| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,164.02 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will trade at the $2,164.02 level during a defined 15-minute interval. It matters because short-window price targets capture rapid moves driven by news, technical patterns, or liquidity shifts and are useful for traders hedging or speculating on intraday volatility.
Ether is a highly liquid cryptocurrency whose price responds to macro news, protocol developments, on-chain activity, and flows between spot and derivatives venues. Markets with very short settlement windows reflect immediate market structure — order book depth, exchange spreads, and timestamped price feeds — rather than longer-term fundamentals. Because this market is new and currently shows no recorded volume, it may be thinly traded until participants engage.
Market odds summarize traders’ collective view about whether the specified price condition will be met during the 15-minute window; they update as new information arrives and as participants trade. Treat odds as a dynamic indicator of market sentiment and available information, not a fixed prediction.
It indicates the market is settled based on ETH trades or an index price observed over a specific 15-minute time window; the event is whether the specified $2,164.02 level is reached within that interval.
Closure and the exact settlement window are set by the market operator and will be published before trading or at launch; settlement will use the timestamped 15-minute interval defined in those market rules.
Settlement normally relies on the exchange’s published price reference or a composite price feed specified in the market rules; check the market’s rulebook or data source listing for the definitive reference.
Zero reported volume means the market is new or has not yet attracted traders; low liquidity can lead to wider spreads and larger price impact for any trade, making odds more sensitive to individual orders.
Whether a brief touch counts depends on the settlement definition in the market rules (for example, whether any trade at or above the price, a quoted mid-price, or an average is used); consult the event’s settlement criteria to know how transient crosses are treated.