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5 Financial Markets Trends in 2026: From assets to events, from hours to always-on

Introduction: 2026, the Year Market Structure Catches Up With Reality

For decades, financial markets have been built around a stable architecture: assets, trading hours, clearing cycles, and well-defined venues. 

By 2026, that architecture is no longer sufficient. 

Across traditional finance and digital markets, we are witnessing a structural convergence driven by three forces: 

  • Always-on trading 
  • Event-based risk 
  • Institutional-grade digital infrastructure 

What once looked experimental, crypto, tokenisation, prediction markets, is now reshaping the core of global market structure. 

Trend 1 - Markets Go Always-On with 24/7 Trading

Crypto didn’t introduce volatility. 

It introduced continuous price discovery. 

By 2026: 

  • 24/7 trading is becoming standard, not exceptional 
  • Derivatives, ETFs, and event contracts increasingly trade outside traditional market hours 
  • Liquidity no longer waits for Monday morning 

This shift forces institutions to rethink: 

  • Margining and collateral management 
  • Weekend risk monitoring 
  • Real-time settlement (with stablecoins acting as an enabler) 
  • How operations are set up from staffing models and technology coverage to margin processes and the associated cost base.

Always-on markets are not about speed, they’re about resilience. 

Trend 2 - From Asset-Based Risk to Event-Based Risk

Traditional markets price assets. 

Modern markets increasingly price outcomes. 

Prediction markets, event contracts, and binary-style instruments allow traders to express views on: 

  • Elections and policy decisions 
  • Central bank actions 
  • Regulatory approvals 
  • Potential corporate events (product launched, earnings milestones, regulatory approvals)
  • Potential geopolitical events (elections, sanctions, conflicts, trade agreements)
  • Product launches 
  • Sports and cultural events with real economic impact 


By 2026, event-based markets are no longer a curiosity, they act as:
 

  • Live probability engines 
  • Alternative data feeds 
  • Hedging tools for non-traditional risks 

Markets are no longer just reflecting reality. 

They are quantifying uncertainty in real time. 

Trend 3 - Institutionalization of “New” Markets

The most important shift is not technological, it’s behavioural. 

Institutions are no longer asking if they should engage with: 

  • Digital assets 
  • Tokenised instruments 
  • Event-driven contracts 

They are asking how to do it safely, efficiently, and at scale. 

This is driving: 

  • Regulatory convergence (CFTC-style frameworks, clearer market rules) 
  • Professional market making and surveillance 
  • Integration into existing OMS / EOMS workflows 

By 2026, the distinction between “traditional” and “digital” markets is largely operational, not conceptual. 

Trend 4 - Tokenization Becomes Operational, Not Experimental

Tokenization is moving beyond pilots. 

The real value is not the token itself, it’s what it enables: 

  • T+0 or near-instant settlement 
  • 24/7 risk management 
  • Reduced post-trade friction 
  • More efficient collateral usage 

As liquidity builds, tokenized versions of assets become functionally superior, especially for institutions managing risk across time zones. 

 

Trend 5 - Market Infrastructure Becomes the Competitive Edge

As products converge, infrastructure differentiates. 

By 2026, winning platforms will be those that can: 

  • Handle asset-based and event-based instruments 
  • Support continuous trading and real-time settlement 
  • Integrate new data signals (probabilities, sentiment, events) 
  • Maintain institutional-grade controls, auditability, and resilience 

This is not about replacing traditional markets. 

It’s about expanding what markets can price. 

Conclusion - The Market Is Getting Closer to the Real World

Financial markets are no longer just mirrors of balance sheets and order books. 

They increasingly reflect politics, policy, technology, culture, and human behaviour in real time. 

By 2026, the most important question is no longer what can be traded? 

It’s how fast, how safely, and how continuously risk can be priced and transferred. 

 

 

Picture of Lise GRANT
Lise GRANT
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