| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,048.70 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market is a binary-style contract tied to Ether (ETH) trading at a specific 15-minute instant relative to a $2,048.70 target. It matters because it isolates a very short window of price action, useful for traders who want to hedge or speculate on minute-level moves.
Ethereum is a highly liquid but volatile crypto asset whose minute-by-minute price can be influenced by news, large order flow, and on-chain events. Short-interval markets like this are commonly posted around scheduled macro announcements, exchange expiries, or when traders expect heightened intraday activity. Because the resolution depends on a precise timestamp, microstructure and which price feed is used matter as much as broader fundamentals.
Market odds show the collective, real-time view of whether the target condition will be met at the specified 15-minute instant; they update as new information arrives. Treat odds as a consensus signal reflecting liquidity, order-book dynamics, and incoming news, not as a definitive prediction.
The outcome is determined by the ETH price value the market operator uses at the precise 15-minute timestamp specified in the contract. The market's resolution rule will state whether that is a single exchange quote, a consolidated index, or another official feed.
Definitions vary by contract; some markets use the price at the exact start of the minute, others use a one-second sample or an averaged value. Check the market's resolution rules to see the exact timestamp convention used for this specific event.
This market's close and resolution times are listed as TBD; the platform will announce the official close/resolution schedule. Typically resolution occurs after the referenced timestamp once the designated price feed has been verified and any dispute window has passed.
The contract's rule text specifies the feed or index used for settlement—common choices are consolidated exchange indices or a primary exchange quote. Always consult the market page or rulebook to confirm the exact source for this event.
Similar short-interval ETH contracts tend to be sensitive to single large orders, exchange microstructure, and immediate news; they can flip quickly and show higher short-term variance than longer-dated markets. Historical performance depends heavily on liquidity conditions and the presence of scheduled events around the timestamp.