| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $86.5992 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL (Solana) will reach the specified $86.5992 target within a single 15-minute window; it matters to traders who want to express or hedge views on very short-term price action in SOL.
Solana is a high-throughput blockchain asset that has historically experienced rapid intraday price swings driven by liquidity, large orders, and network events. A 15-minute target emphasizes immediate order-flow, exchange liquidity, and short-term signals rather than long-term fundamentals or on-chain adoption.
Market odds on this event reflect the collective view of participants about the chance the target will be reached during the defined 15-minute period and will update as new information arrives; treat them as a real‑time consensus indicator, not a guarantee.
The event is settled according to the contract’s specified price feed and settlement rule: if the reference price in the defined 15‑minute window reaches or exceeds the stated target according to that feed and timestamping rule, the contract resolves as successful; check the event page for the precise settlement definitions and feed.
The 15‑minute window is a contiguous period defined by the market creator and recorded in the event details; the start and end times (and any relation to exchange timestamps) are specified on the event page—if the page lists 'Closes: TBD', the exact timing will be posted there once set.
Settlement uses the specific oracle or index named in the market rules (for example an aggregate price or a single exchange feed); participants should check the event’s data-feed specification on the event page because different feeds and timestamp rules can change whether a short spike qualifies.
Common triggers include large exchange orders or liquidations, sudden ecosystem or protocol announcements, major listings or delistings, coordinated trading activity by large holders, and exchange outages or restoration that cause price dislocations.
Use small position sizes relative to your portfolio, set a clear maximum loss per trade, monitor order books and news feeds around the window, be prepared for slippage and fast moves, and verify the event’s settlement feed and timestamping so you understand how the outcome will be determined.