| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,064.16 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will meet the $2,064.16 price condition during a specified 15-minute measurement period. Short-duration price-target markets are used to express or hedge very near-term views and capture immediate market sentiment.
Ether is a high-liquidity, high-volatility crypto asset whose price can move materially over minutes in response to order flow, news, and macro impulses. This event is hosted on KALSHI; the market currently shows Total Volume Traded: $0 and Closes: TBD, so no trading activity or official resolution timing has been posted yet.
Market prices (odds) in this context represent the collective expectation about whether ETH will meet the $2,064.16 condition during the 15-minute window; they update in real time as new information and trades enter the market.
The market’s official resolution rules on the KALSHI event page define the precise condition (for example, whether the price must be at/above or strictly above $2,064.16, and whether the check is at a single timestamp or any point during the 15-minute window). Because Closes is listed as TBD, check the event page for the definitive source and language before trading.
That information is not yet published for this event (Closes: TBD). KALSHI will post the scheduled start/close times and the exact measurement window on the market page; subscribe to the market or check the event details for updates.
Yes — zero volume indicates no prior trades and therefore low liquidity and limited price discovery. Early trades can swing the market price significantly, so expect wider spreads, higher impact from individual orders, and elevated execution risk.
The specific price feed or exchange(s) used for resolution will be listed in the market’s resolution details on KALSHI. Platforms commonly use a single exchange, a composite index, or a vetted data provider; always verify the declared source on the event page.
Short-window moves are often driven by high-frequency market makers, one or a few large market orders from whales or institutional traders, concentrated news releases, or derivatives settlement activity that concentrates flow into a narrow time frame.