| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0920592 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will hit the $0.0920592 price level within a defined 15-minute interval. It matters because it isolates very short-term price action and can be used to trade or hedge microsecond-to-minute volatility in DOGE.
Dogecoin is a highly liquid but often volatile cryptocurrency driven by broad crypto market moves, liquidity flows, and social-media-driven demand. A 15-minute target focuses on intraday microstructure — order-book imbalances, short-term momentum, and brief news or social events can move price enough to meet or miss the target. Because the timeframe is short, execution details and data sources used for resolution matter more than in longer-dated markets.
Market prices on this contract reflect traders’ collective view about the short-term likelihood that DOGE will reach the specified level during a 15-minute window; those prices change as new information arrives. Always check the platform’s settlement and resolution rules to understand how that collective view is turned into a final outcome.
The market resolves based on whether the DOGE price reaches the specified level within the 15-minute interval defined by the contract. Consult the market’s official resolution rules to see which price source(s) and tie-breaking conventions the platform uses to determine whether the threshold was met.
Timing conventions (UTC alignment, sliding windows, or pre-specified interval boundaries) vary by platform. Check the event description and resolution policy on the platform to see how start/end times are defined and whether windows are anchored to clock boundaries or to a specific timestamp.
Different contracts use different aggregated feeds or a single exchange. The official market rules list the authoritative price feed(s) and any aggregation or filtering applied; always refer to that documentation for the definitive answer.
Resolution policies typically specify how outliers and erroneous data are handled (e.g., filtering, time-averaging, or use of multiple venues). Read the settlement rules to understand whether isolated ticks are eligible or whether a sustained price is required.
If an event’s close or resolution timing is not fixed, the platform’s operational rules govern interim management and final settlement. That can include postponement, cancellation, or resolution once criteria are met — review the exchange’s rules or contact support to understand how unsettled or delayed events are handled.