| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $87.8531 | 48% | 49¢ | 50¢ | — | $15 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL’s price will move up or down over a specific 15-minute window. Short-interval markets matter to traders who want to hedge or speculate on rapid price moves driven by news, liquidity events, or algorithmic flows.
Fifteen-minute crypto markets capture very short-term price dynamics that are often dominated by order book liquidity and high-frequency trading rather than fundamentals. Solana (SOL) has historically shown periods of both high intraday volatility and moments of low liquidity, so short windows can produce abrupt swings tied to on-chain incidents, large orders, or market-wide volatility. Because this specific market has low traded volume so far, its prices may reflect sparse liquidity rather than broad market consensus.
Odds or contract prices in this context represent the market’s aggregated view of whether the specified short window condition will occur, and they change rapidly as new trades and information arrive. Treat them as real-time indicators of sentiment and available liquidity, not immutable forecasts.
It refers to the fixed measurement interval used to determine whether the price moved up or down; the exact start and end timestamps and the reference price feeds used for settlement are defined by the platform’s market rules.
Settlement compares the reference price at the interval’s start and end according to the exchange or price index specified in the market rules; if the end reference is higher or lower than the start, the corresponding outcome is recorded per those rules.
Low historical volume implies limited liquidity and that individual trades can move the market price substantially; it increases execution risk and means the displayed price may reflect few participants rather than a broad consensus.
Some market interfaces present a single contract representing the occurrence of one side of a binary condition (for example, the 'Up' side), or they aggregate positions into one quoted instrument; consult the platform’s contract description to see whether the opposing side is implicit or handled via pricing.
Confirm the precise timing and settlement source in the market rules, monitor live SOL order books and recent minute-by-minute price moves, watch for breaking Solana or crypto-wide news, and consider the potential impact of large orders or bots given the short window and current low volume.