| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,183.64 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the specified price target of $2,183.64 within a defined 15-minute observation period. Short-window price targets matter for intraday traders and for anyone tracking near-term volatility or execution risk.
ETH is a highly traded cryptocurrency whose price responds quickly to on-chain activity, macro news, exchange order flow, and liquidity conditions. This particular market currently shows no traded volume, so there may be limited trader participation or it may have just opened; that can make market prices less informative until activity increases.
Market prices here represent the collective view of traders about whether the target will be hit in the stated 15-minute window and can move rapidly as new information arrives; treat them as a continuously updating consensus signal rather than a fixed truth.
Resolution depends on whether ETH trades at or above the specified price within the 15-minute observation window as defined by the market's official resolution rules; consult the event page for the precise definition of a qualifying trade and the authoritative price sources.
The event's page or the platform's rules should state how the 15-minute window is determined and the exact timestamps used for resolution; if the page does not show a scheduled window, check the platform's resolution policy or contact support for clarification.
That depends on the price feeds and aggregation method the market uses for settlement; some events use a single reference exchange while others use an index or aggregated feed—verify the market's specified source to know which prints qualify.
Yes. In low-liquidity conditions a large order can move the displayed trade price sharply for a short period and trigger the target; platform resolution rules may address abnormal prints, so review those rules for how such cases are handled.
With no traded volume, quoted prices may reflect thin order interest or initial quotes and should be treated cautiously; as participants enter the market and volume increases, the price signal typically becomes more robust and responsive to new information.