| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0930413 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the specific price target of $0.0930413 within a designated 15-minute window. Short intra-period price targets matter to traders who want to express views on immediate volatility or exploit very short-term price moves.
Dogecoin is a highly liquid, meme-driven cryptocurrency whose intra‑minute and intra‑hour price behavior can be driven by exchange order flow, large token movements, and rapid reaction to news or social media. Short-duration markets like a 15-minute target amplify the effects of transient liquidity gaps, exchange-specific price dislocations, and market microstructure (order book depth, spreads, and execution latency).
Prediction market prices represent the market's consensus view of the likelihood the contract will resolve as specified; for this event, interpret movement in market odds as changing trader expectations about whether DOGE will touch that price within the defined 15-minute interval. Always consult the contract’s resolution rules to map market quotes to final settlement.
A 'hit' means the settlement-price source specified in the contract reaches or exceeds $0.0930413 at any time within the defined 15-minute interval. The contract’s resolution rules on KALSHI determine whether a price touch counts and how simultaneous ticks are handled.
The event page or contract terms on KALSHI will list the official start and end timestamps for the 15-minute window; if the page currently shows 'TBD', KALSHI will publish the scheduled window before trading or resolution. Use the official timestamps for monitoring and strategy.
Settlement uses the price feed specified in the market’s resolution rules; this may be a single exchange or a consolidated index. Check the contract details on KALSHI to identify the official data source and any fallback procedures.
The contract’s resolution method defines price granularity, rounding rules, and how data latency or conflicting feeds are resolved. Those rules determine whether a record at or above the target counts, so review them before trading.
High probability drivers include sudden large market orders, concentrated buying or selling by whales, exchange-specific price dislocations, and breaking news or viral social-media posts. Lower likelihood is associated with deep order-book liquidity, calm macro crypto conditions, and when the target lies outside nearby technical support/resistance bands.