| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,172.53 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will hit the $2,172.53 price target within a specified 15-minute observation window. It matters because short intraday targets capture extreme short-term volatility and are used by traders to express views or hedge minute-scale risk.
Short-interval ETH targets reflect a mix of crypto-specific drivers (on-chain flows, large exchange orders, and liquidations) and broader market catalysts (macro headlines, risk-on/risk-off moves). Markets like this are commonly used by scalpers and event-driven traders; resolution depends on the contract's official price source and timing rules. Because ETH is traded continuously across many venues, sub-hour price moves can be sharp and brief.
Market odds aggregate participant expectations about whether the target will be met in the 15-minute window and update as new information arrives. Treat those odds as a live sentiment indicator, not a guarantee of outcome; check the contract rules for exact settlement mechanics.
Whether the target is met depends on the contract's settlement definition: typically a reference price reaching or exceeding the specified level during the 15-minute observation window or at a designated timestamp. Consult the event's official contract terms to see the precise rule used for resolution.
The start time is defined by the market's published schedule on the platform and may be listed in the event details; because this market shows 'Closes: TBD,' verify the posted start/end timestamps and timezone on the event page before trading.
The contract will specify a reference price source (for example a consolidated feed or a specific exchange). That choice matters because a single exchange can have idiosyncratic spikes while a composite feed smooths across venues—check the market's settlement documentation to confirm.
Use this short-duration target for event-driven or scalping strategies, or to hedge minute-scale exposure; manage execution risk by monitoring order-book depth, setting clear entry/exit rules, and being aware that fees and slippage can strongly affect outcomes on low-liquidity, short-window contracts.
A listed $0 volume often indicates a newly created market or that no trades have occurred yet; low historical volume can mean wider spreads and less predictable fills, so review current order-book depth and recent trading activity on the platform before placing large orders.