| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,156.35 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will hit the USD price target of $2,156.35 during a specified 15-minute measurement window. It matters because short, time-limited price thresholds are useful for short-term trading, hedging, and testing market reactions to news or flow events.
Ether's price is driven by global crypto liquidity, macro risk sentiment, and on-chain activity; short windows like 15 minutes capture spikes, squeezes, and orderbook dynamics rather than longer-term fundamentals. Historical intraday volatility means these outcomes can flip quickly in response to concentrated flows, exchange events, or macro headlines. Traders should consider both market structure and scheduled catalysts when evaluating this market.
Market odds are a live aggregation of traders' views and capital at a moment in time and can change rapidly as new information arrives. Use them as a short-term sentiment gauge rather than a deterministic prediction—check the market’s resolution rules and liquidity before trading.
The event resolves according to the market's official resolution rules, which define the precise measurement window, the reference price source, and whether equality or exceedance qualifies. Always consult the event's resolution text to see the exact criteria (e.g., timestamp boundaries and tie-breaking language).
The start and end times of the 15-minute window are specified in the market listing or follow-up notices; if the market currently shows 'Closes: TBD', watch the platform for an announced start/close timestamp and check which timezone is used (usually UTC or platform-specified).
Resolution will use the price source named in the market’s rules or settlement clause; this may be a consolidated index or a specific exchange ticker. If the source is not listed, consult the platform’s documentation or support for the official reference.
Large market orders, clustered liquidations, or options expiries can cause rapid, short-lived spikes or drops; in a 15-minute window such flows can push the spot price across thresholds even if sustained moves do not follow. Monitor order-book depth and known expiries for heightened short-term risk.
Exchange outages, price-feed or oracle failures, major chain reorganizations, or emergency protocol upgrades can lead to delayed or adjusted resolution per the market’s contingency rules. The market's documentation will describe how such events are handled (e.g., delays, alternate sources, or voiding).