| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,069.16 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will meet the $2,069.16 price target within a specific 15‑minute interval. Short‑window targets matter because they isolate high‑frequency volatility and event‑driven price moves that longer horizons smooth out.
ETH is a highly traded crypto asset whose price is influenced by macro markets, exchange flows, on‑chain activity, and protocol‑level news; short intraday windows can reflect minute‑by‑minute liquidity and trader behavior. Markets like this are commonly used to express views on immediate reactions to scheduled events (e.g., data releases, announcements) or unscheduled shocks. The event’s exact 15‑minute window and closing time are determined by the platform and are listed on the market page; this particular listing currently shows the close as TBD.
Prediction market odds represent the market’s aggregated view about the likelihood of the target outcome and move as new information arrives; for a 15‑minute target, odds typically react quickly to news, order flow, and price feeds. Use odds as a real‑time sentiment indicator rather than a long‑term forecast.
The 15‑minute interval is the specific contiguous time window the platform defines for the event; the start and end times (or the mechanism to select them) are specified on the market page or in the platform’s rules.
Resolution is based on the platform’s designated price source and resolution criteria—typically whether the reported reference price meets or exceeds the target at any time within the window—so review the market’s resolution policy for exact details.
Start time and closing details are posted by the platform on the event page; because this listing currently shows the close as TBD, monitor the market page or platform notifications for the scheduled window.
The market uses the platform’s designated reference price feed or index; the specific feed (for example, a consolidated exchange index) is listed in the event metadata or in the platform’s resolution documentation.
Platforms generally have contingency and dispute procedures—such as switching to backup feeds, extending windows, or adjudicating per rulebook—so check the exchange’s settlement and dispute policies to understand how exceptional events are handled.