| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0899925 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price target $0.0899925 during a specific 15-minute measurement window. It matters because short intraday targets capture extreme, high-frequency price moves that traders and risk managers use to express views on near-term volatility and liquidity.
DOGE is a highly liquid but often volatile crypto asset whose intraday price moves are driven more by order flow, large trades, and market sentiment than by long-term fundamentals. Short-duration markets like a 15-minute target reflect microstructure dynamics (order book depth, exchange liquidity, algos) and can be highly sensitive to single large orders or sudden news.
In this context, prediction market prices reflect how traders collectively view the chance that DOGE will hit the specified level during the defined 15-minute window; those prices update in real time as new information and orders arrive.
It refers to a specific 15-minute interval during which the market will check whether DOGE reaches the stated price. The event's settlement rules define the exact start and end times for that interval.
Resolution uses the price feed or exchange reference specified in the market's official terms; that document will state whether the settlement uses a single exchange trade price, a composite feed, or a midpoint and how timestamps are handled.
A close/start time has not been published yet. The platform will announce the exact timing and any associated cutoffs in the market's details; monitor the event page for the published schedule prior to trading.
Single large market orders, sudden momentum from correlated coins (e.g., BTC or memecoin rallies), exchange-specific anomalies, or rapid social-media-driven buying/selling are the most common drivers of 15-minute outcomes.
Low volume implies thinner liquidity and wider spreads on the prediction market itself and suggests that individual trades or new information can move the market price sharply; understand execution costs and be prepared for higher volatility if you participate.