| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0915748 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the $0.0915748 price level during a specific 15-minute interval. Short-interval markets like this matter because they highlight intraday liquidity, sudden order-flow events, and execution risk for traders.
Dogecoin is a highly traded memecoin whose price is sensitive to large orders, macro crypto moves (especially Bitcoin), and social-media-driven attention. Fifteen-minute target markets are designed for very short-term speculation and arbitrage; price action over such a brief window can be dominated by a few large trades or by automated strategies. Because settlement depends on the platform's chosen price feed and timing, traders should confirm those details on the market page before taking a position.
Market odds express the crowd's real-time assessment of whether DOGE will hit the $0.0915748 target within the stated 15-minute window and will change as new information and trades arrive. For the precise settlement rule (e.g., whether a single trade that touches the price counts), consult the event's resolution rules on the platform.
The '15 min' label denotes the contiguous 15-minute interval during which the market checks whether DOGE reaches the $0.0915748 target. The exact start and end timestamps are set by the market creator and will be shown on the event page; settlement uses those timestamps per the platform's rules.
Resolution depends on the event's settlement definition; some markets count any recorded trade or quoted price that meets or exceeds the target, while others may use a specific timestamped feed. Check the market's resolution rules to see whether a touch, quoted midpoint, or a closing level is required.
Resolution timing and the exact 15-minute interval are determined by the market listing; since this market currently shows 'Closes: TBD', the event page will be updated with start/close times and resolution details once set. The platform typically publishes the data source and settlement procedure alongside the timing.
Fifteen-minute targets are much more sensitive to transient order flow and microstructure effects: they can show abrupt spikes and reversals driven by single large trades, exchange-specific liquidity gaps, or algorithmic traders, whereas longer-duration targets tend to reflect broader market trends and fundamentals.
Participants include retail scalpers, institutional or professional traders, high-frequency and algorithmic strategies, market makers providing liquidity, and occasionally large token holders whose trades can move price; news-driven retail surges or social-media amplification can also be decisive in a short window.