| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $86.1282 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the SOL (Solana) price will meet or cross the $86.1282 target within a specified 15-minute measurement window. It matters because short-interval price targets capture high-frequency volatility and are useful for traders hedging or speculating on immediate moves.
The market sits in the crypto category and references a short-duration price event for SOL, a high-liquidity smart-contract platform whose price is sensitive to on-chain activity and market-wide crypto sentiment. Short-window targets like this reflect intraday microstructure dynamics rather than longer-term fundamental trends, and settlement depends on the event’s defined data source and timestamp.
Market odds represent traders’ aggregated assessment of the chance that the defined 15-minute condition will be met; interpret them as a consensus view subject to rapid change as new price ticks or news arrive.
It specifies a 15-minute measurement window during which the SOL spot price must meet or cross the $86.1282 threshold for the market to resolve in the affirmative; exact definitions of 'meet or cross' and the start/end times are determined by the market’s settlement rules.
The market listing should specify the precise start time and closing rules; since the event page shows 'Closes: TBD', consult the market’s detailed rules or the platform’s event updates to find the official window and closure schedule once posted.
Settlement uses the market’s designated reference data source as described in its rules—this may be a single exchange feed or an aggregated index—so check the event’s settlement source and timestamp details before trading.
Whether a brief tick counts depends on the market’s tick-resolution and the settlement rule (e.g., whether any trade or a time-weighted midpoint qualifies); review the market’s definition of a qualifying price event to know how transient crosses are treated.
Low liquidity can make the spot price more sensitive to individual orders and increase volatility during the window, which raises execution risk and can make settlement outcomes more dependent on idiosyncratic trades or exchange microstructure; factor this into position sizing and timing.