| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,063.40 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will trade at $2,063.40 during a specified 15-minute interval. It matters because very short-duration price events reveal intraday liquidity, reaction to news, and the behavior of high-frequency and large traders.
Ethereum is a high-liquidity crypto whose minute-to-minute price can be driven by exchange order books, large on-chain flows, and macro or crypto-specific news. Kalshi-style short-window targets are designed to isolate brief price moves rather than multi-day trends; resolving these markets depends on the exchange or price feed and exact settlement rules listed on the event page.
Market odds aggregate traders' views about whether ETH will hit the specified price within the defined 15-minute window; they move with new information, changes in liquidity, and shifts in perceived short-term volatility, and should be interpreted in light of trading volume and market depth.
It asks whether Ether will trade at the price $2,063.40 at any time during the single 15-minute interval defined by the market; the event resolves based on the market's specified price feed and settlement window.
The event detail panel on the Kalshi page lists the official start and end times for the 15-minute window and the reference exchange or index used for settlement—check that section before trading or evaluating outcomes.
Most short-window markets resolve on whether the condition occurred at least once during the window; consult the event's settlement rules on Kalshi to confirm whether a single tick or a specific quote type (trade vs. quote) is required.
Low volume means the market consensus may be thinly traded and more susceptible to price moves from a few participants; low volume can make odds less reliable as a crowd signal until trading activity increases.
Primary movers are exchange market makers and liquidity providers, large spot or OTC traders moving sizable orders, derivatives-driven traders reacting to margin events, and algorithmic systems that target short-term arbitrage or momentum opportunities.