| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0924254 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price level $0.0924254 within a specific 15-minute interval. It matters because it lets traders express views on very short-term DOGE moves and provides a compact way to trade millisecond-to-minute price risk.
DOGE is a highly liquid but often volatile cryptocurrency influenced by retail interest, large holders, and fast-moving social media narratives. Fifteen-minute targets are for short-horizon traders and speculators who focus on order-flow, spikes, and microstructure rather than long-term fundamentals. The market operator (KALSHI) will provide the authoritative settlement rules and reference price feed for this event.
Market prices on this contract reflect the aggregated view of participants about the likelihood of the price reaching the stated level during the defined 15-minute window; they update in real time as information and order flow change. Treat market quotes as a dynamic indicator of sentiment, not a guarantee of outcome.
The precise start and end timestamps for the 15-minute window will be specified by the market operator on the event page or in settlement documentation; traders must rely on those published timestamps as authoritative.
Settlement will use the reference price feed or exchange(s) specified by KALSHI for this market; the event page or official rules list which feed is authoritative for determining hits.
Whether a sub-second trade counts depends on the market's settlement methodology; many short-window contracts consider any trade or tick recorded by the reference feed within the window, but you should confirm the precise rule in the market documentation.
TBD means the operator has not yet published closing/settlement timing; watch the event page, your account notifications, and official announcements from KALSHI for the definitive schedule before placing time-sensitive orders.
Account for very short-term volatility, wide spreads or slippage during spikes, the potential for exchange or feed anomalies, and rapid news-driven moves; use conservative position sizing, appropriate order types, and real-time monitoring, and verify settlement rules before committing capital.