| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,069.76 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the $2,069.76 price level within a defined 15-minute interval. Short-window price-target markets matter because they isolate intraday liquidity and event-driven volatility rather than long-term fundamentals.
Markets that resolve on brief windows magnify the effects of order-book dynamics, single large trades, and time-sensitive news. Ether is widely traded and typically liquid, but even liquid markets can move quickly on concentrated flows, exchange issues, or algorithmic cascades; consult the event page for the exact resolution mechanics and data feed.
Prediction market prices summarize the community's aggregated view about whether that price will be touched during the 15-minute window; interpret those prices alongside liquidity, the stated price feed, and the market's start/end timestamps rather than as guarantees.
It means the market resolves based on whether ETH trades at (or in accordance with the market's stated rule for) the $2,069.76 level during a specified 15-minute interval; the event page and official rules specify whether resolution uses trades, quoted prices, and which feed or exchange is authoritative.
If the start/end times are 'TBD' the platform will update the market page with the scheduled window before resolution; watch the event listing, platform announcements, or your account notifications for the exact UTC timestamp and any timezone details.
Resolution uses the data source named in the market's official rules (a specific exchange, consolidated feed, or an arbitration procedure); check the market description for the authoritative feed and the dispute-resolution process in case of ambiguous ticks.
Total Volume Traded of $0 indicates there have been no executed trades on this market so far; that typically means thin liquidity, wider spreads, and greater sensitivity to individual orders — exercise caution because low volume can make prices less informative about broad expectations.
Yes: short-window markets are disproportionately affected by single large trades, exchange anomalies, and immediate news; they can flip quickly and may reflect market microstructure more than broader fundamentals, so consider order-book snapshots, scheduled announcements, and the risk of feed errors when evaluating outcomes.