| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0952017 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether DOGE will meet a $0.0952017 price condition within a specified 15-minute interval; it matters because short intraday windows can produce rapid, tradable outcomes tied to high-frequency price moves.
DOGE (Dogecoin) is a highly liquid but volatile cryptocurrency whose minute-to-minute price can swing on large trades, exchange-specific flows, and news. A 15-minute target market isolates a short time horizon, so past intraday volatility and recent liquidity conditions are especially relevant. The event is hosted on KALSHI and currently shows no traded volume and an unspecified closing time.
Market odds on this page reflect traders' consensus about the event condition at any given moment; interpret them as the market's current assessment of whether the specified 15-minute price condition will be met, and expect those odds to move quickly as on-chain activity, order flow, and news arrive.
It indicates the outcome depends on DOGE price behavior over a specific 15-minute window; whether the target must be hit at any moment within that window or at a defined timestamp inside it depends on the event's settlement language on KALSHI.
'Closes: TBD' means the exact settlement/closing time has not yet been posted; KALSHI will specify the authoritative price feed, exchange/aggregator, and the precise 15-minute window used for settlement when the event is finalized—watch the event details for updates.
It signals the event has a single resolution condition rather than multiple mutually exclusive outcomes; traders should read the event resolution text to understand the precise condition that will be evaluated.
Zero or very low traded volume means limited liquidity and that quoted prices may reflect few participants; be cautious about using early prices as a reliable consensus and expect spreads and price impact to be larger.
The effect depends on the settlement source: if settlement uses a single-exchange price, a brief spike or feed error on that exchange can determine the outcome; if it uses an aggregate or time-weighted measure, short spikes may be smoothed out—check the event's settlement rules for details.