| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,037.15 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will trade at the target price of $2,037.15 during a specified 15-minute interval. Short-duration price-target markets matter for traders who want to express or hedge very short-term views on volatility and liquidity.
Ethereum's price is driven by a mix of crypto-specific factors (on-chain flows, DeFi activity, exchange order books) and broader macro and risk-asset moves. Fifteen-minute windows capture high-frequency dynamics — automated market makers, bots, and large traders can move prices quickly, creating opportunities and risks that differ from multi-day trading. The event page and settlement rules will specify the exact window and reference price feed; the market currently shows no traded volume and the close time is listed as TBD.
Prediction market prices are a dynamic, market-implied consensus about whether the event’s condition will be met during the stated 15-minute window; they can move rapidly as new information arrives. Settlement follows the event’s explicit definition and designated price source, so check the market rules for the authoritative determination method.
The platform will specify the start and end timestamps for the 15-minute interval in the event details; participants should consult the market page for the official schedule and any updates prior to trading.
Settlement uses the reference price source named in the event’s settlement rules on the market page — check those rules to see whether a consolidated feed, a specific exchange, or an aggregation method is used.
That depends on the event’s definition (e.g., whether the condition is a single trade/quote reaching the target or a minute-bar close requirement); the market’s settlement rules specify whether a transient touch qualifies.
Most markets include contingency procedures in their settlement rules, such as fallback feeds, delay of settlement, or voiding the market; review the market’s adjudication and force-majeure provisions for the exact process.
Traders use 15-minute target markets to express precision bets on immediate price action, to hedge against or speculate on anticipated short-lived events (news, index rebalances, expiries), or to arbitrage differences between platforms; these trades carry higher execution and timing risk compared with longer-dated instruments.