| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,172.25 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the $2,172.25 price level within a single 15-minute interval as defined by the contract. Short-duration target markets matter because they isolate rapid price moves and test intraday volatility and liquidity dynamics.
Ether is a liquid, widely traded crypto asset whose price can move quickly in response to macro data, crypto-native events, and changes in trader positioning. Fifteen-minute‑window markets focus on transient moves rather than sustained trends, so settlement hinges on precise timestamps and the selected price feed. Traders use these markets to express views on short-term order flow, news impact, and algorithmic activity.
Market prices on this contract reflect the consensus view of participants about whether the $2,172.25 level will be hit during any single 15-minute window; interpret them as a real-time signal of market sentiment and risk, not a certainty.
The market resolves based on whether the contract's defined reference price reaches the stated $2,172.25 level within a single 15-minute interval as spelled out in the market's settlement text; consult the market rules for the exact data source, timestamp convention, and any tie or rounding procedures.
The close/settlement time is determined by the market's official timeline and is listed on the market page; if it is shown as TBD, check the platform for updates and the resolution timestamp once the market owner or exchange publishes it.
The contract will specify a reference price source (an exchange ticker, aggregated index, or oracle); always read the market's settlement details to confirm which feed and timestamp convention are authoritative for resolution.
Historical intraday volatility indicates that ETH can and does make rapid moves during short periods, but whether a specific target is reached depends on contemporaneous liquidity, news flow, and order imbalances rather than historical averages alone.
High-impact macro releases, surprise regulatory announcements, large on-chain transfers or exchange outages, big concentrated trades or margin liquidations, and sudden changes in network or protocol status are among the events most likely to produce short, sharp price moves.