| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0911876 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the specified price level ($0.0911876) during a defined 15‑minute measurement window. Short-duration crypto targets matter because they test immediate order flow, liquidity, and price discovery rather than longer-term fundamentals.
DOGE is a highly liquid, volatile cryptoasset whose intraday moves are driven by macro crypto sentiment, large orders, bot activity, and exchange microstructure. Fifteen-minute target markets isolate very short-run dynamics: small volumes, exchange-specific ticks, and transient events can determine outcome more than fundamentals. The market closes and resolution rules (including the exact timestamp and data source) are set by the platform and appear on the event page.
Market prices on this page are the market's crowd estimate of the likelihood that the target price will be met during the 15‑minute window; they update in real time as new information and order flow arrive. Use those prices as a dynamic information signal, not a guarantee — short-window outcomes are sensitive to last-second trades and data-source definitions.
The event resolves based on whether the official price feed used by the platform records DOGE at or above $0.0911876 at any point (or by the specific measurement rule) during the designated 15‑minute measurement window; consult the event’s resolution rules on the platform for precise wording and tie-break procedures.
The platform will publish the exact start and end timestamps for the 15‑minute window on the event page; because the event currently lists 'Closes: TBD', monitor the event page for the announced start time and time zone used for timestamps.
Resolution uses the data source(s)specified in the event metadata—this may be a single exchange feed or an aggregated index; check the event’s source and resolution details to see which venue(s) the market operator relies on.
Most platforms have adjudication rules for obvious errors or delayed/erroneous prints; such trades may be excluded or subject to review according to the market’s dispute and settlement procedures—refer to the platform’s rulebook for specifics.
For very short-duration markets, consider using limit orders to control execution price, be aware that market orders can experience slippage during fast moves, and factor in network and exchange latency; plan entry and exit strategies with the platform’s order types and real-time feed delays in mind.