| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,050.15 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will meet the $2,050.15 price target during a specific 15‑minute interval; it matters because short windows magnify the impact of intraday volatility and news. Traders use this to express views on near‑term price action and event-driven moves.
Ether is a liquid, highly traded crypto whose intraday price reacts to exchange order flow, on‑chain activity, derivatives liquidations, and scheduled announcements. Short-interval markets like a 15‑minute target capture transient moves that broader timeframes can miss, so they reflect both market microstructure and macro developments. Because settlement depends on a precise timestamp or price source, understanding the market's resolution rules is critical.
Odds in this market represent the market's consensus expectation for the specified 15‑minute outcome and will update as new information and trades arrive. Use them as a dynamic signal of near‑term sentiment rather than a fixed forecast.
Resolution depends on the market's published settlement rules: typically a reference price or exchange composite at the exact 15‑minute timestamp. Always check the market page and Kalshi's settlement documentation for the authoritative procedure.
It refers to a single predefined 15‑minute window during which the reference price will be sampled for settlement; the market description or resolution rules should state the exact window boundaries and time zone.
Whether an exact match counts depends on the market's outcome definition (for example, 'at or above' versus 'above'); consult the event's resolution conditions on the market page to see how equality is handled.
Zero volume means no trades have occurred yet; Closes: TBD indicates the market closing or settlement timing hasn't been set or displayed—monitor the market page for updates or announcements.
Time‑sensitive items such as exchange outages, large wallet moves, sudden liquidations, flash news headlines, or scheduled economic releases can produce rapid price swings within 15 minutes and change the market outcome.