| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,135.96 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will meet the $2,135.96 price target within a specified 15‑minute measurement period. Short‑interval markets matter because they capture very short‑term price action and trader expectations about immediate liquidity and order flow.
Ethereum's price frequently moves on a mix of macro headlines, Bitcoin-led moves, on‑chain flows, liquidity events, and exchange order book dynamics. A 15‑minute target is a high‑frequency outcome: small trades, exchange spreads, and momentary liquidity imbalances can determine whether the target is hit. Check the event page for any notes about the exact settlement feed and timing.
Odds in this market reflect the aggregated views and risk preferences of participants about whether the $2,135.96 threshold will be reached during the platform's defined 15‑minute window. Expect the market price to update in real time as new information — trades, news, or shifts in liquidity — arrives.
Resolution is based on the platform’s defined settlement procedure for the event: whether the ETH price meets the $2,135.96 target at any time or on average during the specified 15‑minute measurement window. Consult the event’s rule page for the exact definition and data source used for settlement.
The precise start and end timestamps for the 15‑minute window will be specified by the platform on the event page or at market close; if the market shows 'Closes: TBD' the measurement window hasn’t been finalized publicly yet.
The event will settle using the data feed or index defined by the platform’s settlement rules — that may be a composite index or a single exchange feed. Refer to the event’s settlement specifications to learn which sources are used.
Large taker orders, concentrated liquidity removal, liquidation cascades, sudden news shocks, or aggressive algorithmic trading can produce fast price moves that hit short‑term targets.
Yes. Low trading volume means prices may be thin and more susceptible to large swings or manipulation; information content is lower until participants trade. Higher volume typically produces more reliable, consensus prices for short‑interval outcomes.