| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,042.38 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will meet the specified $2,042.38 price target during a single 15‑minute window. Short intraday windows matter because they capture short-lived price moves that larger timeframes can smooth over, making them relevant for traders and risk managers who track rapid volatility.
Ether is a highly traded crypto asset whose price frequently moves on short notice in response to macro data, on‑chain events, exchange order flow, and derivative settlements. Intraday targets like this are often driven by transient liquidity imbalances, liquidations, and news-driven spikes rather than long‑term fundamental shifts.
Prediction market prices represent the collective view of participants about the likelihood of the specified event and can change rapidly as new information arrives; they are a real‑time sentiment signal rather than a guarantee of outcome. Always consult the market's official settlement and price‑feed rules to understand exactly how the outcome will be decided.
It asks whether ETH will reach the listed price target at any point during a single contiguous 15‑minute window specified by the market; consult the market page for the exact phrasing and settlement condition.
The market operator defines the start and end times of the 15‑minute window; because this listing currently shows 'Closes: TBD,' the precise window will be posted on the market page or official rules once scheduled.
Settlement typically relies on a specified exchange price feed or an aggregated index listed in the market rules; check the event's official settlement documentation to learn which exchange(s) or index are used and how times are normalized.
Zero volume means no trades have occurred yet, so the market may have thin liquidity and limited information content; low activity can result in wider spreads and less reliable sentiment signals until trading begins.
Common triggers include large exchange orders or withdrawals, liquidation cascades in leveraged markets, major macro headlines, exchange outages or rate‑limit events, and sudden on‑chain incidents such as large transfers or protocol exploits.