| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,136.78 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the specified $2,136.78 price level within a single 15-minute settlement window. Short-duration markets like this matter because they isolate very short-term price moves and are used by scalpers, hedgers, and participants testing microstructure risks.
Ethereum is a highly liquid cryptocurrency whose intraday price moves respond to order-flow, macro headlines, on‑chain flows, and derivatives activity. A 15‑minute target focuses on market microstructure: order-book depth, automated trading, and transient news can flip outcomes quickly compared with longer-term contracts.
Market prices on this contract reflect traders’ aggregated expectations and immediate supply/demand for this specific 15‑minute outcome; those market-implied odds can move rapidly and are best treated as real-time sentiment and liquidity signals rather than long-term forecasts.
It asks whether the reference ETH price used by the contract/market will reach the $2,136.78 level at any point within a single, specified 15‑minute settlement window; consult the market rules for exact resolution mechanics.
The market open/close times and the exact timing of the 15‑minute window depend on the platform's schedule and are listed on the event page; because this listing shows 'Closes: TBD', check the market page for final timing or announcements.
Resolution typically uses a predefined price feed or exchange index and looks at timestamps within the 15‑minute window; the market’s rulebook specifies which exchanges, aggregation method, and any rounding or sampling rules are used.
High‑frequency traders, liquidity providers, and algorithmic market makers often dominate 15‑minute moves, while large holders (whales) and news-driven retail flows can also create rapid price swings.
Prioritize low‑latency news sources and real‑time order‑book/on‑chain monitors; for a 15‑minute horizon, execution risk, slippage, and feed latency matter more than longer‑term fundamentals, so use rapid signals and be prepared for sudden reversals.