| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $69,303.45 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Bitcoin will hit the nominal price target of $69,303.45 within a specified 15-minute interval. It matters because short intraday price windows can be driven by microstructure events and are useful for traders focused on very short-term moves or event-driven risk.
Short-interval Bitcoin targets combine high market volatility with fine-grained timing: outcomes depend on whether a trade or price reference touches the target during that 15-minute window. Historically, similar short-interval markets are resolved by checking exchange price feeds or consolidated ticks for the defined interval, and they can be sensitive to exchange-specific prints, index methodology, and timestamp alignment. Because this market currently shows no traded volume and its close time is TBD, liquidity and the official resolution interval should be confirmed before trading.
Market prices on these contracts reflect the crowd’s assessment about the chance of the specified price touch during the specified 15-minute window and will move as new information and order flow arrive; treat them as real-time sentiment indicators rather than guarantees.
Resolution depends on the market's stated settlement rule: typically the contract resolves if the official price feed or defined exchange print reaches or exceeds $69,303.45 at any time during the specified 15-minute interval. Consult the event's resolution rules for whether a single trade, mid-price, or index value is used and whether equality counts as a hit.
The market's event page or rulebook defines the exact 15-minute interval and timezone (for example, UTC-aligned windows or exchange-timestamped minutes). Because this listing shows 'Closes: TBD', check the event details for the scheduled interval and how minute boundaries are determined before trading.
The event description should specify whether settlement uses a consolidated index, a single exchange feed, or another reference price. That choice matters because different feeds can have different prints and timestamps; confirm the named data source in the market rules.
'Total Volume Traded: $0' indicates no trades have occurred so far, which may mean low liquidity and wider spreads if you enter; 'Number of outcomes: 1' often reflects a single conditional outcome (the price touch) rather than a multi-option ladder—review payout mechanics on the event page to understand how settlement pays out if the condition is met.
Watch real-time order books and trade prints on the exchanges referenced by the market, monitor news and scheduled macro/crypto events around the interval, consider offsetting exposure with spot or futures positions to replicate or hedge directional risk, and be mindful of execution latency and slippage for trades tied to narrow intraday windows.