| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $71,291.14 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Bitcoin will hit the specific price target of $71,291.14 during a single 15-minute interval. It matters because outcome-based bets on short, discrete windows capture intraday liquidity shocks and trader conviction around precise price levels.
Bitcoin is a highly liquid but volatile asset whose price can move quickly in response to macro data, on-chain flows, exchange order imbalances, and large trader activity. Markets that settle on short time slices highlight the interplay between algorithmic execution, concentrated orders, and news-driven spikes or drops.
Market odds on this event reflect traders’ aggregated expectations about whether that 15-minute window will include the specified price; they update in real time as new information arrives. Use odds as a snapshot of market sentiment, not a fixed forecast.
Resolution is based on the market’s published settlement rules: whether the official reference price for Bitcoin during the specified 15-minute interval reaches the stated target. Consult the market description and settlement source on the exchange page for the precise price feed and resolution method used.
The interval is the specific contiguous 15-minute time block used by the market’s reference price provider (for example, a time window like HH:00–HH:14 or similar). The exact start and end timestamps and any timezone conventions are defined in the market’s settlement rules — check the market page to confirm.
If the market lists 'Closes: TBD', the final trading deadline and settlement timing are not yet set; they will be announced by the market operator. Monitor the market page and exchange notifications for updates on close and settlement windows.
A $0 volume reading indicates no trades have occurred yet, which can mean low liquidity and potentially wide spreads or volatile price discovery. Be prepared for limited counterparties and greater execution risk until trading activity increases.
Odds can shift rapidly due to major macro releases, sudden regulatory announcements, large exchange order imbalances, concentrated whale transactions, and derivatives-driven squeezes or liquidations that occur around the target 15-minute window.