| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0934753 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will hit the $0.0934753 price target within a specified 15-minute measurement window. It matters because very short-duration price targets emphasize intraday liquidity, volatility, and event-driven moves that can inform short-term trading and hedging decisions.
Dogecoin is a highly traded, low-unit-value cryptocurrency whose price can move sharply on news, large orders, or macro crypto flows; a 15-minute target focuses on ultra-short-term market mechanics rather than longer-term fundamentals. Kalshi-listed event contracts settle based on the contract's defined price source and timestamp, so knowing those settlement rules is essential before trading. With total volume at $0 and the close time listed as TBD, market liquidity and the official measurement window may still be undecided or thin.
Market prices on Kalshi reflect the collective view of traders and update as new information arrives; treat them as a market-implied expectation rather than a guarantee. Because this is an ultra-short window event, prices can change quickly as liquidity or news shifts.
Settlement is determined by the contract's terms: the event is successful only if the official price feed Kalshi specifies records DOGE at or above $0.0934753 during the defined 15-minute measurement period; consult the market terms for the precise price source and inclusion rules.
The start and end times of the 15-minute window are specified in the market listing or in Kalshi's settlement documentation; since the market close is currently listed as TBD, the exact window will be posted by Kalshi before trading or settlement.
Kalshi uses the price source named in the contract's settlement rules (a specific exchange, composite index, or data vendor); check the event page for the definitive source and how Kalshi handles outliers or feed disruptions.
In a short 15-minute window, thin order books mean a single large market order can move the quoted price temporarily above or below the target, so low liquidity increases the chance of transient price spikes that can trigger settlement under the contract's feed.
Zero volume indicates no executed trades yet and likely low liquidity; a single outcome implies a binary-style settlement; both mean spreads and execution risk may be high, so review order-book depth, market terms, and your risk tolerance before trading.