| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $70,868.30 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Bitcoin will reach the numeric target $70,868.30 during a specific 15-minute measurement window. It matters because single-interval targets capture short-term volatility and are useful for traders hedging or speculating on minute-scale price moves.
Bitcoin is a highly liquid but volatile asset whose price can move sharply on news, order flow, and leveraged positions; outcomes for very short windows often reflect transient liquidity and microstructure effects rather than long-term fundamentals. Short-interval markets like this bridge exchange-level price action with event-driven trading, and they can be sensitive to exchange feeds, timestamping, and concentrated orders or liquidations.
Odds on this market summarize the market's collective expectation that BTC will meet the specified numeric target during the defined 15-minute window; because the outcome depends on a narrow time slice, odds can change quickly as intraday liquidity and news evolve.
It asks whether Bitcoin's traded price will meet the numeric threshold $70,868.30 within a single 15-minute measurement interval defined by the platform's settlement rules; read the event page for the precise resolution condition.
The event close and the scheduled 15-minute window are listed on the market page when set; because this listing currently shows 'TBD', follow the event page for the announced start time and any updates.
Settlement will use the exchange or index feed specified by the platform for this market; consult the event's settlement details to see which exchanges, aggregation method, and time standard (e.g., UTC) are applied.
Edge inclusion is governed by the platform's timestamp and inclusion rules—typically millisecond-precise timestamps and a defined rule for boundary trades—so review the market's settlement policy for the exact tie-breaking procedure.
Platforms usually have filtering rules, checks for outliers, and dispute processes to address anomalous trades or feed errors; if settlement looks questionable, use the platform's dispute or support channels and consult the published settlement methodology.