| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0915473 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price target $0.0915473 during a specified 15‑minute interval. It matters because very short‑term windows are sensitive to minute‑level order‑book moves and news, making outcomes driven by intraday microstructure as well as broader sentiment.
DOGE is a high‑volatility cryptocurrency whose price reacts quickly to large trades, exchange liquidity, and social‑media signals; short‑duration contracts like this emphasize those drivers. Markets that settle on a narrow price target over a 15‑minute span can resolve on brief spikes or flash trades, so the contract’s stated price source and timestamping rules are especially important.
Prediction market prices reflect traders’ collective assessment of whether the target will be reached in that 15‑minute window and update as new information arrives. Use them as a real‑time gauge of market expectations, remembering they aggregate beliefs, not guarantees.
The market is resolved according to the contract’s resolution rules: typically that the specified price feed (trade or aggregated quote) records DOGE reaching or exceeding $0.0915473 at any timestamp inside the 15‑minute window. Check the event’s resolution source and definition on the market page for the precise rule used here.
The window starts at the timestamp listed on the market’s event page or contract details; it then runs for exactly 15 minutes. Because this event’s close time is listed as TBD, monitor the event page for the official start time and any updates.
The event will use the specific price source named in the contract (for example, a particular exchange or an aggregated feed). That source and any tie‑breaking or timestamp rules are included in the market’s terms—review them to know which venue’s ticks matter for resolution.
If the market’s resolution feed records a trade or quoted price at or above the target during the window, that spike usually counts. However, some contracts exclude canceled trades or have filters for erroneous prints—consult the contract’s resolution rules for how flash trades are treated.
Only price action that occurs inside the designated 15‑minute window is relevant for resolution. A target touch outside that window would not satisfy this contract, though exchanges or the market operator may issue corrections in cases of reported data errors.