| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Georgia | 99% | 99¢ | 100¢ | — | $76K | Trade → |
| Denmark | 1% | 0¢ | 1¢ | — | $74K | Trade → |
This market concerns the outcome of the Denmark vs Georgia match and aggregates trader expectations about which national team will win. It matters because market moves reflect real‑time reactions to news, lineups, and other match developments.
Denmark is traditionally a strong European national team with many players in top domestic leagues; Georgia is an improving side that has closed the gap with higher-ranked opponents in recent years. The match context—whether a qualifier, friendly, or tournament fixture—and its place in the international calendar will strongly influence team selection and intensity.
Market odds represent the consensus sentiment of traders and update as new information arrives; interpret them as a dynamic indicator of market expectations rather than a fixed prediction.
The listed close is TBD; Kalshi will announce a trading cutoff tied to the match schedule. Settlement will follow the market's specific resolution language and the official match result as reported by the relevant sporting authorities—see the market page for exact cutoff and settlement rules.
This market has two outcomes, so a draw may be handled specially. Many two‑outcome match markets define outcomes as 'Team A wins' and 'Team B wins' and treat draws per the contract (e.g., void/refund or other specified resolution). Check the market description on Kalshi for the exact draw policy.
That depends on the contract wording for this specific market—some markets settle on the 90‑minute result only, others include extra time and penalty shootouts. Verify the market’s resolution text on the platform to know which periods count.
Monitor official team sheets released roughly an hour before kickoff, late injury reports, suspensions, travel delays, and any federation announcements. Confirmed absence of regular starters—particularly strikers or central defenders—often produces the largest market moves.
In competitive fixtures (qualifiers or tournament matches), coaches tend to field stronger lineups and the result carries higher stakes, which typically leads to different market behavior than in friendlies where rotation and experimentation are common. Scheduling and player workload across club commitments also influence selection and perceived team strength.