| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Great Britain | 80% | 79¢ | 80¢ | — | $15K | Trade → |
| Brazil | 20% | 20¢ | 21¢ | — | $10K | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the Brazil vs Great Britain sports contest and matters as a way to trade on the anticipated match result; total volume traded to date is $174, indicating modest liquidity and that prices may move with new information.
Brazil is widely recognized for strong national teams across multiple sports and typically brings deep talent pools; Great Britain competes as a composite team in some events (for example the Olympics and certain multi-nation competitions) while in other competitions its constituent nations compete separately, so context matters. Direct head-to-head history between a Brazil team and a united Great Britain team is often limited, so event-specific roster, format, and timing are important when evaluating this matchup.
Market prices reflect the collective assessment of traders and update as new information (rosters, injuries, venue changes) arrives; treat prices as dynamic signals of market sentiment rather than fixed predictions.
This market lists two mutually exclusive outcomes corresponding to which team wins the match: a Brazil victory or a Great Britain victory. A draw or other outcomes are not included unless explicitly stated in the market rules.
The market close time is TBD; typically the market closes at a platform-specified cutoff (often just before kickoff) and settles based on the official match result as determined by the event organizer. Check the Kalshi market page for the exact closing and settlement rules.
Late roster changes and injury updates are primary drivers of price movement: market participants react quickly to official team sheets, medical bulletins, and coach statements, so such updates can materially shift the market consensus.
Direct historical comparisons may be limited because a united Great Britain side appears in only certain competitions; use sport- and context-specific history (e.g., recent national-team form, performances in the same competition) rather than relying on a long head-to-head record that may not exist.
Settlement depends on the market’s defined rules: with two outcomes listed, the market typically resolves to whichever team is recorded as the winner under the event’s official rules (this may include extra time or penalties if the organizer counts those). Consult the market's settlement rules on Kalshi to confirm whether draws, extra time, or penalty shootouts are included in the outcome definitions.