| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0942441 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price target of $0.0942441 within a specific 15-minute interval. Short-duration price targets matter because they capture transient market behavior and are sensitive to immediate order flow and news.
DOGE is a high-liquidity memecoin whose intraday moves are driven by a mix of retail sentiment, large traders, and algorithmic flows. Historical context: DOGE has shown frequent rapid spikes and drops around exchange events, social-media-driven news, and concentrated whale activity. The broader crypto market environment and macro risk-on/risk-off swings also shape short-interval price behavior.
Market odds on this contract reflect traders' aggregated expectations about whether that 15-minute snapshot will meet the price target; they update as new information arrives. Because the window is brief, odds can change rapidly in response to order-book shifts or breaking news.
It asks whether the observed DOGE price will be at or above (or meet the market's specified condition) the $0.0942441 level at some point within a defined 15-minute observation window; check the event page for the precise resolution rule.
This event's close and resolution timing are set by the market (listed as TBD); the exact 15-minute window and resolution timestamp will be posted on the event page and determine when price is sampled for settlement.
Settlement follows the data source specified in the event rules on the platform; that typically references one or more public exchanges or an index — consult the event's rule section to see the exact feed and aggregation method.
Because the window is short, even brief spikes, flash crashes, or temporary order-book imbalances can determine resolution; a transient trade or narrow liquidity can flip the outcome despite the surrounding trend.
Large traders/whales, high-frequency and market-making firms, and sudden surges of retail activity (often driven by social-media or news) are the primary actors that can move prices within a 15-minute interval.