| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,182.67 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target of $2,182.67 within a specified 15-minute interval. It matters because short time-window markets highlight immediate price dynamics and are sensitive to intraday liquidity and event-driven volatility.
Ether trades 24/7 across many spot and derivatives venues and is known for intra-day volatility driven by macro headlines, large on-chain flows, and derivatives activity. Short-interval targets like a 15-minute window capture transient price moves that may be missed by longer-horizon markets and can be influenced by a single large trade or a fast-moving news item.
Market odds for this event reflect the aggregate view of traders about the likelihood of ETH touching the $2,182.67 level during the designated 15-minute window; they update as new information arrives and should be treated as a real-time gauge of sentiment, not a guarantee of outcome.
The market resolves based on a contiguous 15-minute interval defined by the platform's rules; the event is satisfied if the reference price touches or exceeds $2,182.67 at any time during that interval. Check the event rules page for the official start/end timestamps and resolution method.
The market's close time is set by the platform (currently listed as TBD); once the close is announced, the platform will specify the exact 15-minute interval used for resolution and the cutoff for trading. Trades placed after the announced close will not affect the outcome.
Resolution typically uses a designated reference price or index from one or more specified exchanges or an aggregated feed; the event rules identify the authoritative source and any tie-breaking or averaging procedures to determine whether the target was reached.
High-impact drivers include sudden macro or regulatory headlines, exchange outages or re-openings, large exchange deposits/withdrawals, concentrated liquidations in perpetuals, and algorithmic trading triggering cascading orders—any of which can produce rapid price moves in short windows.
Short-window targets are sensitive to slippage, spread, and execution latency—monitor order-book depth, set appropriate order types, be mindful of fees and potential partial fills, and consider that single large orders or brief news spikes can determine the outcome.