| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0911843 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will meet a specified price target during a 15-minute interval; it lets traders take a short-term directional view on DOGE’s microprice action. Short-duration contracts like this matter because they isolate brief volatility episodes that larger timeframes can smooth over.
Dogecoin is a highly liquid, retail-driven crypto asset with frequent short-term spikes and drops; its price on minute-to-minute timescales is strongly affected by exchange liquidity, large trades, and real-time news. Fifteen-minute measurements emphasize microstructure effects (order book depth, exchange spreads, and high-frequency flows) rather than longer-term fundamentals. This market is listed on an events exchange and will resolve according to that platform’s published resolution terms.
Market prices on an exchange represent the collective view of participants about the likelihood of the event and move as new information arrives; they are continuously updated signals rather than fixed forecasts. Use them together with independent analysis of short-term liquidity, newsflow, and technical conditions.
Resolution depends on the contract’s definition of the target and the 15-minute measurement (e.g., whether it requires the quoted price to equal or exceed the listed value at any point, or an average over the interval). Consult the market’s resolution rules on the platform for the precise condition used to determine a win.
The contract’s listing or the exchange’s rulebook specifies the official price source or consolidated feed used for resolution; check the market page or terms for the named venue(s) or index and any backup feeds.
'Closes: TBD' indicates the platform has not posted a final cutoff or settlement time for this listing; traders should monitor the market page and platform announcements for an official close time and any procedural updates before relying on settlement timing.
Most event exchanges publish dispute and fallback procedures specifying backup feeds, delay windows, and arbitration processes; the market will resolve according to those published dispute-resolution rules—review them on the exchange to understand how edge cases are handled.
The contract’s numeric precision is intentional and the platform’s resolution rules state how rounding, ticks, or fractional pricing are treated; small decimal differences can be material in short-duration contracts, so confirm the exact rounding and comparison rules in the market terms.