| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,168.01 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will trade at the specified level of $2,168.01 during a defined 15-minute interval. It matters for short-term traders because outcomes hinge on rapid intraday moves that can be triggered by market microstructure, news, or liquidity events.
Ether is a highly liquid but volatile crypto asset whose price can swing materially inside minutes due to order flow, derivatives liquidations, and macro or crypto-specific news. Short-window targets like a 15-minute interval emphasize the role of high-frequency activity, exchange spreads, and the timing of public information rather than long-term fundamentals. Markets that settle on narrow time slices typically reference a specific exchange index or aggregated price feed for resolution.
Prediction market prices represent the collective market view about the likelihood of the specified 15-minute target being met and will move as participants trade on new information. Use them as a real-time signal of market sentiment, remembering that they reflect prevailing liquidity and participation at any given moment.
The market resolves based on a single, specified 15-minute timestamp window defined in its resolution rules; that window determines which trades or index values are used. Consult the market's official rule text on the platform for the precise start and end timestamp and time zone.
This particular listing shows the closing time as TBD, so trading open/close times and the settlement schedule will be posted by the platform prior to close. Resolution occurs after the designated 15-minute window completes and the exchange or index publishes the reference price used by the market.
The market uses the specific price feed or index providers named in its settlement rules (often an aggregation of major spot venues). Check the market metadata or rulebook to see which exchanges and timestamp conventions are used for official settlement.
Zero reported volume means no contracts have been traded yet in this market; that implies limited liquidity and that current prices (if any) may be thinly supported. Low-volume markets can be more volatile and harder to enter or exit, so factor that into position sizing and execution plans.
Short, sharp moves often follow large exchange flows, liquidation cascades in derivatives markets, surprise macro headlines, or major outages/announcements by custodians or exchanges. Reviewing historical 15-minute price charts around similar thresholds can show how often and under what circumstances such brief breaches occur.