| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,179.61 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target $2,179.61 during a specified 15-minute observation window; outcomes like this matter because very short-term price moves reveal immediate market sentiment and liquidity conditions.
Ethereum is a high-liquidity crypto asset whose minute-to-minute price can move on large orders, derivatives liquidations, or sudden news. Short-window markets (15 minutes) are designed to isolate intraday volatility and are more sensitive to order-book depth, trading algorithms, and on-chain flows than longer-term macro narratives.
Prediction market prices reflect the aggregated expectations of participants and update as new information arrives; for this event, interpret market odds as a real-time indicator of whether traders expect ETH to reach the specified level within the 15-minute window. Consult the event’s settlement rules to understand the official data source and exact timing used for resolution.
It means resolution depends on whether ETH reaches the specified dollar price within a defined 15-minute observation window; the market’s rules page will state the official timing and data source used to determine the price at resolution.
The start and end times are set by the market operator and are shown on the event page once scheduled; because this listing currently shows 'Closes: TBD', check the platform for updates or an exact timestamp before relying on timing.
The market’s settlement rules specify the authoritative price feed or index used; many short-window markets use an aggregate or a single exchange feed—verify the event’s documentation to know which source will determine settlement.
It indicates no recorded trades have occurred yet; low or zero volume can mean wider spreads and less informative market prices, and it may also signal the market has not opened for active trading or has low participant interest so far.
Typical causes include one or more large market orders, rapid liquidation cascades in margin/derivatives markets, sudden news headlines or macro moves released within the window, or concentrated on-chain flows that change exchange balances and liquidity.