Trader consensus on Polymarket prices an 86.5% implied probability against Nasdaq implementing round-the-clock trading by June 30, 2026, driven by the absence of SEC approval for its SR-NASDAQ-2025-109 proposed rule change filed in December 2025 to extend U.S. equities trading to 23 hours per weekday. Ongoing SEC review, evidenced by SIFMA's March 19 comments and Nasdaq's March 26 white paper on 23/5 operations, underscores persistent regulatory hurdles and coordination needs with DTCC for Q2 readiness. Nasdaq targets early Q3 launch—post-deadline—amid competitor filings like CBOE's 24/5 proposal, highlighting sector-wide but deliberate infrastructure shifts rather than imminent rollout.
Experimentelle KI-generierte Zusammenfassung mit Polymarket-Daten · AktualisiertJa
$37,320 Vol.
$37,320 Vol.
Ja
$37,320 Vol.
$37,320 Vol.
5 days per week refers to any 5 24-hour periods which Nasdaq treats as trading days. This is not limited to the weekday hours of the Eastern Time Zone (e.g. a day starting on Sunday at 9PM ET and ending on Monday at 9PM ET will count, as long as at least 22 of the relevant 24 hours are open for trading).
A qualifying Nasdaq trading schedule must be active, operational, and publicly accessible for trading of Nasdaq-listed securities to qualify for a “Yes” resolution. The announcement of such a trading schedule within this market’s timeframe will not suffice on its own.
Technical errors (e.g. a circuit breaker), trading holidays, or any planned shortened days will not disqualify this market from resolving to “Yes,” provided Nasdaq has officially implemented a qualifying trading schedule.
Limited trading restrictions outside of regular market hours (i.e. lower liquidity or restricted order types) will not disqualify an extended trading schedule from resolving this market.
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from Nasdaq; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Markt eröffnet: Dec 15, 2025, 8:35 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...5 days per week refers to any 5 24-hour periods which Nasdaq treats as trading days. This is not limited to the weekday hours of the Eastern Time Zone (e.g. a day starting on Sunday at 9PM ET and ending on Monday at 9PM ET will count, as long as at least 22 of the relevant 24 hours are open for trading).
A qualifying Nasdaq trading schedule must be active, operational, and publicly accessible for trading of Nasdaq-listed securities to qualify for a “Yes” resolution. The announcement of such a trading schedule within this market’s timeframe will not suffice on its own.
Technical errors (e.g. a circuit breaker), trading holidays, or any planned shortened days will not disqualify this market from resolving to “Yes,” provided Nasdaq has officially implemented a qualifying trading schedule.
Limited trading restrictions outside of regular market hours (i.e. lower liquidity or restricted order types) will not disqualify an extended trading schedule from resolving this market.
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from Nasdaq; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on Polymarket prices an 86.5% implied probability against Nasdaq implementing round-the-clock trading by June 30, 2026, driven by the absence of SEC approval for its SR-NASDAQ-2025-109 proposed rule change filed in December 2025 to extend U.S. equities trading to 23 hours per weekday. Ongoing SEC review, evidenced by SIFMA's March 19 comments and Nasdaq's March 26 white paper on 23/5 operations, underscores persistent regulatory hurdles and coordination needs with DTCC for Q2 readiness. Nasdaq targets early Q3 launch—post-deadline—amid competitor filings like CBOE's 24/5 proposal, highlighting sector-wide but deliberate infrastructure shifts rather than imminent rollout.
Experimentelle KI-generierte Zusammenfassung mit Polymarket-Daten · Aktualisiert
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