| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $92.0917 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the spot price of Solana (SOL) will be higher or lower at the end of a single 15-minute interval than it was at the interval's start; short-duration markets matter for traders managing intraday exposure and for testing order-book dynamics.
SOL is a liquid, high-volatility crypto asset whose very short-term moves are often driven by concentrated order flow, algorithmic trading, and on-chain events specific to the Solana network. Fifteen-minute contracts focus on microstructure and immediate information flow rather than fundamentals, so past rapid moves, exchange outages, and social-media-driven spikes are relevant background.
Market prices on this event represent the real-time consensus about the 15-minute price direction and will change as new orders, news, or liquidity arrive; they should be interpreted as conditional, time-bound expectations rather than long-term forecasts.
The outcome is determined by whether SOL's official reference price (as defined on the event page) is higher or lower at the end of the specified 15-minute measurement interval than it was at the interval's start; the platform's event details describe the precise price feed and timestamps used for resolution.
The exact start and end timestamps are set by the event when trading goes live and will be displayed on the market page; until those timestamps are published, the measurement window remains unspecified and the event cannot yet be traded or resolved.
Zero or very low traded volume typically means market prices are thinly supported, spreads can be wide, and quoted prices may be volatile or easily moved by small orders, so interpret early prices as fragile until liquidity grows.
Large orders or liquidations can decisively move short windows because they directly affect the spot price during the measurement interval; the impact depends on where liquidity sits in the order book and whether other venues or market makers absorb the flow.
A network outage can affect on-chain activity and trading sentiment, often causing price dislocations on exchanges; resolution will still follow the platform's stated price-feed rules, and any extraordinary-event handling is governed by the market's terms on the event page.