| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0945029 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether DOGE will meet or exceed the $0.0945029 price condition during a specified 15‑minute snapshot; it matters for traders interested in short‑interval price moves and for participants using prediction markets to express views on near‑term crypto volatility.
Dogecoin is a high‑liquidity but frequently volatile cryptocurrency whose minute‑to‑minute price can be driven by order‑book dynamics, macro moves in larger assets like BTC, and social‑media sentiment. Short‑interval targets like a 15‑minute snapshot are commonly used by scalpers and algorithmic traders and are sensitive to exchange liquidity and timestamping rules. The market is hosted on Kalshi and will resolve according to the platform’s published settlement procedure for this contract.
Market odds reflect traders’ collective expectations about whether DOGE will satisfy the $0.0945029 condition in the defined 15‑minute window and will update as new information (order flow, news, on‑chain events) arrives.
The market resolves based on whether DOGE meets the contract’s defined price condition during the specified 15‑minute snapshot; consult the event’s settlement rules on Kalshi to see the precise condition (e.g., whether it is '>=', '>' or uses a specific price source) and the resolution procedure.
The exact 15‑minute interval and timezone are set by the event details on Kalshi; because the event currently lists 'Closes: TBD', watch the market page for the scheduled window and any official updates that specify the timestamp used for settlement.
Settlement uses the price feed or exchange specified in the contract’s rules on Kalshi; different feeds can have different quotes, so check the event page for the named reference source and any fallback rules in case of outages.
High short‑term volatility increases the chance of brief price excursions that could hit the target within a 15‑minute window, but thin liquidity and large spreads may prevent trades at that exact level; flash spikes can both create and quickly erase target hits depending on exchange mechanics.
Zero reported volume and a single contract means the market is thin and may have wide bid/ask spreads or limited counterparties; traders should be cautious, use smaller position sizes, monitor order‑book depth and news flow, and confirm the settlement specifications before trading.