| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,160.87 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target of $2,160.87 at any point within a specific 15-minute measurement interval. Short-duration price-target markets matter to traders and hedgers who want to express or manage views about rapid, intraday moves in ETH.
Ether is a highly liquid but volatile crypto asset whose short-term price is driven by order-book dynamics, macroeconomic news, and crypto-specific events such as exchange outages, large transfers, or protocol activity. Fifteen-minute target markets capture transient price behavior that can be influenced by flash trades, low-liquidity periods, and concentrated flows from derivatives or large wallets. The market’s settlement and measurement rules determine how those transient moves are recorded and adjudicated.
Market odds in this context represent the collective view of participants about whether ETH will touch the specified level within the defined 15-minute window; they update as new information arrives and liquidity conditions change. Always consult the market’s official settlement rules to understand exactly what price feed and time definitions underlie those odds.
Whether the target is met depends on the platform’s defined price source and the 15-minute measurement window. The market’s official rules specify which exchange(s) or index and which price metric (e.g., last trade, mid-price, or aggregated feed) are used to decide settlement.
The start and end times for the measurement window are set by the market operator and should be published on the event page or in the market's terms; because this event currently lists 'Closes: TBD', check the listing or platform announcements for the finalized timing prior to trading.
The specific price feed or list of exchanges used for settlement is defined in the market’s settlement methodology; consult the event’s official documentation or contact the platform if the feed or aggregation method is not visible on the page.
That depends on the settlement rule: some contracts settle on any trade or quoted price that reaches the level, while others use smoothed or aggregated prices to reduce the effect of outliers. Review the market’s price treatment and any anti-manipulation clauses before trading.
Platforms typically have contingency and dispute procedures—common fallbacks include using alternate data sources, an extended observation window, or declaring a null/void outcome per the market rules. Check the operator’s force majeure and settlement dispute policies for specifics.