| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0972283 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the $0.0972283 level within a 15-minute measurement window; it matters for traders and hedgers who want to express or manage views on short, intraday price moves.
DOGE is a highly liquid but volatile cryptocurrency whose price can move quickly on news, social-media-driven flows, and order-book activity. Short-interval target markets like this capture microstructural and event-driven moves rather than longer-term fundamentals, so outcomes often hinge on minute-by-minute liquidity and timing. The market’s listed close is currently TBD, so the official settlement window and schedule are set by the platform when available.
Market odds represent the crowd’s current assessment at the time of quoting and change in real time as new information and trades arrive; treat them as one signal among technical, on-chain, and news-based analysis rather than a definitive forecast.
The market resolves based on whether the target price is observed within a defined 15-minute measurement period; the exact start/end timestamps and how that window is selected are specified in the market’s settlement rules on the platform.
The event uses the reference data source named in the market description on the platform; consult the event page for the authoritative exchange or composite feed that governs settlement.
'TBD' means the platform has not yet published a final close or settlement schedule; traders should monitor the event page for updates because the listed close determines how long trading is available and when the settlement window will occur.
Resolution for exact-equals scenarios follows the platform’s published rules (for example, whether the target is inclusive or exclusive); check the market’s explicit resolution criteria on the event page to see how ties are handled.
Zero or low traded volume indicates limited liquidity and potentially wider spreads; prices may move more on single orders, and entering or exiting larger positions could be more difficult, so factor liquidity into size and timing decisions.