| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,064.75 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will hit a $2,064.75 price target within a specified 15‑minute interval on KALSHI. Short, time‑boxed targets matter because they capture high-frequency moves that affect scalpers, hedgers, and event-driven traders.
ETH regularly shows sharp intraday swings driven by macro news, derivatives flows, and on-chain activity; a 15‑minute window focuses on near-term liquidity and momentum rather than multi‑day trends. Markets around short windows can be highly sensitive to single large trades, exchange feed quirks, or scheduled announcements that occur during the interval.
Prediction market odds for this event reflect the aggregated views and bets of participants about whether ETH will reach the stated price during that 15‑minute window and will change as new information arrives. Treat odds as a real‑time market signal, not a fixed forecast or guarantee.
KALSHI will resolve the market using the event's specified 15‑minute interval and its official price source(s). The platform's settlement rules and the market detail page define which exchange(s), price feed, and timestamps are authoritative for determining whether the target was met.
The start and end timestamps are provided on the market detail page; because the event's close time is listed as TBD, check the KALSHI market description for the precise UTC timestamps that define the 15‑minute window before placing trades.
Resolution depends on the authoritative data source KALSHI specifies—many short‑window markets require a time‑stamped trade at or above the target on the designated feed, while some may use aggregated midquotes; consult the market rules to know whether trade prints or quotes are used.
Yes. Outages or feed anomalies can affect how the target is observed or recorded; KALSHI's resolution policy will describe fallback procedures, official sources, and dispute processes that apply if normal data is unavailable or inconsistent.
Zero volume indicates limited liquidity and that market odds may not yet reflect a broad consensus; early trading can move the price substantially, and entrants should be mindful of wide spreads, slippage, and the potential for rapid information‑driven updates once participants begin trading.