| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,058.62 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will meet a $2,058.62 price target within a specified 15-minute interval. It matters because short, time-bound price targets isolate very near-term volatility and liquidity behavior of the ETH market.
Ether is a highly liquid crypto asset whose intraday price can swing on order-flow, derivatives activity, on‑chain movements, and macro news. Short-interval targets like a 15-minute window capture the interaction of spot trading, exchange liquidity, and sudden information shocks rather than long-run fundamentals.
Market odds reflect the collective view of traders about the likelihood of the target being hit during the designated 15-minute window and update as new information arrives; they are market expectations, not guarantees of outcome.
The market will resolve according to the platform's published rule for this contract; typically a 'Yes' requires the ETH price (as defined by the market's specified data source) to meet or exceed $2,058.62 at least once during the designated 15-minute interval. Check the market contract page for the precise resolution definition and price source.
The start time for the 15-minute window will be listed on the market page; because the market metadata shows 'Closes: TBD', monitor the event page or platform notifications for the official scheduled interval and any updates from the exchange.
The contract specifies a particular data source for settlement (for example, a designated exchange ticker or aggregated feed). The exact source and any tie-breaking rules are on the market's rulebook—refer to that to know which venue's trades or quotes are used.
In many short-window contracts, a single qualifying trade or quoted price that meets the threshold during the interval is sufficient for a 'Yes' resolution, but you should confirm whether the contract requires a trade, a quote, or a sustained level by reading the event's settlement criteria.
Scheduled announcements (economic releases, policy decisions, high-profile crypto events) can concentrate volatility into specific short intervals; align the potential 15-minute window with known announcement timing and consider that markets often move before, during, and after such events due to rapid information flow and positioning.