| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0920721 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market tests whether DOGE will reach the price target $0.0920721 within a specified 15-minute interval; it matters because 15-minute windows capture very short-term moves that traders and algorithms exploit. The outcome provides a way to express and trade a near-instantaneous directional view on DOGE.
DOGE is a high-liquidity but often highly volatile memecoin whose minute-to-minute price can be driven by exchange order flow, large single trades, and rapid shifts in retail sentiment. Short-duration markets like a 15-minute target are especially sensitive to microstructure factors (order book depth, spreads, exchange-specific pricing) and to idiosyncratic events such as coordinated social activity or sudden news. Historical intraday behavior shows that small absolute moves can be meaningful for resolution of short-window contracts.
Market odds on this contract reflect the aggregated market view of whether DOGE will hit the stated target during the 15-minute window and will update as new information arrives. Use those odds as a real-time signal of market-implied likelihood, not a guarantee of outcome.
Resolution depends on the market's official rules: typically a 'hit' is recorded if an eligible trade price reaches or exceeds the stated target during the defined 15-minute interval, but some contracts use midpoint or an exchange-specific feed — check the contract's resolution specification for the precise rule.
The exact start and end time of the 15-minute window and the market close are set by the event organizer and listed on the platform; since this market currently shows 'Closes: TBD', the platform will publish the scheduled interval and closing time once finalized.
The contract's resolution section specifies the data source (a particular exchange, consolidated feed, or reference index); that specification determines which ticks are eligible — differences between exchanges can change whether the target is considered hit.
Large market orders, algorithmic execution (including liquidity-seeking or sniping algorithms), sudden spikes in retail trading or social-media-driven flows, and rapid liquidations in derivatives markets can all produce short bursts that cause the price to reach the target during the window.
Zero or low historical volume means the market is thinly traded, so quoted odds may be less informative and more sensitive to individual trades; low liquidity can also widen spreads and increase the impact of a single order on the market-implied view.