| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $86.9643 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL (Solana) will reach the price target of $86.9643 within a specified 15-minute window; it matters because very short-term price moves are important to traders using high-frequency strategies, scalpers, and those hedging immediate exposure.
Solana is a high-liquidity cryptocurrency whose short-term price can swing rapidly in response to large trades, exchange order book depth, network events, and market news. Fifteen-minute markets isolate microstructural and immediate-news effects rather than broader trend drivers, so outcomes often reflect transient liquidity and order-flow dynamics more than longer-term fundamentals.
Prediction market prices represent the collective view of traders about the chance the target will be hit during the 15-minute window and will move as new information arrives; treat them as a real-time sentiment and information aggregator rather than a guaranteed forecast.
The exact start and end timestamps and the time zone are defined in the market's contract terms on the event page; consult those contract details to see when the 15-minute measurement period begins and ends.
The market's settlement rules specify the price source—this could be a particular exchange's trade price, an aggregated index, or another feed—so review the event's official settlement methodology to know which source governs the outcome.
Whether a fleeting tick counts depends on the contract's measurement method (single-trade tick, quote touch, or time-weighted average); check the event's settlement definition to determine whether brief touches qualify.
Watch the live trade feed and order book for the settlement exchange or index, use sub-minute charting, set price alerts around the target, and monitor relevant news or social feeds that could trigger sudden orders.
Historically, short-term target hits are driven by liquidity depth, presence of large market participants, bot-driven momentum around round numbers, and any concurrent network or market-wide events; low liquidity and concentrated order flow increase the chance of rapid price moves, while deep, balanced books tend to dampen them.