| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $86.1375 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks whether SOL will meet a $86.1375 price target during a specified 15-minute observation window; minute-scale contracts matter to traders who want to hedge or speculate on very short-term price moves.
Solana (SOL) is a high-throughput blockchain token that has shown notable intraday volatility, so short-interval targets can be reached quickly in response to on-chain events, exchange flow, or market news. Settlement for this type of contract depends critically on the chosen price feed and precise timestamping of the 15-minute interval. The event currently lists its close time as TBD, so the official interval and settlement details should be confirmed before trading.
Market odds here reflect the aggregated expectations of participants based on available information and will update as new data arrives; use them as a real-time consensus signal rather than a certainty about the outcome.
It refers to the specific 15-minute interval during which the SOL price will be observed against the $86.1375 target for settlement; the exact start and end timestamps are defined by the platform's event rules and the chosen data feed.
The contract settles according to the platform's stated settlement metric (for example, last trade, VWAP, or an exchange-reported price); check the event's official settlement rules or metadata to see which metric applies to this specific market.
The platform designates the authoritative price feed or exchange in the event's rules or announcement; confirm that source on the event page because different feeds can diverge over short intervals.
A TBD close means the platform has not yet published the official observation interval; the platform will announce the definitive start/end times and any settlement details before the contract begins to take positions or before resolution.
Low starting volume generally implies wider spreads and limited depth, so prices may move sharply on small trades and market odds may be an unreliable consensus signal; consider smaller position sizes, order types that control execution risk, and monitoring liquidity before entering trades.