| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,161.89 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the $2,161.89 price target during a specific 15-minute interval as defined by the marketplace. It matters to traders and hedgers who need to manage or speculate on very short-term ETH price moves.
ETH is a highly liquid but volatile crypto asset; outcomes for 15-minute windows are driven by minute-level order flow and news. Short-window markets are sensitive to exchange-level price sources, large trades or liquidations, and any scheduled announcements that could move crypto markets. Because settlement depends on the marketplace's official feed and timing, small differences in price quotes or timestamps can determine the result.
Market odds reflect the aggregate views and risk preferences of participants about this specific 15-minute outcome and update in real time as new information arrives. Treat them as a live consensus signal, not a guaranteed forecast, and always check the event's official settlement rules before trading.
The marketplace defines the start and end timestamps for the 15-minute window in the event's official rules; settlement uses price quotes from the specified feed inside that defined interval. Always consult the event page for the exact timing and any timezone conventions.
The event will settle using the official price source specified by the platform (for example, an aggregate index or a particular exchange); the event description lists the authoritative feed to be used for determining the price.
The market's close time and the scheduled 15-minute window are posted on the event page; if 'Closes: TBD' is shown, wait for the platform to announce the scheduled window and closing time before trading.
Yes. In a short window, a single large market order or a chain of liquidations can shift the observable price used for settlement, especially if liquidity is thin on the referenced price feed.
Common approaches include using tight limits, hedging with offsets, or avoiding stale order placement; key risks are execution slippage, platform-specific settlement rules, feed mismatches, and rapid news-driven moves that can change the outcome within minutes.