| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0934889 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the quoted $0.0934889 price level within the specified 15-minute window. Short-duration price-target markets matter because they isolate intraminute liquidity, order flow, and news-driven moves that long-term price forecasts do not capture.
Dogecoin is a high-liquidity, retail-popular cryptocurrency known for rapid intraday swings driven by concentrated holders, social-media attention, and automated trading. Over short intervals (minutes), DOGE price behavior is dominated by exchange order book depth, large retail or institutional trades, and immediate news or social signals rather than fundamentals such as network usage or long-term adoption.
Market odds on this contract represent the market’s aggregated view about the chance the price target will be reached during the 15-minute window; they update in real time as new information arrives. For official settlement mechanics and the precise data feed used to determine price, consult the market’s contract rules on the event page.
A successful resolution occurs if the market’s official DOGE price reference meets the event’s stated condition (i.e., reaches the $0.0934889 level) at any point during the 15-minute settlement window; the market’s contract rules define the reference price source and any tie/edge cases, so consult those rules for the definitive definition.
The start and end timestamps for the 15-minute window are defined in the event’s contract and shown on the event page; because this listing currently shows a closing time of 'TBD', traders should check the event page for the published settlement window once it is set.
The event’s contract specifies the authoritative data feed or set of exchanges used for resolution; traders should review the event’s official rules to see whether a consolidated index, a single exchange, or a specific API is used to determine the reference price.
Yes; exchange outages, erroneous prints, or outlier trades within the window can change whether the reference price touches the target and some markets include fallback rules (e.g., excluding anomalous prints or using alternate feeds) that are detailed in the contract’s resolution procedures.
Short-duration targets amplify execution, latency, and liquidity risk: monitor order book depth, recent volatility, news flow, and the event’s data feed; use tight risk controls because even small order-flow imbalances or a single large trade can flip the outcome within minutes.