PrimeXBT has launched gold 24/7 trading on its PXTrader 2.0 platform, allowing traders to hold and adjust gold positions across weekends for the first time on the broker’s system. For UK retail investors watching gold’s extraordinary run, the launch raises a practical question worth unpacking: what does round-the-clock gold access actually mean, and for whom does it apply?
Gold’s Run in Context
Gold’s recent performance gives the launch its backdrop. According to the LBMA Precious Metals Market Report for Q4 and the full year 2025, gold broke through $4,000 per ounce on 8 October 2025 and hit a temporary all-time high of $4,338.25 on 17 October 2025, a gain of 11.6% from the start of that month alone. Gold held above $4,000 from 7 November through year-end, adding over 10% in Q4 alone.
The snippet’s claim that gold fell more than 25% from January’s record high before steadying reflects the volatility that preceded that October surge. A hawkish Federal Reserve (Fed), a stronger dollar and geopolitical tension in the Strait of Hormuz all contributed. The same forces that rattled gold also weighed on crypto, equities, oil and currencies in the same period, which is the point PrimeXBT’s launch is designed to address.
Gold and Bitcoin increasingly respond to the same macro drivers: monetary policy, real yields, dollar strength and risk appetite. When the macro environment shifts, it tends to shift for both at once. A trader with a view on dollar direction, for instance, now needs to act on gold and Bitcoin simultaneously, and traditionally could not do so over a weekend.
What Gold 24/7 Trading Actually Means on This Platform
PrimeXBT’s GOLD 24/7 instrument is a CFD (contract for difference, a derivative that tracks an underlying asset’s price without you ever owning the asset itself). It sits alongside crypto futures, foreign exchange, indices and other CFDs in a single multi-asset account on PXTrader 2.0, available in both live and demo accounts, as reported by The Globe and Mail.
On weekdays, spreads start from $0.35, with leverage of up to 1:1000 available. VIP Tier pricing can reduce spreads to as low as $0.17 for high-volume traders. Weekend trading runs on dedicated terms that reflect reduced weekend liquidity. The structural point is integration: a trader funds an account in crypto, then expresses a macro view across both gold and Bitcoin on the same clock, without the two assets sitting on different trading schedules.
That said, UK retail investors need to be clear about what this product is and is not. PrimeXBT holds a licence from South Africa’s Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA), as reported by the Financial Commission, but it is not authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) in the UK. That matters for two reasons.
First, UK investors using a non-FCA-regulated broker fall outside the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS), which protects deposits of up to £85,000 with authorised firms if they fail. Second, the FCA caps the leverage available to retail clients on commodity CFDs at a fraction of what PrimeXBT advertises. A 1:1000 leverage ratio (meaning a £100 margin controls a £100,000 position) is not available to UK retail clients under FCA rules, which impose strict leverage limits on retail CFD accounts precisely because of how rapidly losses can accumulate.
CFDs also cannot be held inside an ISA or a SIPP. Gains from CFD trading are subject to capital gains tax, not the tax-free wrapper that ISA and SIPP holders use for conventional equity or fund positions.
None of this makes weekend gold access an irrelevant concept. The structural argument that macro moves now happen around the clock, and that a trader holding gold and Bitcoin exposure simultaneously deserves a consistent timeline, is a reasonable one. The LBMA data shows just how sharply gold moved in October 2025: an 11.6% monthly gain concentrated into a matter of weeks is exactly the kind of move that can unfold partly over a weekend. Continuous access has genuine logic when an asset moves like that.
The question for a UK investor is whether this specific product, from this specific provider, on these specific terms, is appropriate for their situation. PrimeXBT’s own disclaimer states that leveraged products carry a high risk of losing money rapidly and may not be suitable for all investors. Anyone considering the platform should check the PrimeXBT website for current terms, restricted jurisdictions and which legal entity applies to their country of residence before opening an account.
The broader trend the launch reflects, toward 24/7 markets and the convergence of crypto and traditional assets on unified platforms, is real and moving quickly. Whether the next step is FCA-regulated providers offering similar continuity to UK retail clients is the question worth watching.

