| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0936494 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This contract asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price target $0.0936494 within a specified 15-minute observation period. Short-interval price targets matter to traders and hedgers because brief spikes or drops can determine contract settlement.
Dogecoin is a high-liquidity, meme-driven cryptocurrency whose intraday price can move quickly in response to Bitcoin direction, macro headlines, large orders, or social-media-driven volume. Fifteen-minute targets capture very short-term moves and are more sensitive to exchange order-book conditions and algorithmic trading than longer-dated contracts.
Interpret market prices as the crowd’s view of the chance that the contract’s resolution condition will be met during the 15-minute observation period; check the event terms for the exact resolution source and timing because settlement depends on the specified price feed and rules.
Resolution depends on the contract’s 15-minute observation period and the designated price feed; generally the market resolves YES if DOGE reaches the contract-specified threshold during that observation window—confirm the contract for the precise definition of ‘reach’ and the price source.
This event’s close and the start of the observation window are set by the platform and listed on the event page; because this display shows 'Closes: TBD', monitor the event page for the official start/close timestamps and any timezone information.
The contract specifies the official price source or aggregation method used for settlement; check the event’s terms on the platform to see whether it uses a single exchange, a multi-exchange index, or a specific data vendor.
A $0 trading volume means no positions have been bought or sold in this contract yet; it does not change settlement mechanics—the outcome is still determined by the contract’s price feed and resolution rules, not by the trading volume.
Yes—on low-liquidity venues a single large execution can produce short-lived price spikes that may satisfy a short observation-window target; review the contract’s price source and be aware that 15-minute contracts are particularly sensitive to brief, large trades and exchange-specific anomalies.