| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0906470 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price target $0.0906470 within a specified 15-minute interval. It matters to traders who want to express or hedge very short-term views on DOGE volatility and microstructure-driven moves.
Dogecoin is a highly liquid but often volatile memecoin whose short-term moves are influenced by broader crypto market trends, large traders, and social-media-driven flows. Fifteen-minute targets are sensitive to order-book liquidity, intra-exchange arbitrage, and minute-scale news or tweets; because this particular market currently shows no traded volume and has a TBD close, settlement specifications and timing should be checked on the event page.
Market prices in prediction contracts summarize the collective expectations and available information among participants, but for minute-scale crypto targets those prices can move rapidly and may be noisy when liquidity is low. Treat the market price as an informational signal that depends on trade activity, quoted liquidity, and the contract's stated settlement source.
The event's contract on the platform defines the precise start and end timestamps for the 15-minute interval; consult the market page or contract text for the exact clock alignment and time zone that will be used.
Whether a touch, a sustained trade, or a midpoint reading counts is specified in the market's settlement rules; check the event's definition to see whether equality or crossing at any timestamp resolves the contract in the affirmative.
The event page lists the official settlement price source and any fallback providers; review those settlement details before trading to know which exchange or index will govern the outcome.
Zero traded volume means there is no revealed consensus price from participants yet; with no liquidity, quoted prices (if any) will be sparse and any single trade could move the market substantially, so information content and price reliability are limited until trading occurs.
Contingency procedures are defined in the contract and typically specify fallback feeds, delayed settlement, or an alternate resolution method; review the market's rulebook for the exact protocol applicable to outages or disruptions.