| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $90.9212 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of Solana (SOL) will meet the $90.9212 target within a 15-minute measurement window; it matters because short-interval price outcomes can reflect rapid sentiment shifts and offer chances to trade event-driven volatility.
Solana is a high-liquidity, high-volatility cryptocurrency whose price responds quickly to exchange order flow, network events, and macro crypto sentiment. Short-interval bets like a 15-minute target capture intraday moves rather than multi-day trends and are sensitive to exchange feeds, liquidity, and sudden news or on-chain incidents.
Market odds on this event express the trading market’s collective view about whether the target will be met under the event’s specific settlement rules and timeframe; they typically move as new price data, news, and liquidity arrive.
It indicates the length of the measurement window used to determine whether SOL reaches the stated target price; the event’s settlement specification will say whether that window is a fixed 15-minute timestamp (e.g., 12:00–12:15 UTC) or a different definition.
Settlement depends on the price source specified by the market (an exchange, a consolidated index, or an oracle); check the event page for the named feed and the exact sampling rule used to decide if the target was reached.
That depends on the event’s settlement rule: some markets count any intra-window trade or quote that meets or exceeds the target, while others require an averaged or closing price; consult the event’s settlement details for the definitive rule.
'Closes: TBD' means the market creator has not set a close time yet; zero volume indicates no trades have executed so far. Trading availability and liquidity can change rapidly once the market opens or attracts participants, so monitor the event page for updates.
Risks include exchange outages, delayed or inconsistent price feeds, time-synchronization errors, and disputes over data integrity; the market’s settlement rules should specify fallback procedures and the authoritative data source.