| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,145.98 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will meet the $2,145.98 price target within a specified 15-minute window. It matters because 15-minute markets let traders express views on immediate, event-driven price moves and capture high-frequency volatility.
ETH is a liquid, highly traded crypto whose intraday price is driven by spot flows, derivatives, on-chain activity, and macro or protocol news. Short-duration markets like this are often used around scheduled announcements, large block trades, or expected liquidity events and historically display larger relative swings than longer-duration markets.
The market price reflects the collective, real-time view of traders about whether the target will be achieved in the defined 15-minute window. Treat the market price as a dynamic sentiment indicator that updates as new information and order flow arrive.
Resolution depends on the market's specific rule set on the platform: it typically specifies whether the price must trade at, above, or cross the target during a named 15-minute window and which timestamp or feed is authoritative—consult the event page for the exact wording and settlement window.
Zero reported volume means no trades have been executed on the platform for this event yet; low or no liquidity can produce wide bid-ask spreads and larger slippage, so orders may be harder to fill or have higher execution risk.
The platform specifies the official price feed in the market contract (often an exchange or aggregated index); check the market details to see the named source and any tie-breaking rules for timestamps or outliers.
Large traders/whales placing market orders, exchanges executing block trades, liquidation cascades from leveraged positions, market makers adjusting quotes, and algorithmic/high-frequency traders reacting to news are the main drivers of short-window moves.
Use strict position sizing and pre-set limits, be prepared for rapid execution and slippage, monitor the official price feed and event-page rules, account for platform fees and settlement timing, and avoid relying on delayed data feeds for last-minute decisions.