| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $2,124.85 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will be higher or lower over a 15-minute interval; short-window markets matter because they capture immediate market sentiment and are sensitive to rapid price moves that affect traders and hedgers.
Ether is a highly liquid and often volatile crypto asset; on very short time horizons, price moves are dominated by order flow, high-frequency trading, exchange-specific events, and breaking news rather than long-term fundamentals. Prediction markets that cover short windows are used by participants to express views, manage intraday risk, or speculate on near-term directional moves.
Market odds are a real-time aggregation of participants' expectations about direction over the specified 15-minute window; treat them as a short-term sentiment indicator, not a guarantee of outcome, and consult the market's official resolution rules for precise interpretation.
The exact start and end timestamps for the 15-minute window are defined on the market page; because the listed close time is currently TBD, wait for the platform to publish the scheduled start/close times and any timezone or timestamp convention used.
The platform will resolve the market by comparing the designated reference price at the start of the window to the designated reference price at the end; the market's resolution rules (including tie-handling and rounding) are posted on the market page and govern which side wins.
The market's resolution documentation specifies the official price source or index used for settlement; consult the market page for the named reference—do not assume a specific exchange until the market rules list it.
Very rapidly—significant headlines, large orders, or sudden liquidity shifts can move prices within seconds, so expectations for this short window can change quickly as news or order flow arrives.
Low volume and an unset close time can mean wider spreads, lower liquidity, and more price sensitivity to individual trades; wait for clear start/close details and sufficient liquidity before treating displayed prices as robust consensus.