| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,043.13 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the specified price level during a consecutive 15-minute measurement period. It matters because short-duration price-target contracts are used by traders to express views on immediate market moves and by participants seeking short-term hedges.
Ethereum is a high-liquidity, high-volatility crypto asset whose minute-to-minute price can be moved by news, large orders, or on-chain events. Short-interval targets like a 15-minute window capture transient moves that longer-term charts may hide; the listing shows no trading volume yet and the official close time is not set on the page.
Market prices on prediction platforms aggregate the buying and selling interest of participants and update as new information arrives; in this context, the trade price indicates the market’s current consensus about the chance of the target being met during the defined 15-minute window. Always consult the contract’s settlement rules to understand exactly how outcomes are determined and interpreted.
The contract outcome depends on whether the official settlement price feed records ETH reaching the specified level during the consecutive 15-minute measurement period defined in the contract rules; consult the event’s settlement documentation for the precise definition.
The event currently lists the close time as TBD; the event page or contract details will publish the exact start and end timestamps (and time zone) once scheduled—use those official timestamps to know when the 15-minute window will take place.
Settlement uses the price feed specified in the contract’s rules; the event page should identify the referenced exchange(s) or index—always check that field because different feeds can show different short-term ticks.
Low or zero trading volume means there is little price-discovery and liquidity on the market right now; that can lead to wider bid-ask spreads and greater sensitivity to single trades once trading begins.
Unusual network events can disrupt trading or price feeds; the contract’s contingency and force-majeure rules explain how settlement is handled in those cases, so check the event documentation for those procedures.