| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0948494 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the specified target price of $0.0948494 within a 15-minute measurement window. Short-interval price targets matter to traders who want to hedge or speculate on very near-term moves and to observers tracking microstructure events.
DOGE is a high-volatility cryptocurrency whose short-term moves are driven by liquidity, order flow, and market sentiment rather than fundamentals. Events like large exchange trades, broader crypto market swings (especially Bitcoin), and platform-specific news can move DOGE suddenly over minutes. Settlement and exact measurement depend on the market’s published rules for price source and timing.
Market odds summarize traders’ collective expectation about whether the target will be hit during the 15-minute window; changes in odds reflect incoming information and trading pressure rather than a guaranteed outcome.
It means the market outcome is based on whether DOGE reaches the target price of $0.0948494 during a defined 15-minute measurement period; the event’s settlement rules specify the exact timing and price source that determine a hit.
The start and end times are defined in the event’s official terms and schedule; because this listing shows 'Closes: TBD', the exact window may be set later—consult the event's timing details once available.
Settlement relies on the reference price feed named in the event terms—commonly an aggregated index or specific exchange last-trade prices—so the chosen feed determines which trades count toward hitting the target.
That measurement method is specified in the market’s settlement rules; short-interval markets often use last trade or an indexed price point, but some use VWAP or other aggregation—read the event rules to know which applies here.
Yes—because the window is short and liquidity can be thin, large orders or concentrated trading can produce brief spikes that would register as a hit under many settlement rules; exchanges and the market operator may have surveillance and specific settlement methodologies to mitigate obvious manipulation.