| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,063.92 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will hit the $2,063.92 price target within a defined 15‑minute trading window on Kalshi. Short‑window price questions matter because they isolate microstructure and immediate news-driven moves that larger time‑frame markets may smooth out.
Ethereum is a high‑liquidity but volatile asset; over very short intervals, price behavior is driven more by order book dynamics and sudden flows than by long‑run fundamentals. Events such as large exchange orders, liquidations, network upgrades, or macro/crypto news can cause quick swings that determine outcomes for 15‑minute targets. The market’s settlement will follow the exchange/feed and timestamp specified on the Kalshi market page.
Market prices on Kalshi reflect the evolving consensus about whether the target will be met during the specified 15‑minute window; they are real‑time indicators of perceived near‑term risk and liquidity rather than guarantees of future movement.
It asks whether Ether’s traded price meets the target price level during the specific 15‑minute settlement window defined by the market; the market description on Kalshi will state whether the condition is 'at or above', 'exactly', or similar phrasing.
Start and close times are specified on the Kalshi market page for this event; if the market header shows 'Closes: TBD', check the market details or Kalshi’s announcements for the scheduled settlement window and any updates.
Kalshi will use the price source and timestamp described in the market’s settlement rules—typically an exchange or aggregated spot feed—and apply its official procedure to determine whether the target condition was met during the 15‑minute window; consult the market page for the exact feed and rules.
A zero traded volume snapshot means no executed trades have occurred yet on this market; that can indicate low participation and potentially wide bid‑ask spreads, higher slippage, and less reliable price discovery until liquidity arrives.
High‑frequency traders and market‑making activity, large institutional or retail market orders, liquidation cascades in derivatives markets, and time‑sensitive news or exchange disruptions are the primary drivers that can flip outcomes in such a short interval.