| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0903893 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will meet a specific $0.0903893 price target within a defined 15-minute interval; it matters to short-term traders and event-driven speculators who want exposure to rapid price moves.
DOGE is a high-volatility cryptocurrency whose short-term price behavior is driven by order flow, market liquidity, and news or social-media-driven demand. A 15-minute target focuses on intraday microstructure — small differences in how the price is sourced and the exact minute boundaries can determine settlement. Because the contract closes and settlement details can vary, traders should review the event page for the authoritative terms.
Market odds summarize the collective view of traders about whether the target will be met during that 15-minute window and update as new information arrives; use them as a real-time snapshot of market belief, not a guarantee of outcome.
Resolution depends on the contract wording: it will specify whether a trade print, last price, or an index value must reach the target within the 15-minute window and whether equality counts. Check the event page for the precise settlement condition and any tie-breaker rules.
The start time is defined on the event page or in the contract terms; 'Closes: TBD' means the platform has not published the scheduled interval yet, so monitor the event page and platform announcements for the exact UTC timestamp and any updates.
Settlement uses the specific reference listed by the platform (an exchange, aggregated index, or oracle). Consult the event's settlement/source field to confirm which feed governs resolution before trading.
Low volume usually means thin liquidity and wider spreads; prices can move sharply on a single trade, and it may be harder to enter or exit positions at desired prices. Treat low-volume markets as higher execution risk and check order-book depth before committing.
Rapid moves are often triggered by large market orders or whale activity, exchange listings or outages, prominent social-media posts by influential accounts, abrupt shifts in Bitcoin or broader crypto sentiment, and scheduled liquidity events or liquidation cascades.