| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $87.3237 | 45% | 45¢ | 50¢ | — | $9 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Solana (SOL) will be higher or lower after a 15-minute interval; it captures immediate price direction rather than longer-term fundamentals. Short-interval markets matter to traders who focus on intraday momentum, liquidity events, and rapid news reactions.
Fifteen-minute crypto markets reflect order-flow, market microstructure, and short-term sentiment more than macroeconomic fundamentals. SOL's behavior in such windows depends on exchange liquidity, algorithmic trading, and any concurrent on-chain or off-chain events; historically, short windows can produce sharp moves around announcements or technical incidents.
Odds on this market represent the aggregated trader view about SOL's direction over the specified 15-minute window; changes in odds signal shifting expectations or new information. Because the interval is short, price moves and odds can change rapidly in response to micro‑news and order‑book activity.
It compares the platform's official reference price for SOL at the market's start to the reference price 15 minutes later; consult the event's rules for the precise reference exchange, asset pair, and timestamp definitions used for settlement.
The platform sets the official start timestamp for each market and publishes settlement definitions on the event page; if start or close times are listed as TBD, the platform will specify them before resolution according to its rules.
Tie or no-change scenarios are handled according to the market's official resolution rules; check the event description or platform resolution policy to see how equal start and end prices are treated.
Yes. Because the window is short, a single large trade, concentrated buying/selling, or an exchange/data-feed disruption can swing the settled price and therefore the market outcome.
Low traded volume typically means thinner liquidity, wider effective spreads, and that individual trades can move the market price more; participants should expect higher slippage and that quotes may be less representative of broad market sentiment.