| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $70,428.05 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Bitcoin will hit the specified $70,428.05 target during a single 15-minute measurement period as defined by the contract. It matters because short, high-price targets capture intraday liquidity events and trader expectations about near-term volatility.
Bitcoin is a highly liquid but volatile asset whose minute-to-minute price is driven by order flow on major exchanges, derivatives positioning, and macro news. Contracts tied to narrow time windows are more sensitive to flash moves, exchange liquidity, and the specific price feed used for settlement. Because this market currently shows no traded volume and has a TBD close, it may be thinly quoted until a settlement window is specified.
Market odds (contract prices) reflect the aggregated views of traders about whether the target will be met in the 15-minute window and update as new information arrives; they are a real-time summary of expectation, not a guaranteed prediction.
The contract resolves according to the exchange or index price feed and the precise 15-minute measurement rule specified in the market’s official resolution text; check the contract page for the authoritative settlement definition.
The market currently lists the close as TBD; the operator will publish the specific 15-minute window and closing time prior to resolution—monitor the contract details and announcements for the official schedule.
Low or zero volume means there is limited trading interest and liquidity, so quoted prices (if any) may not reflect broad market views and spreads can be wide; outcomes are still decided by the settlement rules regardless of volume.
Settlement typically uses the data sources named in the contract (an index or specified exchanges); if the market page does not list them, consult the contract’s technical description or platform documentation before trading.
Most platforms have policies for atypical market conditions—these can include removing outlier trades, using alternate feeds, or delaying resolution; review the market’s dispute and force-major clauses to understand how such events are handled.