| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,067.03 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will meet or exceed the $2,067.03 price target within a 15‑minute measurement window. Short, time‑boxed price targets matter because they isolate market microstructure and immediate liquidity events rather than longer‑term fundamentals.
Ether is a highly liquid but volatile crypto asset; 15‑minute windows are sensitive to orderflow, exchange liquidity, and news that land exactly during that window. Markets like this are used by traders to express views on immediate price moves driven by algorithmic trading, large block orders, or time‑specific announcements.
Market prices reflect the crowd’s current assessment of the likelihood that ETH will meet the $2,067.03 target during the stated 15‑minute window; prices update in real time as information and orderflow change. Read the platform’s posted rules to understand how the market price maps to final resolution.
It means resolution is based on whether ETH meets the $2,067.03 target during a contiguous 15‑minute period defined by the market. The exact start and end timestamps for that window are determined by the platform’s market rules and any official scheduling on the event page.
Resolution follows the platform’s stated price feed and timestamping rules for this contract; those rules specify which exchanges or aggregated indices are used and how prices are sampled during the 15‑minute window. Check the event’s resolution policy on the platform for the authoritative source.
Whether a brief touch counts depends on the platform’s resolution mechanics (trade vs. quote, minimum duration, equality conditions). Often a registered trade or quoted price at or above the target during the window will be sufficient, but confirm the exact equality and sampling rules in the market documentation.
Yes. Exchange outages or feed disruptions can alter reported prices; off‑exchange/OTC trades only matter if they are reflected in the official price source. Platforms typically have fallback procedures—review those procedures to understand how exceptional events are handled.
Traders typically monitor real‑time orderflow, set tight limit or iceberg orders, and watch scheduled news or on‑chain events coinciding with the window. Manage position size and slippage risk carefully, since short windows amplify microstructure noise and sudden liquidity shifts.