| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0935818 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the $0.0935818 price level within a specific 15‑minute interval. Outcomes like this matter because minute‑scale price moves can be driven by high‑frequency flows and singular events, and markets aggregate participants’ expectations about those moves.
DOGE is a highly liquid memecoin whose short‑term price behavior is shaped by broader crypto market trends, concentrated whale holdings, and retail sentiment. Historically, minute‑to‑minute moves in DOGE have been amplified by low‑liquidity periods, major exchange trades, or viral social‑media events, so very short windows can resolve differently than daily or weekly horizons. Because this is a time‑bounded target, microstructure and data‑source details matter as much as macro direction.
Market odds for this event represent the collective view of traders about the likelihood that DOGE will reach the stated level during the named 15‑minute window; they update as new information arrives and as participants change risk exposure. Use the odds as a dynamic signal, not as a fixed forecast, and always check the event rules for resolution details.
Resolution is governed by the event's settlement rules on KALSHI: the specified price feed and the exact definition of 'reached' (e.g., touch/exceed on any tick within the window) determine outcome. Consult the event page for the authoritative resolution criteria.
KALSHI will publish the official start and end timestamps on the event page once scheduled; monitoring the event page and platform announcements is the way to know the precise window and any subsequent changes.
The event page lists the primary price feed or index used for settlement; the platform has documented fallback and dispute procedures if a primary feed fails — review KALSHI's settlement policy for those contingency rules.
Minute‑scale triggers include large single exchange trades, coordinated whale activity, sudden liquidity withdrawals on major venues, high‑impact news or viral social posts, and flash crashes or spikes in correlated assets like BTC.
Yes; traders commonly use spot orders, futures positions, or options to hedge short‑term event risk, but effective hedging requires aligning execution timing with the event window, accounting for slippage, fees, and the exact settlement price source.