| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0919255 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether DOGE will hit the $0.0919255 price target within a specific 15‑minute observation window. It matters because very short‑term threshold markets highlight microstructure risks and the market’s real‑time view of sudden price moves in a highly liquid crypto asset.
Dogecoin is a high‑liquidity memecoin whose price is sensitive to broad crypto market moves, large single orders, and sudden social‑media or news events. Short intraday windows (like 15 minutes) emphasize exchange price feeds, order‑book depth, and timing rather than longer‑term fundamentals.
Odds in this market represent the trading market’s aggregated expectations about the event happening within the 15‑minute window; they can change rapidly and reflect current information, liquidity conditions, and trader risk appetites rather than any guarantee of outcome.
The event resolves according to the market’s published settlement rules: the 15‑minute window will be a contiguous time interval anchored to a specific start time determined by the market operator or the event listing. Check the event page or rulebook for the exact start/stop timestamps and whether the window is UTC or exchange time.
Settlement depends on the price feed(s) named in the event metadata — commonly a specific exchange’s last trade price or an aggregated index. Cross‑exchange price differences matter, so confirm which feed the market uses before trading.
Only trades that appear in the referenced price feed(s) used for settlement will affect the outcome. OTC transactions typically matter only if and when they are reflected on the settlement feed; otherwise they do not directly change the resolved price.
Historically, DOGE shows episodes of rapid intraday moves during low liquidity or around major headlines and coordinated social attention. High liquidity periods see smaller, steadier moves, while thin markets and off‑hours are prone to price jumps that can hit short windows.
Recognize that 15‑minute events are sensitive to microstructure: monitor the declared price feed, watch order‑book depth, be cautious about slippage and latency, and size positions defensively. Expect odds to move quickly and have a clear exit or hedge plan.