| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,165.57 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target of $2,165.57 during a specific 15-minute observation window; it matters for traders and hedgers focused on very short-term price moves.
ETH is a highly liquid but volatile crypto asset whose intraday moves can be driven by exchange order flow, macro economic news, on-chain events, and market microstructure. Short-window markets like this capture transient price behavior that may not reflect broader trends, and resolution depends on the official price source and timestamp specified by the platform. The event currently lists its close time as TBD, so the precise observation window and settlement mechanism should be confirmed on the event page.
Market odds/prices on the platform summarize the market's evolving consensus about the likelihood of the target being hit during that 15-minute window; price moves and liquidity provide real-time signals about changing expectations.
It refers to a 15-minute observation window during which the platform will check whether ETH reaches the specified $2,165.57 level; the event page or settlement rules should specify the exact start and end timestamps or the rule that determines that window.
The event's resolution depends on the official price source listed on the event page or in the platform's settlement policy; check the event details for the named index or exchange and, if unclear, consult the platform's resolution rules or support.
Whether an exact match qualifies depends on the platform's resolution criteria (for example, whether equality counts and which price types are accepted); consult the event's resolution text to see how exact matches are treated.
Zero traded volume simply indicates no transactions have occurred yet; the market may still be open for orders. Low or zero volume implies low liquidity, which can widen spreads and make price moves more sensitive to individual trades.
Traders typically use narrow risk controls: consider limit orders to control execution price, size positions to account for higher slippage, monitor the exact observation timestamps and price source, and be aware that brief news or microstructure events can rapidly change outcomes in a short window.