| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $85.7270 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL will reach the price target $85.7270 during a specific 15-minute observation window; it matters because it isolates very short-term price action and tests market sentiment and liquidity over a narrow timeframe.
Solana (SOL) is a high-liquidity cryptocurrency whose price can move quickly on news, order flow, or network events; short-duration bets like a 15-minute target amplify sensitivity to intraday volatility and execution timing. Traders use these markets to express views on immediate price moves, react to macro or token-specific announcements, or trade around known events such as listings, announcements, or coordinated liquidations.
Market odds reflect the crowd’s aggregated view and available liquidity for this specific short-duration proposition and will move quickly as new information or orders arrive. Treat them as a live indicator of market sentiment and execution risk for the 15-minute interval rather than a fixed forecast.
The window is a contiguous 15-minute interval during which the reference price is observed; the exact start/end times, timezone, and how the window is announced are specified in the market’s event rules or the platform’s listing for this contract.
Typically a 'hit' means the settlement price reaches or crosses the target at any recorded timestamp within the 15-minute window according to the market’s defined price feed and matching rules, but you should confirm whether the market counts equality, crossing, or sustained levels in its official resolution policy.
The contract resolves using the specific price source named in the market’s rules (for example a single exchange, a consolidated index, or an oracle); check the event page or rulebook to identify the designated feed and how timestamps are applied.
Network outages and exchange trading halts can reduce liquidity, produce stale or volatile quotes, or trigger special resolution procedures; the platform’s policies should explain how such disruptions during the observation window are handled (e.g., rescheduling, using alternative feeds, or cancellation rules).
A TBD close means the platform has not yet published the market’s scheduled timeframe; monitor the event page for updates, sign up for platform notifications, and review official announcements so you know the exact start and end times before taking positions.