| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0974372 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether DOGE will reach the price target $0.0974372 during a specified 15‑minute interval; it matters because very short‑term moves can create trading opportunities and reflect intraday volatility for memecoins.
DOGE is a high‑volatility cryptocurrency whose minute‑by‑minute price can be driven by broader crypto market swings, social media activity, and concentrated liquidity. Markets that target narrow price levels over short windows are designed to let traders express views on microstructure events (spikes, sweeps, and rapid retracements) rather than multi‑day trends.
Market odds on this event represent the collective pricing and risk appetite of participants at any moment; treat them as a real‑time market signal, not a guaranteed outcome, and combine them with your own price‑feed checks and risk management.
The event outcome depends on the platform's settlement definition for this market—typically a 'hit' means the official reference price equals or crosses the target at any time during the defined 15‑minute window. Consult the event page for the precise settlement criteria (e.g., whether trade price, mid‑price, or a composite feed is used and how boundaries are treated).
The platform will publish the exact start and end timestamps for this market on the event page; if the market currently shows 'Closes: TBD', wait for the official schedule or platform announcement, which typically lists times in UTC and ties the market to a single continuous 15‑minute interval.
Settlement uses the data source specified in the event's rules on the platform—this could be a single exchange ticker, a composite index, or an oracle. Always check the event page for the named feed before trading, because small differences between feeds can affect whether the target is touched.
Look at high‑resolution intraminute charts and tick data around similar price levels to gauge how often DOGE crosses narrow targets in 15‑minute windows, and note the context (volume, order‑book conditions, and concurrent market events). Historical frequency helps set expectations but is not predictive of a single occurrence.
Low on‑market volume typically means wider quoted spreads and limited counterparty depth, so individual trades can move the market more and execution may be more expensive. Low volume does not change how settlement is determined, but it increases market‑impact and liquidity risk for participants.