| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0925221 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will hit the specific price target of $0.0925221 during a single 15-minute observation window. Short-interval markets matter because they let traders express beliefs about rapid, intraday price moves and microstructure events.
Dogecoin is a high-liquidity, retail-driven cryptocurrency that can experience rapid intraday moves driven by order flow, social-media momentum, and broader crypto market moves. Fifteen-minute targets capture transient spikes or dips that would be invisible in longer-duration markets, so outcomes often hinge on momentary liquidity, exchange ticks, and news timing. Platforms resolve these events against a specific price feed and window, so exact settlement mechanics matter as much as market dynamics.
Prediction market prices for this event aggregate trader beliefs about the likelihood that DOGE will reach the stated level within the 15-minute window; prices change as new information arrives and as participants adjust positions in response to order flow or news.
It means the event resolves based on whether the DOGE price reaches the stated target at any time during one contiguous 15-minute observation window; the platform will publish the exact start and end timestamps for that window when the market is scheduled.
Settlement is determined using the market's designated reference price feed (for example, a specific exchange or aggregated feed); the target is considered met if that feed reports a trade or quote at or beyond the target price during the 15-minute window, per the platform's published rules.
The closing time is listed as TBD for now; the platform will update the market page with the scheduled start time, end time, and any timezone information prior to trading or settlement—monitor the event page for official timestamps.
Typical drivers include large, concentrated buy or sell orders (whale trades), breaking news or viral social posts, sudden moves in Bitcoin or other major assets, exchange-specific events (listings, outages), and concentrated speculative or coordinated trading activity.
In most short-window markets a single reported trade or quoted price that meets or exceeds the target during the observation window counts as meeting the condition, but you should consult the platform's official settlement rules for any edge cases, tie-breakers, or feed-specific definitions.