| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0974415 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether DOGE will reach the specified $0.0974415 target within a 15-minute measurement period. Short-duration price-target markets matter because they isolate very short-term volatility and event-driven moves in a highly liquid asset class.
Dogecoin (DOGE) is a high-volatility crypto asset whose intraday moves are driven by liquidity, algorithmic trading, retail order flow, and news or social-media events. Fifteen-minute windows are sensitive to flash moves, exchange microstructure, and large single trades, so outcomes often reflect transient order-book dynamics rather than longer-term fundamentals.
Market prices on this event represent traders' aggregated expectations about whether that 15-minute target will be met; interpret odds as a snapshot of market sentiment and risk pricing, not as a deterministic forecast.
Resolution follows the event's published rules and the designated public price source listed on the event page; generally the target is considered met if the official feed records the required price level during the defined 15-minute measurement period, but you should consult the event description for the specific data feed and tie-breaking rules.
In most such markets a brief tick that appears on the official resolution feed will count, since resolution is based on recorded trade or price data during the measurement period; confirm the permitted data types (trade price, aggregated midpoint, etc.) in the event's resolution rules.
The event page lists the closing and measurement schedule when set; currently the close is marked TBD, so monitor the event page for an announced start time and any platform updates that specify when the 15-minute window will be measured.
High-impact drivers over a 15-minute span include large individual orders from high-net-worth holders or funds, coordinated retail buying triggered by social posts, algorithmic liquidity-taking strategies, and exchange-level events such as listings, delistings, or outages that change available liquidity.
Platform resolution policies typically specify how to handle outages or anomalous prints; such events can delay resolution, invoke alternate data sources, or lead to cancellations per the operator's rules, so review the event's resolution policy and the platform's market-conduct notices for procedures in those scenarios.