CME Futures Go Dark After Cooling Failure At Chicago Data Center; Traders Angered: “We’re Flying Dark” 

CME Futures Go Dark After Cooling Failure At Chicago Data Center; Traders Angered: “We’re Flying Dark” 

CME Futures Go Dark After Cooling Failure At Chicago Data Center; Traders Angered: “We’re Flying Dark” 

A major “cooling issue” at data centers operated by CyrusOne forced the Chicago Mercantile Exchange to halt futures and options trading early Friday morning, disrupting activity across equities, FX, Treasuries, energy, and agricultural markets.  

Due to a cooling issue at CyrusOne data centers, our markets are currently halted. Support is working to resolve the issue in the near term and will advise clients of Pre-Open details as soon as they are available,” CME wrote on X late Thursday night. 

CME provided an update around 0500 ET, indicating, “BrokerTec EU markets are open and trading. All other CME Group markets remain halted due to a data center cooling issue at CyrusOne. We will provide updates as they are available.” 

The disruption, now longer than a similar 2019 outage, paralyzed CME’s Globex platform, prompting traders to describe conditions as “flying dark” as liquidity, price discovery, and market signaling disappeared in seconds.

Exchanges connected to CME, including CBOT, NYMEX, COMEX, and even the Gulf Mercantile Exchange, also experienced disruptions. CME has not provided a reopening time.

Thomas Helaine, head of equity sales at TP ICAP Europe in Paris, told Bloomberg the outage is “a bit like flying dark,” adding, “When you’re trading cash equity like us, US futures give you an indication of where the market is going before the open. I can only imagine how complicated it must be for derivatives desks.”

UBS equity trader Ed Abraham told clients, “Liquidity has reduced even more after the CME halted trading of commodities futures and options due to a cooling issue at a data center, providing no timeline for when the issue would be fixed. APAC.” 

Traders sitting with a position are certainly quite angry,” said Gnanasekar Thiagarajan, head of trading and hedging strategies at Kaleesuwari Intercontinental.

Nick Twidale, chief analyst at AT Global Markets in Sydney, noted that traders “will be switching to alternative liquidity tools where they can. We’ve lost one of the market’s major liquidity sources. This heightens the risk of exacerbated moves if a big event occurs.”

The outage creates headaches for traders as they roll monthly contracts, leaving positions frozen. With US markets reopening for a shortened post-Thanksgiving session, broader equity markets in Europe and Asia were rather muted. 

Also, the outage highlights the extent to which CME serves as a backbone of global markets, where one data center cooling issue can ripple across exchanges worldwide.

German analyst Marc Friedrich joked at CME’s X post,Silver had to get cooled off.” 

Tyler Durden
Fri, 11/28/2025 – 06:40ZeroHedge News​Read More

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