| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0917349 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the quoted price target of $0.0917349 during a single 15‑minute observation window, making it a short‑term, event‑style crypto bet. It matters because ultra‑short price movements capture volatility, liquidity and news sensitivity that differ from typical multi‑day trading bets.
Short 15‑minute target markets isolate microstructure events: exchange order flow, temporary liquidity gaps, and rapid news reactions can decide outcomes. Dogecoin’s behavior in such windows is often driven by broader crypto market moves (especially Bitcoin), exchange‑level activity, and momentary retail or whale trades rather than longer‑term fundamentals.
Market odds represent the crowd’s real‑time assessment of whether DOGE will hit the specified target in that 15‑minute window; they move as new trades, data, and news arrive and should be read as a live consensus signal rather than a fixed prediction.
Resolution depends on whether the official price feed specified by the market shows DOGE at or above $0.0917349 at any point during the market’s defined 15‑minute observation window; check the event page for the exact resolution rules and data source.
The exact start and end times are set on the market page; because this listing shows 'Closes: TBD', consult the platform’s event details for the announced window or any subsequent scheduling updates.
The market will use the price feed or exchange(s) named in the event’s resolution rules; if the feed isn’t listed on the page, the platform’s rules or support team can confirm the official data source.
In most short‑window markets a single confirmed trade or quoted price at or above the target during the observation window qualifies the market as met, but you should verify the market’s specific resolution criteria for confirmation.
Flash trades, erroneous ticks, or exchange outages can produce misleading prices; resolution protocols typically include data‑quality checks and may rely on aggregated feeds or dispute procedures—review the market’s resolution policy to see how such events are handled.