STARTRADER has rolled out 24/5 trading on 20 of the most actively traded US stocks, expanding beyond standard Wall Street hours as brokers race to meet demand for more flexible equity access.
The new instruments, listed with a “.24H” suffix under a dedicated US.24H group, are now available across STARTRADER’s trading platforms. The move places the broker among a relatively small group of providers offering structured exposure to US equities outside the traditional market session.
Why Are Brokers Moving Toward 24/5 US Stock Trading?
Demand for extended-hours trading has been building for several years, driven by a more global retail audience and the growing overlap between traditional finance and always-on digital asset markets. Traders in Asia, the Middle East, and Europe increasingly want exposure to US equities without waiting for the New York session to open.
That shift is becoming more visible across the market. Nasdaq has signaled plans to move toward 24/5 US equity trading, while crypto-native platforms have been experimenting with tokenized US stocks that mimic around-the-clock accessibility. In that context, STARTRADER’s launch is less an isolated product update and more a response to a structural market trend.
The message is straightforward: standard exchange hours are starting to feel restrictive in a global, digitally connected trading environment.
Investor Takeaway
What Exactly Is STARTRADER Offering?
The new 24/5 stock products are designed to give traders continuity beyond standard market hours, but with a more conservative risk structure. STARTRADER is offering these instruments with 5:1 leverage, a lower cap intended to support liquidity stability and risk control during off-hours trading.
That matters because liquidity conditions outside regular US market hours can be thinner and more uneven. Wider spreads, lower volume, and sharper price jumps are common in extended trading windows. By keeping leverage lower on these products, STARTRADER is clearly trying to balance access with risk containment.
At the same time, the broker is preserving its existing higher-leverage model for standard US stock products, which remain available at up to 33:1 leverage. That creates a two-track structure:
- 24/5 US stocks: lower leverage, broader market-hours access
- Standard US stocks: higher leverage, traditional trading session focus
This dual setup is meant to serve different trading styles. Some traders want flexibility and continuity. Others prioritize higher exposure during the most liquid session. STARTRADER is trying to cater to both.
Why Does This Matter for Traders?
The practical value of 24/5 stock access is not just convenience. It changes how traders respond to catalysts. Earnings reactions, macro headlines, geopolitical events, and overnight moves in related markets often happen outside standard US cash equity hours. Traders with no extended-hours access are forced to wait, sometimes entering a market that has already repriced sharply.
With 24/5 availability, traders can react sooner, hedge earlier, or capture momentum that otherwise would be missed. For globally active traders, this also reduces the mismatch between local time zones and US market timing.
There is a broader strategic angle as well. More traders now approach markets in a cross-asset way, tracking crypto, FX, indices, commodities, and stocks within the same session. A broker that extends stock access closer to the around-the-clock rhythm of other asset classes becomes more relevant in that workflow.
Investor Takeaway
How Does Regulation Fit Into the Product Push?
STARTRADER is emphasizing that the launch sits within a regulated framework, noting its oversight across five jurisdictions: ASIC, FSA, FSC, FSCA, and CMA. That is an important point because extended-hours products can raise questions around pricing transparency, liquidity handling, and client protection.
By highlighting governance alongside flexibility, the broker is trying to position the rollout as a controlled product expansion rather than an aggressive leverage play. CEO Peter Karsten’s comments reinforce that framing, presenting the launch as a response to different client needs rather than a blanket push for more risk-taking.
In a crowded brokerage landscape, that matters. Extended-hours access alone is not enough. Traders also want confidence that pricing and execution standards remain consistent when the market becomes less liquid.
What Comes Next for Extended-Hours Equity Trading?
STARTRADER’s rollout reflects where the brokerage industry is heading. The boundary between traditional session-based products and always-accessible markets is starting to blur. As exchanges, brokers, and tokenized asset platforms continue pushing toward longer trading windows, 24/5 stock access may gradually move from a premium feature to a baseline expectation.
For now, STARTRADER gains an early positioning advantage by offering structured access ahead of broader industry normalization. The success of the product will depend on execution quality, pricing stability, and whether traders see real value in off-hours participation rather than just another headline feature.
Still, the direction is clear: the future of equity trading looks more continuous, more global, and far less tied to the old market clock.
About STARTRADER
STARTRADER is a global broker offering access to online trading across multiple financial instruments. The company serves both partners and retail clients through MetaTrader, the STAR-APP, and STAR-COPY. Operating under a client-first approach, STARTRADER is regulated in five jurisdictions and continues to position itself around governance, transparency, and sustainable growth.

