| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0915965 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the target price of $0.0915965 during a specified 15-minute interval; it matters because it lets traders express views on extreme short-term price moves. Short-window markets can be used to hedge or speculate on intraday volatility and market microstructure events.
DOGE is a highly traded memecoin whose intraday price action is often driven by broader crypto market moves, social-media interest, and concentrated large trades. Historically, DOGE exhibits frequent short-lived spikes and reversals, so outcomes on a 15-minute horizon are sensitive to transient liquidity and news flow. Exchange-specific behavior and the chosen settlement feed can materially affect whether a short-term target is seen as reached.
Market odds here reflect the aggregated beliefs of participants about whether the event's settlement conditions will be met during the defined 15-minute window and will update as new information and order flow arrive. Treat those odds as a live consensus signal, not a guarantee, and always confirm the contract's settlement rules before trading.
It denotes a single contiguous 15-minute settlement window defined by the event; the platform will state the exact start time, timezone, and whether settlement uses ticks, minute closes, or an averaged price—see the event page for the precise definition.
Settlement uses the reference price feed or exchange and measurement method specified on the event page (for example a specific exchange's trade price, an aggregated index, or a timestamped tick); review the event's settlement source and methodology to know which price counts.
That depends on the event's settlement rules—some contracts count any trade at or above the target during the window while others use averaged prices or have outlier filters; consult the event's settlement and invalid-trade policies for the definitive answer.
Yes. Thin order books, exchange outages, reporting delays, or anomalous trades on the designated price source can produce atypical prices or trigger dispute procedures, so check which exchange or feed the event relies on and read the platform's market-disruption rules.
Match position size and timing to the 15-minute horizon, monitor order-book depth and recent trade flow, factor in relevant news and broader crypto market direction, and verify settlement mechanics and any exclusion rules before taking a position—short windows magnify execution and timing risk.