| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,051.87 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ethereum (ETH) will reach the specified price target of $2,051.87 within a defined 15-minute observation window; it matters to traders and hedgers focused on very short-term price moves and microstructure risk.
Short-duration ETH targets sit at the intersection of crypto volatility, exchange liquidity, and high-frequency trading; 15-minute windows can be dominated by single large orders, liquidation cascades, or brief news-driven spikes. Market structure for ETH—including which exchanges and aggregated price feeds are used—shapes outcomes, as do broader macro events and network-specific developments.
Market odds reflect the collective view of traders about whether the target will be met during the specified 15-minute interval and update as new information arrives; use them as a real-time gauge of market sentiment and risk rather than a fixed prediction.
The event uses the observation window defined in the market's contract and settlement rules; those terms specify the exact start and end timestamps or alignment method (e.g., exchange timestamps or fixed clock intervals) that determine the 15-minute period.
Settlement is based on the price feed or index named in the market's documentation—typically a specified exchange feed or consolidated index—so consult the market terms to see which data source is authoritative for resolution.
'Closes: TBD' means the market's trading end or finalization time has not been set publicly; resolution will follow the market's announced closure and the settlement timeline described in its rules, so check official updates for the final schedule.
High-frequency traders, market makers, algorithmic scalpers, and large directional traders influence odds most in such short windows—because rapid order flow and liquidity provision (or withdrawal) can quickly move the market-implied likelihood of the target being hit.
Very short-duration targets tend to be driven by transient price spikes, order-book events, or feed anomalies rather than sustained trends; they therefore show greater sensitivity to single large trades and momentary news than multi-day or longer-duration markets.