| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0968326 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price target of $0.0968326 within a specified 15-minute window. Short-window price markets matter because they isolate high-frequency volatility and provide a real-time market view of whether traders expect a brief price spike or dip.
Dogecoin is a liquid, retail-driven cryptocurrency whose minute-to-minute price moves are influenced by broader crypto market action (especially Bitcoin), large trader orders, and social-media-driven flows. Short interval bets like this are sensitive to exchange liquidity, algorithmic trading, and any high-impact news released around the window.
Prediction market odds aggregate participants' views about the event and update as new information arrives; they are a measure of market consensus, not a guarantee of outcome. Use odds as a real-time signal combined with your own research and risk management.
This market resolves based on whether DOGE reaches the specified $0.0968326 target within the designated 15-minute interval; the event's listing and settlement rules define whether ‘reach’ means equal to, at or above, or another operator — consult the market's rule text for the precise resolution condition.
The start and end timestamps of the 15-minute window are set by the market's official schedule and time convention (usually exchange or UTC-based); the event page and rulebook specify how the contiguous 15-minute block is anchored and published.
Settlement uses the price source specified in the market's rules (a particular exchange, an aggregate feed, or an index); check the event's settlement-source field on the market page to see exactly which feed governs resolution.
Whether an exact touch counts depends on the resolution operator defined for the market (for example, 'at or above' vs. 'above'); the market's resolution language determines whether equality satisfies the condition — refer to that language for confirmation.
Markets have predefined fallback and dispute procedures in their settlement rules to handle outages or feed anomalies; common approaches include using an alternate feed, applying a clean-price rule, or delaying resolution — review the market's contingency/resolution policy for the authoritative process.