| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,068.34 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target $2,068.34 within a 15-minute measurement period. It matters because short-window price events reflect immediate liquidity, order flow, and news-driven volatility that traders use to express intraday views.
ETH is a highly traded crypto asset that can move quickly on concentrated flows, macro news, or on-chain events. Markets that use narrow time windows focus attention on microstructure and timestamped price feeds; settlement depends on the precise reference feed and measurement rules specified by the platform. Because the window is short, individual large trades or sudden headlines can determine the outcome.
Prediction market odds here represent aggregated trader beliefs and the price at which participants are willing to take positions given current information and liquidity. Treat odds as a real-time sentiment signal that can change quickly as new data or trades arrive.
A successful outcome is determined by the market's settlement rules: typically the reference ETH price meeting or exceeding $2,068.34 within the designated 15-minute measurement period. Check the market page for whether the high, an exchange midpoint, or a composite feed is used and for any tie-breaker language.
The market's official start and end timestamps define the 15-minute window; because this listing currently shows 'Closes: TBD', the platform will publish the precise window and schedule on the market page. Monitor the event details for the announced UTC/local start time.
Settlement follows the platform's designated reference price or exchange feed indicated in the market details. That feed can be a single exchange, an aggregator, or a time-weighted mechanism—consult the market rules to see which source is authoritative.
Total volume of $0 indicates no trades have occurred yet, implying low or no liquidity so far. New or low-volume markets can have wider quoted spreads and be more sensitive to individual orders, so quotes may be less stable until activity increases.
Rapid crossings are typically driven by large exchange orders or whale flows, sudden macro or crypto-specific headlines, exchange outages or liquidity withdrawals, cascading derivatives liquidations, or scheduled announcements that concentrate trading into a short window. The frequency of such spikes depends on contemporaneous liquidity and market sentiment.