| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0920052 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the specific price target $0.0920052 within a defined 15-minute interval. It matters because short intraday price moves can be driven by distinct drivers (liquidity, news, bots) and are relevant for high-frequency traders and event-driven strategies.
DOGE is a highly liquid, high-volatility memecoin whose short-term moves often follow broader cryptocurrency market trends, large whale orders, and rapid shifts in retail sentiment. A 15-minute resolution focuses attention on microstructure and intraday volatility rather than fundamentals, so outcomes can hinge on a few trades or social-media-driven bursts. Because this market closes TBD, the precise window and data-feed rules on the platform will determine how price prints are counted.
Prediction market prices reflect current trader sentiment about whether DOGE will hit the $0.0920052 target during the market's defined 15-minute window; they are a live aggregation of beliefs, not certainties. Always check the event page for exact resolution criteria and data sources before interpreting prices.
Resolution is based on whether the official price feed used by the platform records DOGE trading at (or through, per the market rules) $0.0920052 during the market's defined 15-minute interval. The event page lists the exact resolution language and the price feeds or exchanges that the platform uses.
The start and end times for the 15-minute interval are specified on the market's event page or in the market rules; if the market shows 'Closes: TBD', the platform may assign or announce the interval later. Monitor the event page for the official timing.
The platform will specify a vendor or list of exchanges (or an aggregate feed) on the market page; that feed is authoritative for resolution. If the feed is not listed, consult the platform's FAQ or support for the official source.
Yes—if the official price feed reports a trade at the target price during the window, that print can trigger resolution. Some platforms have rules on ignoring obvious erroneous prints, so check the market's adjudication and stale-oracle policies.
Examine high-frequency historical data (1-minute or tick-level), recent intraday volatility around similar price levels, order-book snapshots, and the timing of past volatility spikes linked to news or social-media events; combine that with awareness of scheduled events and platform resolution rules.