| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,113.26 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the $2,113.26 price level during a specified 15-minute interval; it matters to traders who wish to take short-duration directional or hedging positions tied to minute-scale price action.
ETH is a highly liquid, frequently traded crypto asset that can exhibit significant price movement over very short intervals due to order flow, liquidations, and news. Fifteen-minute target markets isolate very short-term behavior and are resolved against an official price feed or exchange reference specified in the market rules. Because the interval is brief, outcomes often hinge on transient market microstructure events rather than longer-term fundamentals.
Market prices on this contract summarize participant views about whether that specific 15-minute window will include a trade or price that meets the target; those prices move in real time as new information and order flow arrive and should be interpreted as a snapshot of current market consensus rather than a fixed forecast.
The interval is a contiguous 15-minute period used to check whether the ETH price meets the target; the market's official rules specify the exact timestamping convention and how the interval start is determined, so consult the event's rule page for the definitive timing definition.
Resolution criteria depend on the market's published rules — common approaches include any trade at or above the target on the designated price feed, or a quoted mid/aggregate price reaching the target; check the market's resolution specification to know which measure is used here.
The market's rulebook lists the authoritative data source(s) used for resolution; it may cite a specific exchange, an aggregated consolidated feed, or an independent oracle, so review the event details to see which feed governs outcomes for this contract.
The listing indicates closure time as TBD; typically markets stop accepting new positions shortly before the relevant measurement window begins, with the exact cut-off posted on the market page — monitor that page for the announced close time for this specific contract.
Review historical minute-resolution price data around similar price levels and comparable market conditions to see how often short bursts or spikes occurred; focus on events with similar liquidity and news context, but remember past minute-scale volatility is informative about patterns, not deterministic for a single future 15-minute outcome.