| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0943297 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will reach the price target of $0.0943297 during a 15-minute measurement period; it matters for traders and analysts focused on short-term price action and volatility events.
DOGE is a highly liquid but volatile cryptocurrency influenced by broader crypto market moves, macro headlines, and concentrated trading activity. Short 15-minute contracts capture transient price spikes or dips that longer-term instruments may smooth out, so outcomes often reflect immediate order flow and news rather than long-term fundamentals.
Prediction market prices represent the market’s collective view of the likelihood that the contract’s settlement condition will be met and will change as new information or trades arrive; always read the contract terms to understand how settlement is determined.
Settlement depends on the market’s defined price source and mechanism; typically it requires the reference price from the specified feed to reach (or exceed) $0.0943297 within the contract’s 15-minute measurement period—check this contract’s settlement rules for the precise definition.
The contract’s timeline and the exact 15-minute measurement window are set by the market and should be published in the event details; because the event currently lists a TBD close, wait for the platform to announce the definitive start/end times and any alignment to clock minutes.
The market will specify its reference price source (an exchange, consolidated index, or other feed) in the settlement terms; review the event’s data source information to see which venue(s) Kalshi will use for final determination.
Yes—thin liquidity or a large market order can create brief price spikes that meet the target; whether those spikes count depends on the contract’s settlement methodology and whether outlier trades or consolidated pricing are used, so consult the settlement rules.
Zero trading volume simply means no one has taken a position in the market yet; it does not change the settlement mechanism, but low participant interest can indicate wider spreads and higher execution risk if you choose to trade the market before it closes.