| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $87.5408 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL will reach the price target of $87.5408 during a specific 15-minute measurement window. Short-window price targets matter because they test near-term volatility and the impact of single, high-impact events on crypto prices.
Solana (SOL) is a high-liquidity, high-volatility crypto asset whose price can move rapidly in response to order flow, liquidations, network events, and news. The market’s close time is listed as TBD, so settlement specifics (start/end times, data feeds, and tie rules) should be confirmed on the platform before relying on this market for decisions.
Odds in a prediction market reflect the market consensus and the balance of money on each outcome; for short-window targets like this, prices incorporate expectations about imminent order flow, liquidity, and known upcoming events rather than long-term fundamentals.
The exact start and end timestamps (including timezone) are defined in the market’s settlement rules on the platform; some markets use fixed, clock-aligned windows while others use windows anchored to a published timestamp—check the event details for the authoritative definition.
The market will use the specific price feed or index named in its settlement rules (for example, an exchange pair or an aggregate index). Refer to the event page for the named data source and any fallbacks in case of feed failures.
Whether a single trade or quote that reaches the target counts depends on the market’s settlement criteria—some markets require the last traded price, others accept any trade/quote meeting or exceeding the target during the window; confirm the precise condition on the event page.
Common drivers are large one-off orders, forced liquidations on margin platforms, sudden news or announcements, concentrated activity on a centralized exchange or DEX, and feed/index re-pricing; all can move the mid-price quickly within minutes.
Platforms typically specify fallback data sources, dispute procedures, and force-majeure clauses in the settlement rules; if a primary feed is compromised, the platform will follow those predefined fallbacks—review those clauses before trading.