Candles with long wicks appear when theres a big trade in that time period but it closes at the level of the candle.
Someone did a large purchase but the majority of purchases on that day were much lower.
Such wick doesn't show on other exchanges because it's the candle closing that counts for the indexes so nobody cares if an exchange wicks above or below the average.
To be more specific. Immediately after the price drop seen in the candle before, futures up to $323 were bought in the timeframe of the next candle (here 1d).
A possibility here might have been that someone made a missclick with a big lever and ordered $323 instead of $32.3. As the market price remained much lower, the futures price fell back to the lower value.