| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,075.77 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of Ether (ETH) will reach the $2,075.77 level within a specified 15-minute interval. It matters to short-term traders and event-driven speculators because it isolates very near-term price movement.
Short-duration price targets reflect intraday volatility and microstructure dynamics rather than longer-term fundamentals. ETH frequently moves on a mix of macro news, exchange flows, liquidation cascades and protocol-specific developments, all of which can play out over minutes. Because the market closes are listed as TBD, timing and the exact interval will be set on the platform when the event is finalized.
Market odds on this event represent the collective market view about whether that short 15-minute condition will be met and change as new information arrives. Watch odds moves as a near-real-time signal of shifting sentiment rather than a definitive forecast.
Reaching the target means the designated reference price recorded for the relevant 15-minute interval meets the condition specified on the event page (for example touching or exceeding that level); the event’s settlement rules on Kalshi define whether a touch, an exact print, or a sustained level is required.
The 15-minute window is a consecutive 15-minute time block specified by the event listing; because this event currently shows 'closes: TBD', the platform will publish the exact start and end timestamps and timezone on the event page when the market schedule is finalized.
Settlement follows the price source identified in the event terms (often a specific exchange or consolidated index); the event description and Kalshi’s rulebook name the official feed used for final determination.
In most such short-interval markets a qualifying print by the designated price source during the window will count as meeting the condition, but there can be exceptions based on consolidation, price-tick rules, or tie-break procedures documented in the event terms—check those rules for edge-case handling.
Zero or low traded volume means there is little existing liquidity in the market, so bid/ask spreads may be wide and individual orders can move prices materially; traders should expect higher execution risk and monitor order-book depth and news flow before entering.