| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0944253 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will meet a specific price target tied to a 15-minute observation period; it matters because very short-term price moves are driven by different forces than longer-term trends and can create trading and hedging opportunities.
Dogecoin is a highly liquid but volatile cryptocurrency whose price can move quickly in response to order flow, social-media-driven interest, and macro crypto sentiment. A 15-minute target isolates microstructure dynamics—exchange liquidity, large trades, and immediate news—rather than fundamentals like development roadmap or long-term adoption.
Prediction market prices are a dynamic, collective signal of how participants expect the predefined event condition to resolve; they update as new information arrives but do not guarantee an outcome and depend on the event's exact settlement rules.
It indicates the event's outcome is evaluated over a fifteen-minute observation period; whether that means 'any trade within the window', 'price at the end of the window', or another precise rule depends on the market's settlement specification, so check the event rules on the platform.
The market will use the data source specified in the event's settlement rules on the platform—commonly an aggregated index or a designated exchange feed—so consult the event details to see the exact price reference.
TBD means the definitive observation window and settlement timetable have not yet been published; follow the market page for updates because the available trading timeline and settlement conditions will be posted before the event closes.
Most platforms have contingency and fallback procedures—such as alternate feeds, averaging rules, or postponement—detailed in their settlement policies; review those rules for this market to understand how exceptional conditions are treated.
Monitor the live order book and trade prints on major exchanges, large block trades, short-term derivative flows (e.g., perpetual funding spikes), and real-time social or news feeds, since these typically drive minute-scale price moves.