Market Event··5 min read·Data as of May 20, 2026

CME's 11% Pullback: Historical Context

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As of May 20, 2026, CME Group Inc. (CME) moved from the green zone to the yellow zone. The verified drawdown is 11.1% from its all-time high, with the stock at $290.12 versus a high-water mark of $326.46. Its Drawdown Severity Score™ is 2.3, which places it in the Moderately Elevated range.

Drawdown Severity Score™

Down 11% over 56 days. This pullback is above average but not extreme by historical standards.

Article data as of May 20, 2026

2.34

Moderately Elevated
0510+

Price

$290.12

All-Time High

$326.46

Drawdown

-11.1%

Duration

56 days

What is the Drawdown Severity Score™?

What changed in the data

This article uses only DrawdownAlerts price, drawdown, duration, severity, and historical-drawdown records. The zone transition matters after the severity score crossed a defined threshold in the DrawdownAlerts framework. A move into a yellow zone means the current drawdown profile now sits in a more severe part of the ticker's own historical range.

The current drawdown has lasted 56 days. That duration is important alongside the drawdown depth. A short, deep decline and a long, grinding decline can both reach the same zone, but they tell different risk-context stories. Here, the current reading combines a 11.1% drawdown with 56 days below the high-water mark.

Current drawdown context

CME Drawdown History

Percentage below all-time high over time

Article data

-11.1%

May 20, 2026

The all-time high used in this analysis is $326.46. The latest verified price is $290.12. Those two numbers anchor the current drawdown calculation and keep the article focused on measurable data rather than outside narrative.

The average maximum drawdown in the stored CME history is 4.5%, and the average drawdown duration is 47 days. The current drawdown is therefore compared against the ticker's own record, not against a broad market average. That is the point of the Drawdown Severity Score™: it normalizes the current decline against what this ticker has actually done before.

Historical comparison

DrawdownAlerts has 3 comparable historical CME drawdown records at or beyond the 30% threshold. The average duration in that comparison set is 1507 days. This is a limited historical sample with only 3 comparable events, so the average should be read as context rather than a forecast.

What History Says

Article data as of May 20, 2026

CME has dropped 30%+ from its high 3 times in its tracked history.

Occurrences

3

Avg Duration

1507

days

Avg Max Drop

-34.5%

Showing 2 of 3 comparable events from available data. View all

PeriodMax DropDuration
Mar 2020 to May 2021-37.4%435 days
Mar 2022 to Oct 2024-31.7%940 days

View CME's full drawdown history →

There are 168 total drawdown records in the stored CME history used by this system. The comparable set above is narrower. It looks only at drawdowns that reached the selected threshold, which makes it more relevant to the current setup than a simple average across every past pullback.

The threshold is intentionally tied to the depth of this event. A comparison that is too shallow can make a normal pullback look more dramatic than it is, while a threshold that is too deep can leave too little history to evaluate. DrawdownAlerts uses the nearest available comparison level with enough historical records when possible, then shows the count so readers can judge the sample size.

This is why the article separates the event reading from the full drawdown history. The event reading says what changed as of May 20, 2026. The historical table shows how often similar drawdowns have appeared in the stored record. Those are related, but they are not the same claim.

For readers using this as a monitoring signal, the useful question is not whether history will repeat. It is whether the current score, depth, and duration keep moving into a more unusual range or start moving back toward ordinary territory for this ticker.

Data boundary

This is a data-only transition brief. It does not assign an outside explanation for the move. The article is intentionally limited to price history, drawdown depth, time in drawdown, severity score, and comparable DrawdownAlerts records.

That boundary is important. A zone change is a measurement event. It says the ticker crossed a severity threshold. It does not, by itself, explain why the price moved. The practical value is that it gives investors a consistent way to notice when a ticker's current drawdown has become more or less unusual versus its own past.

Because this article is anchored to May 20, 2026, later market moves can make the live ticker page look different from the article snapshot. That is expected. The article records why the transition was notable when it happened, while the ticker page remains the place to inspect the latest price, score, and zone.

What to monitor next

The next useful readings are the Drawdown Severity Score™, the current drawdown percentage, and the number of days the ticker remains below its all-time high. If the score moves farther into the yellow zone, the current drawdown is becoming more unusual in DrawdownAlerts data. If the score moves back toward the prior zone, the measured stress is easing relative to the ticker's own historical range.

For CME, the present transition is already enough to merit a fresh article after it crossed a green, yellow, or red boundary. That is the coverage rule for DrawdownAlerts market-event content: true zone transitions receive coverage, while same-zone velocity moves remain optional.

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Disclaimer: DrawdownAlerts provides historical data analysis, not financial advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Severity scores are analytical tools, not buy/sell signals. Always do your own research before making investment decisions.