| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $87.8122 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the SOL (Solana) price will meet a $87.8122 target as measured across a specified 15‑minute settlement window; it matters because it lets traders express short‑term views on Solana price action and hedge or speculate around intraday moves.
Solana is a high‑throughput smart‑contract blockchain whose token often exhibits pronounced intraday volatility driven by liquidity, developer activity, and macro crypto moves. Short, time‑boxed targets like a 15‑minute window are especially sensitive to order flow, exchange execution, and near‑term news rather than long‑term fundamentals.
Market prices on this market represent the crowd’s consensus about whether the specified price target will be met during that 15‑minute window; they update as new information arrives and should be read as market expectations, not guarantees.
It indicates the event tests whether SOL reaches the specified $87.8122 price according to the market’s defined settlement procedure measured over a 15‑minute window; the contract’s rules spell out how that window and price observation are applied.
The final measurement window and market close time are set by the market operator and displayed on the market page; traders should consult the official timing details for the exact timestamps and any pre‑window trading cutoff.
Settlement depends on the market’s specified data source and method (for example an exchange index, last trade, or time‑weighted average); the market’s settlement rules define which feed and calculation determine whether the target was met.
Yes — transient spikes, outages, or erroneous ticks in the reference feed can alter the observed price; reputable market operators typically document dispute procedures and use robust reference feeds to mitigate such risks.
Watch SOL order‑book liquidity on major venues, correlated moves in BTC/ETH, any scheduled Solana network events or major listings, recent large trades or on‑chain activity, and exchange notices about maintenance that could affect data feeds.