| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $91.4885 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the USD price of Solana (SOL) will trade at or above $91.4885 during a specified 15-minute window. It matters because short-window price targets test immediate liquidity, news sensitivity, and execution timing for a high-volatility crypto asset.
Solana is a high-throughput blockchain whose token often shows large intraday swings driven by on-chain activity, developer updates, and broader crypto market moves. Markets that use very short resolution windows are especially sensitive to exchange-level liquidity, timestamping rules, and transient news or automated trading flows.
Market prices reflect collective expectations about whether that price will be reached within the 15-minute interval, given the resolution rules and reference price source. Because the outcome depends on a defined timestamp and data feed, interpret market prices conditional on those operational details rather than as a long-term valuation.
It means the market will check whether SOL traded at or above $91.4885 within a contiguous 15-minute interval defined by the market's start and end timestamps; consult the event page for the precise scheduled window and any updates (the market currently shows closes as TBD).
Resolution uses the price feed or exchange(s) named in the event rules—typically a last-trade or aggregated index quote in USD—so the $91.4885 threshold applies to that reference price per the market's stated measurement method.
If, during the defined 15-minute interval and according to the market's specified reference source and measurement rule, SOL is recorded trading at or above $91.4885, the market will resolve to the outcome defined as 'Yes' per those rules.
Exchange outages or feed delays can alter which data are available; the market's rules typically specify fallback sources or arbitration procedures—check those resolution rules because the platform may use alternate feeds or extend adjudication in case of data issues.
Because the window is short, thin order books and large orders can create outsized moves; consider expected slippage, the presence of high-frequency traders, and the likelihood of concentrated flows around the window when evaluating the chance that the price will hit the target.