| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $0.0952670 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dogecoin (DOGE) will hit the $0.0952670 price target during a specific 15-minute trading window. It matters because it lets traders express or hedge very short-term views on DOGE price action.
Dogecoin is a highly liquid, retail-driven cryptocurrency known for sharp intraday moves tied to market sentiment, large trader flows, and news or social-media events. Fifteen-minute windows test minute-scale price dynamics and can be influenced by exchange microstructure, low early liquidity, and concentrated orders. Some markets list with little or no prior volume, which can widen spreads and increase execution risk for early participants.
Prediction market odds for this contract reflect aggregated market expectations and update in real time as participants trade; treat them as a snapshot of short-term market sentiment and available liquidity rather than a definitive forecast.
The outcome is determined by whether DOGE trades at or above $0.0952670 within the market's specified 15-minute settlement window, as measured by KALSHI's designated price feed and settlement rules; consult the event page for the official settlement procedure.
KALSHI uses a designated consolidated price feed or index defined in the market's terms; the event page and KALSHI market rules list the exact sources and any tie-break or aggregation logic—check those documents for specifics.
The 15-minute window is a contiguous interval defined by the market's settlement timetable; start/end timestamps and how they align to exchange prints or ticks are specified in the market terms on the event page—verify those details before trading.
In most cases a trade print at or above the target within the settlement window will satisfy the condition, but some markets restrict eligible venues or use averaged feeds—confirm the event's settlement criteria to be certain.
Low volume can produce wide bid-ask spreads and large price moves from relatively small orders, making early market quotes less reliable; traders should review order-book depth, recent trade history, and be prepared for higher execution and slippage risk.