| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0920240 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price target $0.0920240 within a specified 15-minute interval. It matters to traders and hedgers focused on ultra-short-term crypto price moves and intraday volatility.
Dogecoin is a high-liquidity but often high-volatility cryptocurrency whose intraday price action can be driven by a mix of retail flows, whale trades, algorithmic strategies, and social-media-driven events. A 15-minute target is an ultra-short horizon that emphasizes order-book dynamics, execution risk, and minute-level information rather than longer-term fundamentals.
Market odds aggregate participants' current beliefs about whether the specified 15-minute condition will be met; they update as new information arrives and serve as a real-time sentiment and information signal, not as a guaranteed prediction.
It represents whether DOGE's market price reaches the specified $0.0920240 level at any point within the defined 15-minute window used by the market contract; consult the contract for whether the condition is based on trades, bid/ask quotes, or an index.
The market operator or contract terms define the start and end times for the 15-minute interval and the closing/resolution process; because the event shows 'Closes: TBD', watch the contract page or official notices for the precise schedule and any settlement rules.
The event's resolution uses the price feed specified in the market rules—this may be a single exchange, an aggregated index, or a third-party oracle—so check the contract details to see the authorized reference source.
Thin order books and wide spreads make short-term targets easier to hit via single large orders or price spikes, while deep liquidity can dampen abrupt moves; slippage and execution latency also influence observed prices during brief intervals.
Historically, 15-minute crypto targets are often decided by transient events—short-lived spikes, large block trades, or sudden social-media-driven volume—so outcomes can flip quickly and differ from longer-term trends; review prior intraday charts and order-book snapshots for context, keeping in mind past patterns are not predictive guarantees.