| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $40.0445 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the specified crypto instrument will meet or exceed a $40.0445 price target within a 15‑minute interval. Short intraday targets like this matter because they isolate rapid price moves and liquidity dynamics that are important to traders and market observers.
Very short-duration crypto contracts are driven by immediate order‑book activity, exchange feeds, and market microstructure rather than long-term fundamentals. Historically, 1–30 minute targets in crypto can be dominated by single large trades, liquidity gaps, exchange-specific pricing, and newsflow that hits in real time. Because the contract length is only 15 minutes, settlement depends heavily on the chosen price feed and on-the-minute timing.
Market odds here reflect the collective view of traders about whether the $40.0445 threshold will be reached during the 15‑minute window and are updated as new information arrives. Treat odds as a live consensus signal and not a fixed prediction; they can move sharply as order‑book activity or news changes.
Resolution depends on whether the underlying asset's price, as measured by the platform's specified price feed and settlement rules, meets or exceeds $40.0445 at any point during the 15‑minute measurement period. Check the contract terms on the event page for the exact feed and resolution definition.
The start and end times are defined by the market creator or platform and are currently listed as TBD on the event. The platform will announce the official 15‑minute window; settlement happens after that window according to the stated rules.
The event's contract details should list the exchange(s) or price feed used for settlement. If the event page does not specify, the platform’s published settlement policy explains which feeds it uses and in what order of precedence.
Zero or very low traded volume means there has been little price discovery in this contract, so quoted odds may reflect sparse liquidity or initial opinions rather than broad market consensus. Low volume also increases vulnerability to information shocks or single trades moving the market.
Traders commonly monitor live order books and the specific settlement feed, use tight risk limits, prefer limit orders to control execution price, watch for scheduled announcements or exchange events, and avoid large one‑way exposure because short windows amplify slippage and manipulation risk.