| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0918697 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price target $0.0918697 within a specified 15-minute interval. It matters because short, time-limited price targets test immediate liquidity, news sensitivity, and exchange feed behavior rather than longer-term trends.
Short-interval crypto targets are resolved by observing trade or quoted price behavior on the data feed(s) specified by the market; they capture fast, intraday price moves that are often driven by order-book dynamics and high-frequency flows. DOGE has historically shown rapid, sentiment-driven spikes and drops, so 15-minute windows can be dominated by single large orders, exchange-specific anomalies, or sudden news.
Interpret market odds as the crowd’s aggregate view of the likelihood that the target will be met during that 15-minute window, not as a prediction of where price will be minutes or hours later. Because this is a short-duration, tick-sensitive question, market prices often reflect immediate liquidity and risk of brief touches rather than sustained moves.
A hit is determined by the market’s stated resolution rule: typically a trade or quoted price meeting or exceeding $0.0918697 during the specified 15-minute interval on the designated price feed(s). The event page or rule text specifies whether a printed trade, last-sale, or midquote is used; that definition governs settlement.
The event page will show the start and end timestamps for the 15-minute window or the trigger conditions that start it. If the close time is listed as TBD, the platform will update the market with the precise interval before trading begins or per the platform’s timing policy.
The market’s rule section names the authoritative data source(s); resolution relies on those feeds. If the rule does not name a feed, the platform’s stated arbitration or consolidated-feed policy applies—check the event specifications for the authoritative source.
Whether a brief trade counts depends on the market’s resolution definition. Many short-interval markets count any reported trade that meets or exceeds the target, but some use quoted prices or have safeguards against erroneous prints—arbitration procedures can address suspicious ticks.
When close time is TBD, the market may not be open for trading until the platform posts the definitive interval. Monitor the event page for updates; the platform will announce the exact 15-minute window and any settlement timing before the market becomes active.