| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,054.76 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will hit the price target of $2,054.76 within a defined 15-minute interval; it matters because such short-interval targets let traders express views on immediate price spikes or dips.
Short-interval ETH markets sit at the intersection of crypto spot liquidity, algorithmic trading and on-chain activity, and they are especially sensitive to sudden news or order flow imbalances. Historically, intraday ETH moves can be driven by macro headlines, large on-chain transfers, exchange outages, or liquidity cascades, so these markets often reflect very short-term technical and flow-driven dynamics.
Market prices for this event summarize the collective view of traders about the chance that ETH reaches the stated price during the specified 15-minute window and will move as new information arrives; consult the market rules for the exact resolution mechanics and reference price source.
Resolution depends on the market’s official rules and reference price source; typically it will check whether the reference ETH price meets or exceeds $2,054.76 during the specified 15-minute interval as defined by the event’s resolution clause—always verify the event page for the precise settlement definition.
The event page should list the scheduled 15-minute settlement window or show 'TBD' if not yet set; trading usually remains open until the market’s stated close time or until the organizer finalizes the settlement window, so monitor the event page for updates.
The official reference sources are specified in the market rules—some markets use an aggregate of major spot exchanges, others use a single exchange or a consolidated feed—check the event’s resolution section to know which venues determine the settlement price.
On-chain events can trigger price moves rapidly once large transfers hit exchange order books, but their effect depends on how fast funds are converted to market orders and on prevailing liquidity; a sizable transfer can move price within seconds to minutes if liquidity is thin.
Expect heightened volatility and potential slippage; use limit orders to control execution price, be mindful of spreads and thin liquidity during unusual hours, and manage position size and margin carefully because short windows can produce abrupt spikes or reversals.