| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $69,513.56 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Bitcoin will reach the price target of $69,513.56 during a specified 15-minute measurement window. Short-interval price targets matter because they distill expectations about intraday volatility and immediate liquidity around a precise level.
Bitcoin is a highly liquid but often fast-moving asset; minute-scale moves can be driven by order-book imbalances, large single trades, or sudden news. Markets that resolve on short windows capture microstructure risks that longer-term markets smooth out, and they are commonly used by traders to express views on near-term price action.
Market odds aggregate traders’ views about whether the price will hit the target in that short interval and update in real time as information and order flow change. Treat odds as a real-time consensus signal—not a guarantee—and check the platform’s resolution rules for exact price-source details.
Resolution depends on the platform’s specified price source and sampling method (for example, consolidated index versus a particular exchange) and on how they sample trades within the interval; consult the event’s resolution rules to see which feed and exact measurement rule are used.
If the event’s timing is listed as TBD, the platform has not yet published the start/end times; the market will specify the exact 15-minute window and settlement schedule before the market closes for new positions—watch the event page for updates.
Boundary treatment (whether the start is inclusive and the end exclusive, or vice versa) is defined in the platform’s resolution policy; check those rules because boundary conventions determine whether a trade at an exact timestamp counts toward the outcome.
Minute-scale drivers include a single large market order or block trade, rapid liquidation cascades in derivatives markets, unexpected news or data arriving within the window, and sudden shifts in exchange liquidity or technical failures—any of which can push price across the target quickly.
Traders can use the market to hedge or express a short-term directional view without taking spot custody, to test intraday hypotheses about liquidity or volatility, or to gauge market-implied near-term risk; use position sizing and risk controls appropriate for minute-level resolution markets.