| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0968849 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will hit the $0.0968849 price target within a specified 15-minute reference window. Short-duration price targets matter to traders who react to rapid price moves, liquidity events, and news-driven spikes.
Dogecoin is a high‑volatility memecoin whose short-term moves are often amplified by low intraday liquidity, derivatives flows, and social-media-driven demand. Fifteen‑minute targets are resolved against exchange price feeds and therefore reflect microstructure dynamics (order book depth, single large trades, and timestamped prints) more than fundamentals.
Market odds on this contract represent the collective, real‑time expectation of traders about whether the price condition will be met during the specified 15‑minute window; they change as new information and trading activity arrive and are not guarantees of outcome.
Resolution depends on the platform's defined reference price during the event's 15‑minute window: if the designated reference (typically a trade print or official feed) reaches the target during that interval, the market resolves accordingly. The event page lists which feed and resolution rules apply.
The start time and exact 15‑minute interval are set by the market creator or the platform and are displayed on the event page; if the market shows 'Closes: TBD' the precise interval has not yet been fixed, so check the market details for the official timestamp once posted.
In many short-window markets a single qualifying trade print at or above the target during the official 15‑minute interval is sufficient for a positive resolution, but final determination follows the platform's resolution policy and which price source it uses.
The event page specifies the reference exchange(s) or aggregator used for resolution; if that information is not visible there, consult the platform's resolution rules or market metadata to see the named price source.
Zero traded volume simply means no one has yet taken a position in this contract; it does not change how the market will resolve, but it signals low liquidity and that initial trades may move market odds substantially once activity begins.