| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0904878 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether DOGE will hit the specific price target $0.0904878 within a defined 15-minute window. Short-window markets matter because they isolate microstructure, liquidity and event-driven moves that drive very short-term crypto price action.
Dogecoin is a high-liquidity, high-volatility memecoin whose price is sensitive to retail flows, large trader activity, exchange liquidity and news. A 15-minute target focuses on intraday micro-movements rather than longer-term fundamentals; settlement will depend on the exchange or index feed and the precise timing rules set by the platform. The market currently shows no traded volume and the close time is listed as TBD, so participants should confirm the platform’s resolution mechanics before trading.
Market odds are the collective market view on whether the event will resolve according to the platform’s settlement rules; they update in real time as new information and trades arrive. Interpret odds as the market consensus under the stated resolution methodology, not as a guarantee of outcome.
The event page should specify the window’s start time, timezone and whether windows are anchored to clock times or are rolling; if the page is silent, consult the platform’s market rules or contact support for the precise timestamp mechanics.
Settlement is determined by the price source named in the market rules—this may be a single exchange, a multi-exchange index, or an oracle; always confirm which feed the platform uses because that feed’s ticks and spreads determine whether the target is recorded.
The resolution methodology on the market page or platform rulebook specifies whether a last trade, bid/ask midpoint, or tick crossing qualifies as meeting the target; read that rule to know whether a quoted price or an executed trade is required.
Platform trading volume does not change how the underlying price is determined; resolution relies on external price feeds or exchange data as defined by the market, so zero traded volume on the contract only reflects inactivity among participants, not the settlement process.
Look at historical 15-minute high/low ranges, typical bid-ask spreads during similar times of day, frequency of short bursts driven by social or whale activity, and liquidity on major exchanges—those metrics give context for how often DOGE has moved similar magnitudes in comparable windows.