| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $91.3288 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of Solana (SOL) will reach $91.3288 within a specific 15-minute interval; it matters to traders who want to speculate on or hedge against very short-term price moves in SOL.
Solana is a high-liquidity, high-volatility cryptocurrency whose intraday price behavior is driven by a mix of on-chain events, exchange order flow, and broader crypto market moves. Short-duration bets like a 15-minute target amplify sensitivity to single large trades, exchange microstructure, or sudden news about Solana or major market drivers.
Market odds on this event represent the market's aggregate view of whether that price will be reached during the defined 15-minute window and update as new information arrives; in very short windows those odds can change rapidly with order-flow and news.
Settlement is governed by the platform's published rules for this market; typically it means the official spot price from the designated data source at the precise timestamp that ends the 15-minute window. Consult the event's settlement specification on the market page to confirm the exact price feed and timestamp used.
The start and end times are defined by the event listing on the trading platform—some markets begin at a scheduled timestamp while others begin when the market opens. Check the market details or contract terms on the event page for the exact timing; if the listing says 'Closes: TBD,' monitor the page for the announced window.
Large exchange market orders, concentrated block trades, sudden news about Solana, exchange outages or halts, and cascading liquidations on leveraged positions are the primary drivers that can move prices quickly within a short interval.
Use position sizing appropriate for very short time horizons, prefer limit orders to control execution price, be prepared for rapid reversals, and avoid overleveraging—short-duration events can swing quickly and spreads or fees may widen during volatile moments.
Past intraday volatility and periods of elevated volume (for example around major news or during overlap of global trading hours) indicate that large moves can and do occur in short windows, but each 15-minute interval is driven by current liquidity and news flow, so review recent volatility, order-book snapshots, and on-chain metrics for context before trading.