| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $86.4620 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of Solana (SOL) will reach the target price of $86.4620 during a designated 15-minute interval. Short-duration targets matter because they isolate intraday volatility and let traders express views on immediate price moves or hedge ultra-short risk.
SOL is a high-liquidity, high-volatility crypto asset whose price is driven by on-chain activity, investor sentiment, and broader crypto and macro market moves. Historical intraday swings, network events (outages, upgrades), and concentrated order flow can all produce rapid moves that make 15-minute outcomes feasible. Because the market's listed closing time is currently TBD, timing and the specification of the exact 15-minute window are critical context for participants.
Market prices on this event reflect the aggregate, real-time sentiment of participants about the chance that SOL will hit the specified target during the 15-minute window; they update as new information arrives. Treat those prices as indicators of market-implied likelihoods and not as guarantees—they can change quickly with news, liquidity, or order-book dynamics.
It means the market will resolve based on whether SOL reaches the specified price level at least once within a specific 15-minute interval defined by the market operator; the interval’s start and end times determine when that check occurs.
The platform will announce the exact 15-minute interval and closing time before or at market start; participants should monitor the event details or official notices for the confirmed timing because that determines when the target is checked.
The event’s official resolution source (a specific exchange, consolidated index, or trade print rule) is set by the market platform; consult the event's resolution rules or documentation to see which exchange or ticker will be authoritative.
Resolution of boundary cases depends on the platform’s defined rules (e.g., whether the endpoint is inclusive and whether they use trade prints or time-sampled prices); check the market’s rulebook or event page for precise handling of equality and boundary timestamps.
If an exchange halt or delisting occurs, the market operator will follow its contingency and resolution procedures, which may include using the last available traded price, delaying resolution, or canceling the market; review the platform’s emergency and force-majeure policies for specifics.