| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0907485 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the market reference price for Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the $0.0907485 level within a specified 15-minute observation window. It matters because very short-term price thresholds are used by traders to express views on intraday volatility and order-flow risk around a precise price level.
Dogecoin is a high-liquidity, high-volatility crypto asset whose minute-to-minute price moves are shaped by overall crypto market direction, large trades on major exchanges, and rapid news or social-media-driven sentiment shifts. Short-duration targets like a 15-minute window emphasize execution risk, feed selection, and transient spikes rather than longer-term fundamentals.
Market prices on this contract reflect the collective expectations of traders about whether the reference price will meet the stated condition during the 15-minute window; they update continuously with new information and do not guarantee an outcome.
The authoritative resolution condition is set by the market's stated resolution rules on the event page; in practice, 'Yes' markets of this type resolve if the reference price defined by those rules reaches or exceeds the target during the designated 15-minute observation window. Always check the event page for the precise inequality (>= vs. >) and the named price source.
The start and end times of the 15-minute window are specified on the event listing; if a start time is shown you should interpret the window as that start time plus 15 consecutive minutes in the event's stated time zone. If the event page shows TBD for timing, the platform will publish the official timestamps before resolution.
The event's resolution rules name the reference feed or exchange used for price data — some markets use a specified exchange ticker, others use a consolidated index. Differences between feeds can create small price discrepancies, so consult the event's rules for the exact source.
Whether a brief tick counts depends on whether the market uses tick-level data or minute-bar sampling as its resolution method; many short-window markets count any timestamp in the window where the reference feed equals or exceeds the target, but you should confirm the sampling rules on the event page.
Contingency procedures are governed by the platform's resolution and force-majeure rules — common approaches include using a backup feed, postponing resolution until reliable data are available, or applying a predefined fallback methodology. The event page and platform rulebook describe the exact process.