| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,067.70 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target of $2,067.70 within a specified 15-minute interval. It matters because short-duration price targets test near-term liquidity, volatility, and order-flow dynamics in the crypto market.
Short-interval price markets like this capture brief, high-impact moves driven by large orders, liquidations, or macro news rather than sustained trends. ETH's price behavior is influenced by on-chain activity, derivatives positioning, centralized exchange flows, and broader crypto and macro risk sentiment. Because the event uses a 15-minute window, outcomes hinge on transient spikes or dips that may not reflect longer-term direction.
Market prices on this platform reflect traders' aggregated views about whether that 15-minute target will be hit; interpret them as real-time expressions of market expectations, not guarantees of future price movement.
A 'Yes' outcome depends on whether the event's official price source records ETH at or above (or reaches, per the event wording) $2,067.70 during the specified 15-minute interval. The platform's official resolution rules define the precise comparison (e.g., trade price vs. midprice) and tie-breaking procedures.
The closing time and the exact 15-minute window are listed on the event page when the platform schedules them; currently this event shows 'Closes: TBD', so the platform has not yet set the official interval or close time.
The event's resolution specification on the platform will state the designated price feed or exchange (or aggregated index) used for settlement. Consult the event details on the platform for the authoritative source and timestamp conventions.
Short windows are most sensitive to single large market orders, concentrated liquidation cascades, sudden macro headlines, rapid shifts in risk sentiment, or algorithmic trading that triggers cluster stops or large fills at that price level.
'15 min' indicates the resolution looks at a single 15-minute interval rather than a continuous period or end-of-day price; success depends on a price touch within that brief window, so transient moves that reverse immediately after the window still count if they occurred during it.