| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0899969 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the specified price level during a single 15‑minute interval; it matters because very short‑window contracts isolate micro price moves and can reveal real‑time market sentiment and liquidity dynamics.
Dogecoin is a highly liquid, retail‑driven cryptocurrency whose short‑term price is sensitive to exchange order flow, whale transactions, and social‑media signals. Markets that target sub‑hour price moves are influenced both by broader crypto trends (e.g., Bitcoin direction, macro risk appetite) and by idiosyncratic events such as exchange outages, large limit orders, or viral news.
Odds in this market reflect the collective view of traders about the chance that DOGE will hit the target within that 15‑minute window; treat them as a live measure of sentiment and available liquidity rather than a guarantee of outcome.
The contract resolves based on a contiguous 15‑minute period defined by the event's rules; the platform will specify the official start time for that interval (or use a predetermined trigger). Check the event page for the exact start/settlement timestamps and time zone once they are posted.
Resolution depends on the platform's published settlement source and rules: it may use a specific exchange feed, an aggregated index, or time‑weighted trade ticks. Consult the event's resolution documentation to see which data feed and aggregation method will be used.
Whether a single outlier trade qualifies depends on the contract's settlement rules and the chosen data feed. Some contracts accept any trade at or above the level; others apply filters or require prices to persist. Check the settlement criteria to know how spikes are treated.
Because the window is only 15 minutes, execution latency, order slippage, and fill probability matter more than in longer markets; thin liquidity and fast moves can cause intended trades to fail or execute at worse prices, so traders should factor in transaction speed and available depth.
Short‑interval targets historically resolve based on sudden liquidity shifts: large market orders, short bursts of news, exchange anomalies, or coordinated retail activity. They tend to be high‑variance and can be dominated by one or two large events during the interval rather than gradual trend moves.