| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,065.27 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the $2,065.27 price level during a designated 15‑minute interval. It matters because short intraday moves capture immediate liquidity, volatility, and trader expectations for ETH.
Ether experiences frequent, sometimes large, intraday swings driven by macro data, crypto‑native news, large order flow, and derivatives activity. Fifteen‑minute targets are commonly used by traders to express views on very short‑term moves and to hedge or speculate around specific catalysts.
Market odds on this event reflect the aggregated views and risk appetites of participants at a point in time and are a live snapshot of how traders price the chance of ETH touching the stated level within the 15‑minute window. They are not guarantees and can change rapidly as new information arrives.
Resolution typically depends on the platform's designated price feed: the market resolves in favor of the 'hit' outcome if the reference price or a reported trade reaches the $2,065.27 level during the specific 15‑minute window defined by the event. Consult the event's official rules on the trading platform for the exact settlement definition.
This event's close and the timing of its resolution window are set by the platform and are currently TBD; the platform will publish the exact closing time and the start/end times of the 15‑minute interval prior to resolution.
Settlement usually relies on a specified exchange or an aggregated index of spot exchange prices designated by the platform; the event page lists the official data feed or exchange used for settlement.
Rapid large limit or market orders, coordinated liquidations in derivatives markets, surprise macro announcements, exchange outages or restorations, and major on‑chain transfers by large holders can all produce quick moves that cross a short‑term target.
Because the target is measured over a short window, traders should account for order‑book depth, potential slippage, the timing of their own execution, and the elevated role of high‑frequency and algorithmic trading in producing brief price spikes or drops.