| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,160.89 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks whether Ether (ETH) will meet a $2,160.89 price target on a 15‑minute timeframe; it matters to traders who want to express short‑term views or hedge intraday ETH risk. Outcomes can reflect very short bursts of price action that broader daily markets may miss.
Events framed around a specific price and short time window capture minute‑level volatility rather than longer trends; such markets are sensitive to exchange price feeds, index methodology, and the exact timestamp used for settlement. Historical intraday ETH moves can be driven by macro headlines, on‑chain flows, derivatives liquidations, and technical order clusters near round numbers.
Market odds represent the collective, real‑time view of participants about the chance of the target being hit within the contract's defined window; interpret movements as information flow—odds shift when new data or liquidity events change the perceived likelihood.
The market’s official contract specifies the start and end timestamps and the reference time zone for the 15‑minute interval; consult the event’s contract page or platform rules to see the precise minute boundaries used for settlement.
Settlement will use the price feed or index named in the event’s contract (it may be an aggregate index or a single exchange feed); check the event details to identify the authoritative source and any fallback rules.
The closing time for trading and the settlement schedule are listed on the event page; because this listing shows 'Closes: TBD' you should monitor the platform for updates and the official timeline before trading or relying on settlement timing.
Most platforms include contingency and dispute procedures in the contract—common approaches use backup feeds, manual review, or voiding the market if the reference data is compromised; the event’s rules describe the exact resolution path.
Large block trades, sudden macro headlines, coordinated liquidations in futures/margin books, order‑book imbalances at the target price level, and exchange‑specific issues are the most common drivers of rapid 15‑minute moves.