| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $69,044.39 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Bitcoin will reach the specified $69,044.39 price level within a defined 15-minute measurement window. Short-duration targets matter because they test immediate market pressure and are useful for high-frequency traders and event-driven strategies.
Short intraday targets like this focus attention on minute-by-minute price action rather than broader trends. Bitcoin's intraday moves are driven by a mix of macro headlines, crypto-specific news, order-book dynamics, and activity in derivatives markets, so a target at this short horizon can be hit or missed quickly. Because the market closes are listed as TBD, participants should confirm the exact measurement timing and resolution method on the event page before trading.
Prediction market prices reflect the market’s consensus about the likelihood of the specified outcome and update as new information arrives. For time-limited, high-frequency events, expect the market price to be especially sensitive to near-term news, liquidity shifts, and exchange data used for resolution.
Resolution depends on the event's formal rules: typically the specified price must be reached or exceeded within the defined 15-minute measurement window using the platform's stated price source and tie-breaking rules. Check the event page for the official resolution criteria and the exact timing and price feed.
The market close and measurement window are listed as TBD in the summary; the platform will publish the precise trade cutoff and the start/end times for the 15-minute window on the event page. Traders should monitor that page for updates and any timezone information before trading.
The event's resolution procedure specifies the price source (for example, a particular exchange or an aggregated index). That choice affects susceptibility to localized anomalies; confirm the exact price feed on the market’s official details before acting on the market.
In a thin order book, relatively small market orders can move the displayed price enough to create transient touches that satisfy a short measurement window, while deep liquidity makes such touches less likely without larger flows. Large one-sided orders, exchange outages, or liquidity withdrawals immediately before the window can therefore be decisive.
A $0 volume figure can indicate the market is newly listed and has not seen trades yet, or that data is not yet updated. It does not reflect the underlying probability dynamics; check the market page for live volume, order book, and recent trade history before making decisions.