| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0904445 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price target of $0.0904445 within a 15-minute measurement interval. It matters because ultra-short-term markets highlight immediate liquidity, volatility, and price-feed mechanics that drive very short-lived moves in crypto.
Dogecoin is a highly liquid but volatile cryptocurrency whose price can move quickly on news, order-flow, and exchange activity. Fifteen-minute targets emphasize microstructure effects—order-book depth, exchange spreads, and automated traders—rather than longer-term fundamentals. Settlement and measurement depend on the platform's chosen price feeds and timing rules.
Market prices on this event reflect the collective view of participants about whether the target will be met under the platform's settlement rules; changes in price reflect new information or shifting order flow rather than a fixed forecast. Liquidity and the platform's price source affect how informative market prices are for this kind of short window.
A successful outcome is determined by whether DOGE meets the market's settlement condition for the specified target price during the platform-defined 15-minute measurement interval; check the event page and the platform rulebook for the precise definition used for settlement and whether quotes or trades are used.
The platform sets the start and end times for the 15-minute window according to the event's specifications; those timing details and any time-zone conventions are listed on the market page or the exchange's rules—confirm the exact window there because it determines which price data are considered.
Settlement typically uses the specific price feed or composite index named by the platform; consult the market description or the platform's documentation to see which exchanges or aggregators are used and how they handle outlier prints.
Yes—zero executed volume means there have been no trades on this market so far, so displayed quotes or implied prices may reflect posted orders rather than traded consensus; low on-market volume reduces liquidity and makes price signals less robust.
That depends on the platform's rules about what constitutes a valid print or quote and its time-resolution for the measurement interval; some platforms count any valid trade or quote at or above the target during the window, while others apply consolidated or filtered feeds—check the settlement methodology for this market.