| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,048.57 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will hit the price target $2,048.57 within a designated 15-minute settlement window. Short-interval price bets matter to traders hedging intraday risk and to participants assessing momentary liquidity and volatility.
ETH is a highly traded crypto asset whose price can move quickly on macro news, on-chain events, and order-book dynamics; a 15-minute window focuses the question on short-term market microstructure rather than long-term fundamentals. Markets like this are used to express views on very brief price dislocations, exchange-specific flows, or the impact of scheduled announcements. Because the market close time is listed as TBD, the precise settlement window and resolution rules should be confirmed on the market page once they are posted.
Market odds reflect the aggregated views and willingness of participants to buy or sell the contract at given prices and therefore indicate market consensus at that moment, not a guarantee. Before trading, check the market's specific settlement and data-source rules to understand how outcomes will be determined.
Resolution depends on the market's official rulebook: it will specify the authoritative price feed or exchange and whether a trade, midpoint, or other quote during the 15-minute interval counts toward settlement. Consult the market page for the definitive resolution criteria once posted.
The precise start and end times for the 15-minute window are set by the market operator and will be published on the event page; because the market currently lists the close as TBD, wait for the posted schedule there to know the exact timestamps and time zone.
The event page and official rules list the referenced data source(s) used for settlement; different feeds (exchange trades vs. aggregated indices) can produce different short-term outcomes, so check the market documentation to see which one governs this contract.
In thin liquidity conditions, a single large market order can move the spot price enough to hit the target; in deeper markets, coordinated flows or broader news are typically needed to shift price materially within a short window, so expected liquidity conditions matter for this event.
A single-outcome listing typically indicates one binary-style settlement condition (the event either meets the criterion during the window or it does not); the market page will specify the payout structure and whether there are any additional settlement nuances to be aware of.