| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0910458 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the specified $0.0910458 price level within a single 15‑minute trading window. Short, intraday binary questions like this matter because they isolate very short‑term price mechanics and can be influenced by liquidity, order flow, and discrete news events.
Dogecoin is a highly liquid but often volatile cryptocurrency whose short‑term moves are driven by a mix of retail activity, large block trades, and broader crypto market trends. Because this is a narrow 15‑minute window, the outcome is more sensitive to microstructure (order‑book depth, exchange prints) and ephemeral news or social media events than to longer‑term fundamentals.
Market odds for this contract reflect the platform participants' aggregated expectations about the price behavior during the designated 15‑minute window and incorporate available information such as current order flow, news, and historical short‑term volatility. They should be read as a consensus signal, not a guarantee of what will happen.
It asks whether DOGE will meet the specified $0.0910458 price condition at any time within a particular 15‑minute window defined by the platform; the precise resolution condition and whether the target must be trade print, last sale, or midprice will be specified in the contract rules.
The platform will publish the exact start and end timestamps for the 15‑minute window in the market details; until that schedule is posted the contract is unresolved (TBD). Once posted, those timestamps are the authoritative interval for resolution.
Resolution typically relies on the specific price feed(s) or exchange trade prints named in the contract text or rulebook; check the market’s resolution rules to see which consolidated feeds or exchanges are used for this contract.
A legitimate trade print meeting the contract’s resolution criteria can determine the outcome, but many platforms have procedures to identify and exclude obvious erroneous prints—refer to the market’s dispute and error rules for how anomalous trades are handled.
Common drivers are sudden social‑media amplification, exchange listings or delistings, spikes in derivative or margin activity, large institutional or whale orders, and rapid moves in the broader crypto market; because the window is only 15 minutes, even short‑lived order‑flow imbalances can be decisive.