| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,045.41 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will hit a price target of $2,045.41 within a specified 15‑minute observation window. Short, intraday targets are useful for traders who want to hedge or speculate on transient price moves driven by news or liquidity events.
Ether is an actively traded, often volatile crypto asset whose intraday price can move quickly in response to macro announcements, exchange order flow, large on‑chain transfers, or protocol news. Fifteen‑minute targets capture brief spikes or drops—events that can be decisive for short‑term traders but may be irrelevant to longer‑term holders. Review the contract terms on the platform to see which price feed and timestamp rules govern resolution.
Market prices on the prediction platform represent the consensus view of whether the target will be met during the 15‑minute window; they update as new information and order flow arrives. Use changes in the market price, liquidity, and order book depth to gauge how participants are positioning ahead of the observation window.
It denotes the observation window length used to determine the outcome: the contract checks whether ETH reaches the stated price at any point during that specific 15‑minute interval. The platform listing will specify the exact start time, timezone, and how that interval is selected.
Resolution uses the data source named in the contract terms—commonly a specified exchange or an aggregate feed—and applies that feed's published price or trade ticks at timestamps defined by the rules. Always consult the event's detailed terms to know the authoritative price source.
If the close time is TBD, the platform will publish the resolution schedule when the observation window is set. Check the event page or platform announcements for the finalized start/end times and any last‑minute updates.
Yes—depending on the contract's resolution rules, a single trade or published tick meeting the target can be sufficient. Short windows are therefore more susceptible to transient ticks or low‑liquidity prints, so review the resolution criteria closely.
Large liquidity takers or whales executing sizable orders, high‑frequency traders reacting to news, forced liquidations in derivatives markets, and sudden exchange or data‑feed events can all produce rapid price moves that cause the target to be met within a 15‑minute span.