| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1,984.60 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target of $1,984.60 within a specified 15-minute window. It matters because short intraday price targets capture high-frequency catalysts and can be used to hedge or speculate on very near-term moves in ETH.
Ethereum is an actively traded crypto asset with frequent intraday volatility driven by macro data, exchange flows, protocol news, and derivatives liquidations. Short-duration markets like a 15-minute target reflect microstructure dynamics rather than longer-term fundamental trends, so events such as large trades, exchange outages, or surprise announcements often dominate outcomes. Kalshi-listed contracts resolve to a specific settlement method and timestamp defined on the platform.
Market odds on this platform are a real-time aggregation of trader beliefs about whether that 15-minute price condition will be met; use them as a dynamic signal rather than a guarantee. Odds change quickly around new information and order-flow events, so they are most informative when combined with live market data.
Resolution is based on the contract's official settlement method and timestamp as defined by the Kalshi listing for this event; check the contract page for whether settlement uses an index, exchange feed, or last trade within the specified 15-minute window.
If the page lists 'TBD', the platform has not yet published the exact closing/resolution timestamp; monitor the Kalshi event page for the posted resolution window and any updates from the exchange.
Odds shift rapidly on surprise macro prints, large block trades or liquidations, exchange-level disruptions, and breaking protocol or security news that affect trader positioning during the 15-minute interval.
Zero volume so far indicates limited participation and thinner liquidity; that makes prices more sensitive to single trades and increases slippage risk, so treat current market prices as less robust until volume picks up.
Historical intraday volatility and typical 15-minute high/low ranges provide useful context for what is plausible, but they do not predict specific short-term jumps; combine historical patterns with live order flow, news, and time-of-day effects when forming a view.