| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| above 25,328,744 Streams | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether weekly on-demand streams for J. Cole's album 2014 Forest Hills Drive will move up or down compared with the previous reporting week. It matters because streaming momentum is a real-time indicator of fan engagement, promotional effectiveness, and catalog health for artists and rights holders.
2014 Forest Hills Drive is a high-profile catalog album whose streaming totals can fluctuate with anniversaries, artist activity, playlisting, and viral moments. Historical patterns for legacy releases show periodic spikes around tours, media appearances, or social-media trends, so traders should consider both recurring and one-off drivers of listenership.
Market odds on this event reflect the collective expectation of traders about the direction of weekly streams and will move as new information arrives; they should be interpreted as a market-implied consensus about direction rather than a precise forecast of stream counts.
The market compares the album's official on-demand audio stream total for the designated reporting week to the prior week's total using the exchange's specified data feed; consult the market rules or the KALSHI event page for the precise data source and measurement window used for resolution.
The market resolves based on the reporting week defined in the event's resolution rules—common windows are platform-standard weeks (e.g., Friday–Thursday) but the exact start/end times will be specified on the market page or by the exchange; check the event details for the authoritative timeframe.
Counting conventions depend on the exchange's chosen data source and its aggregation rules: some feeds consolidate streams under the album's canonical identifier, while others may exclude alternate editions; the market's rule text should state whether all album versions and credited features are included.
If the designated data feed is delayed or altered, the exchange typically follows predefined fallback procedures described in the market rules—these may include using an alternate official source, awaiting corrected data, or issuing guidance to traders; review the event's resolution contingency language and KALSHI's dispute policy for details.
Traders should evaluate timing and expected reach: scheduled concerts, major media appearances, music-video drops, or coordinated promotion near the reporting week are credible catalysts for increases, while lack of visible activity or competing news can reduce momentum; treat announcements and verified placement information as higher-weight signals than rumors.