| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0942054 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will hit the $0.0942054 price target within a specified 15‑minute window. Short‑interval markets matter because they isolate brief, high-frequency moves that are driven by immediate order flow and news.
DOGE is a liquid, retail‑forward cryptocurrency that frequently exhibits sharp intraday swings; 15‑minute targets are inherently path‑dependent and sensitive to single large trades, exchange microstructure, and social‑media driven flows. Historical short‑window behavior shows frequent brief spikes and retracements, so outcomes often hinge on transient liquidity and timing rather than longer‑term trends.
Prediction market prices summarize traders' collective view about whether the target will be met during the specified 15‑minute interval; they update in real time as new price ticks, order flow, and information arrive.
It denotes a contiguous 15‑minute interval during which the platform will observe price data to determine whether the target was met; the exact start and end times and the window definition are provided on the event page and in the market's settlement rules.
Settlement follows the event's published rules and reference price feed; that typically means the operator checks trade ticks or an aggregated spot feed for any timestamped price meeting the target, so consult the event details for the definitive source and method.
Whether a transient touch counts depends on the market's settlement definition—some markets count any trade at or above the target, while others require sustained levels or specific confirmation—so review the event's settlement criteria to know which applies.
Very quickly: in a 15‑minute window, a single large order, exchange imbalance, or viral post can move the spot price within seconds to minutes, making these short‑window markets particularly sensitive to immediate information and order flow.
Look at high‑frequency (1‑minute or tick) price data around the $0.094 level, past instances of brief spikes or touches, order‑book depth and cancelation patterns, times of day with elevated volatility, and prior episodes where concentrated trades or news produced short blips.