| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $91.5633 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of SOL (Solana) will reach the numeric target of $91.5633 during a specified 15-minute window. Short-duration price targets matter because they test immediate liquidity, order-flow dynamics, and intraday volatility.
Solana is a widely traded cryptocurrency that can exhibit rapid intraday moves driven by news, derivatives flows, and algorithmic trading. Fifteen-minute target markets are used by traders to express views on very short-term price action rather than long-term fundamentals. Because the resolution period is so short, outcomes often hinge on temporary liquidity and execution, not just broader market trends.
Market odds aggregate traders' real-time views and can shift quickly as new orders, news, or liquidity changes arrive. For a 15-minute event, odds tend to reflect current order-book conditions and expected immediate flow rather than long-run valuation.
It asks whether SOL's price will reach the numeric target ($91.5633) within a defined 15-minute resolution window. The event resolves based on the platform's specified reference price feed and resolution rules.
Start and close times are listed on the event page; if the close is shown as TBD, the platform will announce the official window before the market begins trading. Always check the event page for timestamps and time zone information.
The outcome is determined by the reference price feed named in the event's resolution rules—this may be a single exchange or an aggregated feed. Consult the event's resolution details to see the exact source and methodology.
Typically a qualifying trade at or above the target on the reference feed during the 15-minute window will count, but resolution rules may specify trade size, trade type, or whether quotes qualify. Review the event's resolution criteria for precise handling of brief touches.
Short windows are sensitive to order placement: large market orders, coordinated trading, and algorithmic taker activity can move prices quickly. Platform surveillance, minimum trade-size rules, and settlement procedures may limit or monitor manipulative activity, so check the market rules.