| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $86.5248 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the SOL/USD price will reach the specified $86.5248 level during any 15-minute interval defined by the contract. Short-duration price-target markets matter because they concentrate risk around very specific, news- and liquidity-driven moves in the underlying asset.
Solana (SOL) is a high-throughput smart-contract platform whose price can move quickly in response to exchange order flow, on-chain events, and broader crypto market moves. A 15-minute target is an ultra-short-term contract designed for traders who want to express views on near-immediate price action rather than longer-term fundamentals. Because settlement depends on intraminute price data, exchange liquidity and the published resolution rules are especially important context for this contract.
Market odds represent the collective view of traders about whether the target will be met within the specified 15-minute window; interpret them as a real-time trading sentiment indicator rather than a guaranteed prediction. For decision-making, combine market-implied information with independent price feeds, order-book depth, and your risk management rules.
The contract's event page and official rules specify the exact start and end timestamps used to form the 15-minute interval; consult that resolution definition to know which clock and timezone apply.
The market resolves according to the data source and methodology listed on the contract page; the exchange or index provider named there is the authoritative feed for settlement.
Whether a transient tick qualifies depends on the contract's settlement rules and the resolution feed’s timestamping; check the event's detailed rules to see if a single recorded trade or quote at the target is sufficient.
Settlement timing is governed by the platform's processing and verification procedures as described on the event page; expect a delay for data confirmation and any dispute-handling steps specified in the rules.
Yes — outages, maintenance, or feed anomalies can affect resolution; the event page and operator rules explain fallback procedures, alternative sources, and how such situations are handled.