| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,067.76 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target $2,067.76 during a specified 15-minute interval on the Kalshi platform. It matters because it lets traders and observers express and monitor expectations about very short-term ETH price moves.
Ethereum is an actively traded crypto asset with frequent intraday swings; fifteen-minute markets are sensitive to order flow, news, and derivative-driven moves. Short-window contracts like this capture sudden volatility and are often used for event-driven or tactical trading rather than long-term positions.
Prediction market odds reflect the collective expectations of participants at a moment in time and should be read as a market-implied view rather than a guarantee. Use them alongside order-book liquidity, known scheduled events, and your own analysis when forming a trading decision.
It indicates the contract resolution is tied to a specific 15-minute time window during which the price is observed; the precise start and end times, and whether any intra-interval tick or a closing price is used, are defined in the event's settlement rules on the platform.
Settlement uses the price feed or index specified in the event's official rules; consult the event page or Kalshi's settlement documentation to see which exchange(s) or consolidated index determine the reference price.
That depends on the contract's defined settlement method—some events resolve on any intraperiod trade or quote reaching the target, others use a final averaged or closing value—so check the event wording and settlement details for the exact condition.
'Closes: TBD' means the platform has not yet fixed the market's trade cutoff or final observation window; this can affect how long you can enter positions and may signal the market is pre-launch or awaiting scheduling details, so monitor the event page for updates before committing funds.
Zero reported volume means there are no prior trades and likely limited liquidity and price history for this contract; a single outcome listing often corresponds to a binary or single-resolution contract type—both facts suggest wider spreads and greater execution risk, so be cautious about position sizing and slippage.