| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,148.27 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the specific price target of $2,148.27 within a specified 15‑minute measurement window. Short, time-bound price targets matter because they test immediate liquidity and event-driven volatility rather than longer-term trends.
Ether is a highly traded cryptocurrency whose price can move sharply on news, order‑flow, or technical triggers; 15‑minute markets focus on intraday liquidity and microstructure rather than macro fundamentals. Because this market’s close time is listed as TBD, the exact measurement window and settlement timestamps are determined by the market rules and will be crucial for interpretation.
Market prices (odds) on this contract represent the collective trading view about whether the $2,148.27 level will be reached in the specified 15‑minute window and will change as new information arrives. Treat those prices as a real‑time consensus signal reflecting available public and private information, not a guaranteed prediction.
The 15‑minute period is the defined measurement window used to check whether the ETH price touches $2,148.27; the precise start and end timestamps are set by the market’s official rules and are displayed on the market page once the window is scheduled. Check the market details for the exact start time and timezone.
Settlement uses the price feed or exchange/index specified in the market rules; that could be a single exchange tick or an aggregated index at a timestamp or continuous feed during the 15‑minute window. Always consult the market’s settlement source and methodology to know which price series will be used.
Whether a brief touch counts depends on the market’s settlement definition (for example, whether settlement uses any trade/tick that equals or exceeds the target during the window). The market rules will specify whether instantaneous touches qualify; review them before trading.
Zero volume only indicates no one has traded the contract yet; it does not change settlement mechanics. Low or zero liquidity affects tradability and the information content of market prices but the official settlement still follows the market’s published rules once the event is measured.
Rapid hits typically come from sudden order‑book imbalances (large market orders or liquidations), exchange outages or re‑routing of flow, major macro or crypto‑specific news released right before or during the window, or cascading stops/algorithmic trading that amplifies an initial move.