Just realized something interesting about how market access is shifting. Traders can now trade the S&P 500 basically around the clock without needing a traditional stock exchange at all. That's a pretty significant change.



The way this works through perpetual futures is pretty elegant - you get the exposure you want without the limitations of traditional market hours. No more waiting for the opening bell or missing moves overnight. If something happens in Asia or Europe that impacts the S&P, you can react immediately through perpetual futures contracts.

What's wild is how this fundamentally changes the playing field. Retail traders and institutions can now compete on more equal footing when it comes to timing and access. The perpetual futures market doesn't sleep, which means neither do the opportunities.

For anyone seriously trading indices, perpetual futures have basically become the default now. You get better execution, no circuit breakers cutting you off at weird times, and the ability to manage exposure 24/7. The traditional stock exchange model is starting to feel outdated when you compare it to this.

The infrastructure around this has gotten really solid too. Liquidity is there, spreads are tight, and the mechanics of perpetual futures have become pretty standardized. If you're still exclusively using traditional equities platforms, you might be leaving money on the table just from the access limitations alone. Definitely worth exploring if you haven't already.
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