| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,063.71 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target of $2,063.71 within a specific 15-minute measurement window. Short-window price targets matter because they capture market microstructure and immediate sentiment that longer-term markets can miss.
Ether is traded across many venues and can move quickly on concentrated order flow, news, or on-chain events; intraday swings are common compared with longer-term moves. A 15-minute target emphasizes high-frequency drivers (order book imbalances, liquidations, newsflow) rather than fundamentals that play out over days or weeks. The market currently shows no trading volume, which means price discovery is thin until participants transact.
Prediction market prices aggregate participant expectations and update as new information arrives; use them as a shorthand for consensus at a point in time rather than a definitive forecast. Rapid updates are typical for very short windows, so interpret prices alongside liquidity and the platform's stated resolution rules.
The platform defines a precise consecutive 15-minute interval used to determine outcome resolution; check the market’s detailed description or rulepage for the exact start/end timestamps and how they align with clock sources.
Resolution typically relies on a named exchange or an aggregated price feed specified in the market rules; consult the event’s resolution details to see which venue or index is authoritative for this contract.
Depending on the market’s rules, resolution can depend on last trade, mid-price, or an aggregated timestamped price meeting or exceeding the target at any point in the window—verify the precise definition in the market’s resolution specification.
Zero or very low volume means there is little or no price discovery; quoted prices (if any) may be thinly supported and can change drastically once trading begins, so treat early prices as noisy until liquidity appears.
Most platforms have contingency procedures (use alternate feeds, extend the window, or apply an official fall-back rule); check this market’s contingency and force-majeure clauses in the resolution rules to know how such events are handled.