| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $89.2684 | 63% | 59¢ | 61¢ | — | $248 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL (Solana) will be up or down after a 15‑minute interval; it matters because very short‑term markets capture immediate sentiment, liquidity and microstructure events that can move prices quickly.
SOL is a high‑liquidity cryptocurrency that can show large moves on short timeframes due to concentrated order flow, exchange outages, or news. Fifteen‑minute markets are designed to isolate ultra‑short‑term price changes and are used by traders and researchers to express or measure near‑instantaneous expectations.
Odds in this market reflect the aggregate beliefs and risk willingness of participants about SOL’s direction over that specific 15‑minute window; in ultra‑short markets, quoted odds can shift rapidly as new trades and information arrive.
Resolution depends on the market’s stated rules: typically it compares a reference price at the end of the 15‑minute interval with a starting price or threshold. The event page should list the exact price source and the comparison rule used for settlement.
The start and resolution timestamps are specified on the market page; because this listing shows 'Closes: TBD', check the market details for the announced start time or await platform notification—resolution occurs at the end of the defined 15‑minute period.
Low cumulative volume means individual trades can move the market price and quoted odds significantly, so execution may be more costly and odds less stable compared with higher‑volume markets.
The market’s rules should name the exchange or aggregated feed used as the reference price; if the event page does not specify it, consult the platform’s documentation or support to confirm the authoritative price source.
Traders often use fast scalps, order‑book watching, liquidity‑taking with small size to avoid moving the price, or automated strategies that react to live feeds. These approaches carry elevated execution risk and are sensitive to fees, slippage, and latency.