| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0940514 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of DOGE will meet or exceed $0.0940514 during a 15-minute interval; it matters because short, precise targets test intraday volatility and liquidity for a widely traded memecoin.
DOGE is a high-liquidity, high-volatility cryptocurrency whose price can move rapidly on small volumes, social signals, and broader crypto market swings. Short-interval markets like a 15-minute target capture microstructure dynamics—order-book depth, algorithmic trading, and transient news—rather than long-run fundamentals.
Market odds on this platform represent the collective trading market’s view of how likely the event is to occur, given current information and liquidity; they update in real time as participants buy and sell contracts and should be read as a snapshot of market sentiment, not a forecast guarantee.
A 'Yes' resolution requires the DOGE price to meet or exceed $0.0940514 during any contiguous 15-minute interval as defined by the market’s settlement rules; consult the market rules page for the exact price source and inclusion criteria.
The platform evaluates contiguous 15-minute intervals according to its timestamp and aggregation method; the market will resolve based on whether at least one qualifying 15-minute window meets the price condition—check the event page for the official start/stop mechanics.
Settlement uses the price feed specified in the market’s rulebook on the platform (for example a consolidated trade price or a specific exchange feed); always verify the data source listed on the event page to know which venue(s) set the reference price.
Zero traded volume means no contracts have changed hands yet; this typically indicates low current liquidity, so initial trades may move market-implied odds strongly and execution costs (spreads/impact) can be higher until liquidity builds.
Whether a boundary-touch qualifies depends on the platform’s inclusion rules (some use inclusive endpoints, others define open/closed intervals); consult the market’s settlement specification to see how edge timestamps are handled.