| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $69,607.36 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Bitcoin (BTC) will hit the price target of $69,607.36 within a specified 15-minute window. Short-interval target markets matter because they isolate intraday volatility and let traders express precise, time-bound views on price action.
Bitcoin is a highly liquid but volatile asset whose price can move sharply over minutes due to orderflow, news, and liquidity shifts. Fifteen-minute target markets focus on microstructure and immediate catalysts rather than longer-term fundamentals, so outcomes are sensitive to the exact timing, exchange pricing, and how the market aggregates quotes. Broader macro conditions—central bank guidance, risk appetite, and major macro releases—can still move price abruptly and affect this event.
Market odds aggregate traders' views about whether the target will be reached during the stated 15-minute interval; they are a real-time reflection of information and sentiment, not a guarantee of outcome. For precise interpretation, consult the market's settlement rules to understand the price feed and resolution method used.
It refers to a specific 15-minute interval during which the market will check whether BTC reaches the stated price target; the market resolves based on price action inside that interval. The exact start and end timestamps and the price source are defined in the market's rules.
The close time is listed as TBD for this event; the platform will publish the precise start/end timestamps and any updates on the market page. Monitor the market listing and official announcements for the settlement schedule.
Resolution depends on the market's stated settlement methodology — for example, whether it uses a consolidated index or a single exchange price and whether the price must touch, exceed, or equal the target. Consult the event's resolution rules for the definitive definition and tie-breaking procedures.
Large executed market orders, sudden algorithmic/derivative liquidations, exchange-level issues (latency or outages), and breaking news or macro data releases arriving during the interval are the most likely to produce rapid price moves that can alter the outcome.
Different exchanges can show materially different tick-level prices during volatile minutes; if the market uses a single exchange ticker, localized orderbook moves matter more, while an index typically smooths across venues. Know which feed the market uses because that determines which trades or quotes can trigger resolution.