| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $90.3330 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Solana (SOL) will reach the target price of $90.3330 within a specific 15-minute observation window; it matters because very short-interval markets highlight immediate momentum and execution risk in crypto trading.
Solana is a high-liquidity but often high-volatility crypto asset; 15-minute target markets focus on intraday price swings amplified by order-book dynamics, news, and algorithmic activity. Historically, sub-hour targets are sensitive to exchange execution, large orders, liquidations, and sudden network or regulatory headlines, so outcomes often hinge on transient events rather than long-term fundamentals.
Market prices on prediction platforms express the collective market view about whether the target will be met and will move as new information arrives; for a 15-minute window, prices can change rapidly in response to order flow, news, or thin liquidity.
The market will resolve according to the platform's specified reference price during the defined 15-minute observation window; if that reference feed reports a price meeting the event's threshold under the platform's resolution rules, the market pays out as a hit. Consult the event's resolution policy for tie-breakers, averaging rules, and the official source(s).
The platform or event organizer sets the exact start/end times and will update the listing before the window begins; because 'Closes: TBD' is shown, traders should monitor the event page or official notifications for the scheduled observation interval and any changes to timing.
Resolution typically relies on one or more named reference exchanges or aggregated feeds specified by the platform; check the event's detailed rules or the platform's market data policy to see which exchange data or aggregator will determine the official settlement price.
Zero reported volume means there has been no recorded trading in this market so far, implying limited liquidity and potentially wide spreads; if you trade, expect that your order could move the market and that execution prices may be less favorable than in active markets.
Short bursts that hit this target are usually driven by high-frequency market makers, large block trades, forced liquidations from leveraged positions, or sudden news releases; because the window is brief, localized liquidity imbalances and execution timing often matter more than longer-term fundamentals.