEC, two researchers from the University of Washington and Stanford University suggested that increasing trading hours could reduce net gains made by retail investors.

They said that during pre-market and post-market sessions, liquidity tends to be low, volatility high, and prices “arguably less informationally efficient.”

“Our research indicates that retail investors systematically underperform during these types of conditions,” they said.

“While attracting more volume to these sessions is presumably the intention of 24X Exchange, the majority of trading activity will likely remain in the daily market session, meaning these issues will remain salient for out-of-hours retail traders.”

24X National Exchange’s approval comes as the New York Stock Exchange revealed in October that it plans to extend weekday trading time at its Arca equities exchange to 22 hours per day.

With this update, trading during weekdays will operate between 1:30 a.m. EDT and 11:30 p.m. EDT. The fully electronic exchange will offer all stocks, ETFs, and closed-end funds listed in the United States for trading.

Naveen Athrappully
Naveen Athrappully
Author
Naveen Athrappully is a news reporter covering business and world events at The Epoch Times.