| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $89.7502 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of Solana (SOL) will be higher or lower after a 15-minute interval; short-interval direction markets matter to traders who want to profit from immediate price moves and to observers measuring market microstructure.
Solana is a liquid, high-throughput blockchain token whose short-term price can swing quickly due to order flow, liquidity, and on-chain events. Fifteen-minute markets capture microstructure effects — exchanges, high-frequency trading, large orders, and sudden news — rather than longer-term fundamentals.
Market odds represent the consensus view of participants about the event outcome at a point in time and can change rapidly; in a 15-minute market they primarily reflect immediate order flow, liquidity, and short-term sentiment rather than long-run fundamentals.
The event is settled by comparing the designated reference price at the market's start time with the reference price 15 minutes later; the market's settlement rules define whether a higher final price counts as 'Up', a lower price as 'Down', and how ties are handled.
The event page and settlement documentation specify the precise price source(s) or index used; platforms typically use a single exchange feed or an aggregated index from major spot venues — consult the event details for the authoritative source.
The window begins at the start time listed on the event page and ends exactly 15 minutes later according to the platform's official timestamps; the event rules state the exact seconds and time zone used for measurement.
Some market interfaces display a single primary outcome while the complementary outcome is implied; the platform's contract specification explains how the single listed outcome maps to the binary settlement (Up vs Down) and payout structure.
Sudden large trades or liquidations, exchange/API outages causing price dislocations, rapid correlated moves in major crypto assets, and immediate breaking news or coordinated social-media activity are the common drivers of unexpected direction changes in a short window.