| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $68,214.17 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Bitcoin will hit the specific price level $68,214.17 within a defined 15-minute measurement window. It matters because it captures ultra-short-term price action and is used by traders focused on near-instant moves and liquidity events.
Bitcoin is highly traded across many venues and can exhibit rapid price moves driven by order flow, news, and algorithmic trading. Short-duration targets like a 15-minute window are influenced more by immediate liquidity and execution than by longer-term fundamentals. Market structure, exchange spreads, and which data feed is used for settlement all shape outcomes for contracts of this type.
Market odds on this event summarize the aggregated view of participants about the specified 15-minute outcome and will move as new information, orders, or liquidity arrive. Always read the event's settlement rules to understand exactly what the displayed market price represents.
The contract defines the exact 15-minute measurement period (start and end timestamps); check the event details on the platform for the precise alignment (for example, whether intervals are UTC-aligned or tied to a particular exchange).
That depends on the market’s settlement condition. Some contracts pay if the price equals the target at any point in the window, others use the price at a specific timestamp or an index average; consult the market’s rules to see which applies here.
Settlement uses the reference price source specified in the event contract—typically an exchange feed or a composite index listed on the event page. Review the contract metadata to find the named feed(s) and aggregation method.
If the contract only requires at least one occurrence, a single touch is sufficient; repeated touches usually do not change the outcome unless the contract requires a particular frequency or an end-of-window condition. Confirm the exact settlement condition in the event rules.
Zero volume indicates no executed trades so far and can signal low liquidity; that may mean wider spreads and greater slippage for orders. Traders should check order book depth and be cautious about position size until visible liquidity appears.