| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,182.28 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target of $2,182.28 within a specified 15-minute observation period; it matters because short, fixed-duration price-target markets capture event-driven and high-frequency risk that longer-term contracts may miss.
ETH is a highly liquid but volatile crypto asset whose price can move sharply on news, macro releases, leverage unwindings, exchange events, and on-chain activity. Short-window targets like this one are sensitive to microstructure (order book liquidity, derivatives funding and liquidations) as well as scheduled and unscheduled catalysts; the market sponsor will publish settlement rules and the exact observation mechanics. The contract currently shows no traded volume and the close time is TBD, so details on timing and the price source should be checked on the event page before trading.
Market odds for this contract reflect traders' real-time consensus about the chance ETH will hit the stated price during the defined 15-minute window; treat those odds as a dynamic signal informed by available liquidity and information, not a definitive forecast.
It denotes a binary outcome tied to whether ETH reaches the $2,182.28 level during a single 15-minute observation window defined by the market; final settlement will follow the contract's published rules about the observation start, end, and price feed.
The observation window and contract close are set by the market sponsor and listed on the event page; because the close is currently TBD, check the official market details for the announced date/time and any timezone or synchronization notes before placing trades.
The event will use the price feed or index specified in the market's settlement rules (for example a composite exchange index or a named venue); consult the event's rulebook on the platform to identify the authoritative source used for settlement.
Zero or low volume typically means low liquidity, wider spreads, and greater price sensitivity to individual orders; until participation increases, market prices may be noisy and reflect limited information, so consider liquidity risk when interpreting odds or placing trades.
Rapid moves can be driven by large block trades, concentrated liquidations in derivatives markets, sudden on-chain flows to/from exchanges, major regulatory or exchange announcements, or high-impact macro news released during market hours.