| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $83.2530 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL will reach a USD price target of $83.2530 during a specified 15-minute observation period. It matters because 15-minute binary-style contracts highlight short-term volatility and market participants' expectations about immediate price moves.
Solana (SOL) has historically shown periods of rapid intraday moves driven by liquidity shifts, network events, and broader crypto market momentum. Short-duration contracts like this one concentrate risk around minute-level price behavior and are sensitive to exchange-level prices, automated trading, and news that can arrive on very short notice.
Market prices for this contract reflect the aggregated expectations of participants about whether the target will be met in that 15-minute window; they update as new information arrives. To understand what the market implies, compare its price movements with public news and on-chain or exchange activity around the event window.
It denotes the observation period during which the contract checks SOL price behavior; whether the contract requires the price to reach the target at any point within that 15-minute window or at a specific tick depends on the event's settlement rules.
Settlement relies on the specific exchange(s) or aggregated price feed named in the contract terms; you should consult the event's settlement specification to see the official data source and how cross-exchange differences are handled.
That depends on the contract settlement rule—some contracts count any tick that meets or exceeds the target, while others require the closing tick or a time-weighted price; check the event details for the exact criterion.
Platforms typically include contingency procedures in the rules such as using a backup data source, extending the observation window, or applying a specified fallback; review the event's terms or platform policies for the precise approach.
Primary movers include market makers and liquidity providers, high-frequency trading bots, large holders or 'whales' placing sizable orders, and clusters of retail traders reacting to breaking news or social media—each can produce rapid intraminute price swings.