| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Louisa Chirico | 40% | 39¢ | 40¢ | — | $26K | Trade → |
| Akasha Urhobo | 66% | 64¢ | 67¢ | — | $2K | Trade → |
This market asks which competitor — Chirico or Urhobo — will win the head-to-head sporting contest. It matters because trader activity aggregates publicly available information and can be a realtime indicator of market expectations for this specific matchup.
Chirico vs Urhobo is presented as a two-outcome sports contest on Kalshi; the market closes and the event start time are not yet announced (Closes: TBD). Relevant background that can affect the contest includes the athletes' recent form, any prior meetings between them, the sport and contest format, and venue or scheduling details provided by the event organizer.
Market prices reflect the collective view of traders and change as new information arrives; use them alongside official announcements, injury reports, matchup analysis, and historical data when forming your own view.
It will resolve on which competitor is officially declared the winner of the contest by the event's authoritative source; settlement will follow Kalshi's stated resolution rules for this market.
The market close time is listed as TBD; typically Kalshi closes markets at the event start or at a specific time announced on the market page, so monitor the Kalshi listing for an official close time.
Settlement treatment of draws, no-contests, and disqualifications depends on the market's specific terms and Kalshi's settlement policy; check the market description and Kalshi rules for how such outcomes are resolved for this event.
Key sources include official event releases (start time, venue), weigh-ins or medical bulletins, pre-event press conferences and interviews, credible beat reporters and social channels for last-minute developments, and movement in liquid betting or market prices.
The $27,547 figure represents the dollar value of trades executed to date and signals the market's current liquidity and interest level; higher volume tends to correlate with deeper liquidity and more information reflected in prices, while low volume can make prices more sensitive to individual trades.