| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0969395 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the target price of $0.0969395 within a specific 15‑minute window. It matters to short‑term traders and liquidity providers because it isolates a very short time horizon where volatility and order‑book events dominate outcomes.
DOGE is a highly traded, retail‑driven cryptocurrency with a history of rapid intraday moves tied to social media, large holders, and broader crypto market swings. Short window price targets like this capture microstructure effects — exchange liquidity, trade prints, and momentary spikes — rather than multi‑day fundamental trends. Because the market closes are listed as TBD, the eventual resolution will depend on the platform's announced timing and reference price feed.
Prediction market odds for this event represent the market's aggregated expectation and available liquidity for that 15‑minute touch event and will adjust as new order flow and information arrive. Treat odds as a real‑time gauge of perceived chance, not a static forecast, and remember they move with trading activity and news.
The market resolves as 'YES' if the DOGE price, as determined by the platform's official reference feed, trades at or above $0.0969395 at any point within the announced 15‑minute resolution window. Exact resolution rules (price source, trade vs. midprice) will follow the exchange's event terms.
An unspecified close time means you should monitor announcements for the declared 15‑minute window; until the window is published, traders face added timing uncertainty which can widen spreads and affect liquidity. Conservative traders typically wait for the official window and for clearer order‑book conditions before taking large positions.
Resolution will use the platform's stated reference price feed and aggregation method (for example, consolidated trade prints or a specific exchange tick). Check the event's official rules on the trading platform to see which exchanges or data providers are authoritative for this market.
Traders commonly use small, time‑limited stakes, scalp-style entries, limit orders placed around known liquidity points, and hedges on correlated instruments. Managing slippage, using tight risk controls, and monitoring order books and social channels in real time are typical practices for such short horizons.
Relevant behaviors include past intraday spikes driven by concentrated buys or social media, frequent short burst volatility, and episodes where low order‑book depth allowed quick price moves. Also consider whether recent trading has shown momentum toward or away from the target level and whether large holders have been active.