| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0910336 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the specific price target $0.0910336 during a defined 15‑minute interval. It matters because minute‑scale price moves test short‑term liquidity and sentiment in crypto markets and can offer rapid trading opportunities.
Dogecoin is a high‑volatility memecoin whose short‑term price is often driven by liquidity conditions, retail sentiment, social‑media events, and broader cryptocurrency market moves (especially Bitcoin). Minute‑level spikes and rapid retracements have occurred in DOGE historically, so outcomes on a 15‑minute time scale reflect microstructure and newsflow more than long‑term fundamentals.
Prediction market prices on this event aggregate trader views about whether that 15‑minute interval will include the target price; they update as new information arrives and as liquidity changes. Treat the market price as a real‑time sentiment indicator and a contract for the specific settlement rules set by the platform.
Settlement depends on the market's official price source and the event's defined 15‑minute settlement window. Check the event rules on the platform to see whether the contract uses 'at or above' versus 'strictly above', which exchanges or index are used, and how intraminute sampling is handled.
The start time and the market closing schedule are set by the event listing on the platform; because this listing shows 'Closes: TBD', monitor the event page for the announced start/close times and any updates from the platform.
The event uses whatever exchange(s) or aggregated index the listing specifies; different venues can show different instantaneous prices due to fragmentation and latency, so the chosen feed matters for whether short spikes are captured for settlement.
Yes—Dogecoin has a history of rapid intraminute and intraday moves tied to social‑media events, large orders, or broader market volatility. To verify, examine historical 1‑minute OHLC price data around past spikes or news events.
Large market participants (whales) placing sizable orders, algorithmic/liquidity‑providing bots, coordinated retail flows triggered by social posts, and sudden liquidity withdrawals from exchanges can all move the price quickly in a 15‑minute window.