| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1,989.75 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target of $1,989.75 during a specified 15‑minute window. Short, time‑bound price targets matter to traders who need to hedge or speculate on near‑instantaneous moves and measure market microstructure risk.
ETH is a highly liquid crypto whose price can move quickly in response to on‑chain flows, large exchange orders, macro news, and liquidity changes across venues. Fifteen‑minute target markets isolate very short‑term dynamics — they capture spikes, squeezes, and liquidity events that broader timeframes can smooth over. The listed close time for this market is TBD, so the exact settlement window and timing will be posted by the platform before trading/settlement.
Market odds reflect the trading community’s consensus about whether that price target will be hit in the 15‑minute window and will update as new information arrives. For ultra‑short windows, odds function mainly as a real‑time sentiment and liquidity indicator rather than a long‑term forecast.
The platform will publish an explicit start and end timestamp for the 15‑minute window on the market page; because this event’s close time is currently TBD, check the market details for the official UTC start and end times before trading.
Settlement depends on the market’s specified price source and methodology (for example, a specific exchange last trade, an aggregated index, or a time‑weighted average). The event page and settlement rules state which feed and measurement method apply.
Whether an exact match counts depends on the market’s resolution rules (some markets resolve on ≥ target, others require > target or use a precise tie‑breaker). Review the market’s resolution and tie‑breaking language on the event page.
Yes — if the settlement method counts spikes (e.g., based on last trade or a raw exchange price) a single large order can trigger the target; if settlement uses an aggregated or averaged feed, short spikes may be smoothed and less likely to count.
Historical short‑window markets show that outcomes are often driven by microstructure (liquidity, venue spikes) and event timing; they can be more random than longer horizons. Use past results to understand typical volatility and settlement sources, but remember each 15‑minute window is highly sensitive to immediate order flow and news.