| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0950335 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether DOGE will meet or exceed the $0.0950335 price target during a specified 15‑minute observation period. It matters because short, high‑resolution targets test intraday volatility and trader expectations about immediate price moves.
DOGE (Dogecoin) is a highly liquid, retail‑driven cryptocurrency known for rapid intraday swings tied to market liquidity, news, and social attention. Short‑window markets like this capture whether a transient spike or dip will occur, which differs from longer‑term trend bets because single large orders or brief news can change the outcome.
Odds in this market represent the crowd’s collective expectation that the target will be met within the 15‑minute window and will update as new information arrives. Treat them as a real‑time aggregator of market sentiment and order flow, not a guarantee of future price behavior.
It indicates the market is tied to a specific 15‑minute observation period during which the DOGE price must meet the $0.0950335 target for the outcome to be considered achieved; check the market’s rules for the exact start and end timestamps.
Resolution typically relies on an exchange or aggregated price feed defined in the market’s rulebook; consult the event’s resolution clause to see which data source and timestamp are authoritative.
Whether a momentary touch counts depends on the market’s exact resolution logic (e.g., any trade or quote at or above the target versus an average); review the specific resolution criteria for this event.
The market will close or be resolved based on the platform’s scheduling and the defined observation window; because the close time is listed as TBD, monitor the event page or platform notices for the announced start time and resolution timeline.
Short‑window outcomes are most affected by liquidity providers and market makers, large retail or institutional trades (whales), algorithmic traders, and real‑time news or social media activity that shifts order flow across exchanges used by the market’s price feed.