| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $2,194.23 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether ETH's price will be higher or lower after a designated 15-minute interval; it matters to traders and hedgers who need to express extremely short-term directional views or manage intraday exposure.
Ethereum is a liquid, high-frequency-traded asset that often exhibits meaningful price movement on minute-to-minute timeframes driven by order flow and large transactions. Fifteen-minute markets focus on market microstructure and short-term catalysts rather than long-term fundamentals, so outcomes can flip rapidly as new trades, news, or technical events occur.
Market odds reflect the collective, real-time expectations of participants about the 15-minute outcome and can change quickly; use them as a live signal rather than a fixed forecast.
The start and end timestamps are defined by the market's official rules and appear on the event page once set; check the event details for the precise start time and the referenced settlement timestamps before trading.
That display may reflect how the platform presents the tradable side(s) or a single contract representing the market condition; consult the market description and payout rules on the event page to see whether the contract is binary, unary, or uses an implicit counterparty mechanism.
Zero reported volume indicates little or no prior activity and likely low liquidity; entering or exiting positions may carry higher execution risk and wider spreads, so review order-book depth and consider limit orders or waiting for more participation.
Settlement is performed against the specific reference price feed named in the market's rules; you must check the event page to see which exchange(s) or index are used because that choice determines what spot price movement is measured.
Potential causes include a verified price-feed failure, major exchange outages, extreme data anomalies, or platform-specific force majeure; the market's dispute and invalidation policy, available on the event page, explains how such situations are handled.