| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $66,670.29 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Bitcoin will reach the specific price target of $66,670.29 during a defined 15‑minute period. It matters because very short windows capture transient price moves that are driven by liquidity, news, or large orders rather than longer-term trends.
Bitcoin is a highly liquid but volatile asset that can exhibit rapid price swings over minute‑long intervals; markets that focus on 15‑minute windows are designed to let traders express views about these short, discrete moves. Events such as macroeconomic releases, large exchange flows, derivatives expiries, or exchange-specific incidents have historically produced brief spikes or drops that this market is trying to capture. Because the market's close time is listed as TBD, the exact settlement window and timing will be published by the market operator prior to resolution.
Market prices aggregate participants' expectations about whether the $66,670.29 level will be reached during the specified 15‑minute window; they update in real time as new information arrives. To interpret prices correctly, always read the market’s resolution rules to know the reference price source, the exact timing of the 15‑minute window, and how unusual data is handled.
The market will resolve according to the event's resolution criteria: typically whether the designated reference price reaches the target level at any point during the defined 15‑minute measurement window. Check the market's official resolution rules to see the precise price source, whether 'reach' means trade or quote, and how the 15‑minute interval is timestamped.
The event page currently shows 'Closes: TBD', so the operator will announce the specific start and end times for the 15‑minute window before settlement. Monitor the market page for the published timestamps and any timezone or timestamp conventions used.
The market uses a specified reference price feed or exchange as defined in its resolution terms. That could be a consolidated index or a particular exchange's trade price—consult the event’s rule text to identify the exact data source used for settlement.
Yes. Short-lived anomalies like flash crashes, erroneous trades, or outages can influence whether the price touches the target; the market’s resolution rules typically describe how such outliers or missing data are treated (for example, ignore, use alternate feed, or apply averaging). Review those rules to understand contingency procedures.
Total volume $0 means no trades have been executed yet, indicating limited liquidity and potentially wider spreads if you place orders. 'Number of outcomes: 1' indicates the market centers on a single measurable event (the price touch) rather than multiple labeled outcomes; check the market description to confirm whether settlement is binary or follows another convention.