| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,141.16 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will hit the price level $2,141.16 within a 15‑minute measurement window specified by the platform. Short intraday target markets matter to high-frequency traders and hedgers because they capture expectations about immediate volatility and liquidity events.
ETH frequently shows sharp moves over minutes due to concentrated order flow, liquidations in derivatives markets, and rapid reaction to news. Intraday target markets reflect that microstructure: small volumes or single large trades can create or erase a price milestone in a short window. Check the market page for the platform's specified price source and resolution rules, since those determine how the event is judged.
Market prices on this event represent participants' aggregated view about the odds that the $2,141.16 level will be reached during the stated 15‑minute window and will move as new information arrives. Treat the market price as an information signal that depends on liquidity, time until the measurement window, and recent order flow rather than a certainty.
It indicates the price will be checked over a continuous 15‑minute measurement window defined by the platform; the exact start and end times and how the window is anchored are specified in the market’s resolution rules on the event page.
Resolution depends on the platform’s nominated price source and method (for example, a specific exchange’s trade price, an index, or an aggregated feed) and on whether the rule counts the last trade, a mid-price, or any tick at or above the target; consult the market rules for the precise definition.
Zero volume means no trade history yet, which often implies low liquidity and wider spreads; 'closes TBD' means the market end or finalization schedule is not set publicly, so check the event page regularly for updates before entering positions.
Likely triggers include large market orders on spot exchanges, concentrated derivatives liquidations, sudden macro headlines or policy announcements, exchange outages or re-listings, and major smart‑contract events or exploits that change risk sentiment quickly.
Participants can use it to hedge exposure to rapid intraday moves, express a short‑term directional view, or speculate on the timing of imminent volatility; because of execution risk and potential low liquidity, entrants should size positions conservatively and monitor order-book and news flow closely.