| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $87.7016 | 30% | 26¢ | 27¢ | — | $671 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of Solana (SOL) will be higher or lower over a specific 15-minute interval, letting traders express views on very short-term price movement. Short-interval markets matter because they concentrate price risk and reward around brief events and liquidity shifts.
Solana is a high-throughput smart-contract platform that often exhibits intraday volatility; 15-minute markets capture immediate reactions to trades, on-chain transactions, and news. Traders and automated strategies routinely use sub-hour windows to profit from microstructure moves, making these markets useful for measuring near-instant sentiment and liquidity.
Market prices on the platform represent the collective trading view of whether SOL will be up or down across the designated 15-minute window and will change as new information and trades arrive. Treat the quoted market price as a live signal, not a guarantee — it reflects current supply and demand among participants.
The outcome is determined by comparing the market's defined reference price at the start and end of the specified 15-minute interval according to the platform's settlement rules; consult the event’s official rule text to see the exact price source and time-stamps used.
The event page or market terms should list the precise start timestamp for the 15-minute window; if the market close is listed as TBD, check the platform for updates or scheduled start times and use the platform clock to confirm when trading will stop for that interval.
Settlement typically relies on the price feed specified in the event rules — for example, a particular exchange, an aggregated index, or a time-weighted average; if the feed isn’t shown on the event page, review the platform’s documentation or contact support for the authoritative source.
Short windows are most sensitive to big on-chain transactions (large transfers or exchange deposits), sudden liquidity gaps on major venues, breaking news or social-media posts about the network, and concentrated algorithmic trading activity.
Use the market price as a real-time indicator of other participants’ expectations and as a measure of available liquidity; because 15-minute outcomes can flip quickly, combine market prices with order-book checks, news monitoring, and awareness of possible slippage before placing trades.