| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0938796 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price target $0.0938796 during a specific 15‑minute measurement window. Short‑interval contracts matter because they isolate immediate order‑flow, liquidity, and news-driven moves rather than longer‑term trends.
Dogecoin is a high‑volatility cryptocurrency whose short‑term price is heavily influenced by market microstructure, large orders, correlated moves in major crypto assets, and social media activity. Fifteen‑minute target markets emphasize intraday dynamics such as order book depth, exchange prints, and transient spikes rather than fundamentals like adoption or long‑run supply dynamics.
Market prices express the collective view of whether the contract condition will occur in the defined window and incorporate available information, liquidity, and trader risk preferences. For very short windows, quoted prices often reflect immediate order flow and news sensitivity rather than persistent valuation.
The outcome depends on whether DOGE's trade price meets the contract's target during the defined 15‑minute measurement window. The event page and resolution rules define whether a single qualifying trade, a quoted price, or an aggregated value is required for a 'yes' outcome.
The contract specifies the precise start and end timestamps for the 15‑minute window; check the market details for that boundary. If the listing shows 'TBD' for close or start, the platform will publish the exact window in the event's resolution rules before settlement.
Resolution uses the price feed or aggregation explicitly named in the contract (for example, trade prints from a specified exchange or a consolidated feed). Review the market's resolution source on the event page to see which exchanges or indices are authoritative.
Zero volume means no contracts have changed hands yet; that implies limited liquidity and potentially wide bid‑ask spreads. Prices in low‑volume short‑window markets can move sharply on small orders, so assess execution risk and platform fees before trading.
Treatment of spikes depends on the contract's resolution rules: some markets count any qualifying trade, while others use aggregated prices or exclude anomalous prints per platform governance. Always read the resolution methodology to understand whether isolated outlier trades will decide the outcome.