| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,115.07 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the $2,115.07 price level within a specified 15-minute window. It matters to traders who want to express or hedge views on very short-term ETH volatility and microstructure events.
Ethereum is a highly traded crypto asset whose price can move quickly in short intervals due to order-book dynamics, derivatives flows, and news. Fifteen-minute target markets isolate micro-moves that are often driven by single large trades, sudden sentiment shifts, or exchange-level events rather than longer-term fundamentals.
Market prices on this contract reflect the collective view of participants about the chance that ETH will hit the target within the 15-minute observation window; they update in real time as new information and order flow arrive.
For a 'Yes' resolution, ETH must trade at or above the stated $2,115.07 level within the contract's defined 15-minute observation window, as determined by Kalshi's published settlement rules and reference price feed.
Kalshi uses specific contiguous 15-minute blocks (anchored to standard clock times) and the settlement uses the timestamped price from the reference exchange or index named in the contract terms; consult the market's rules on Kalshi for the exact window definitions.
'Closes: TBD' means the final trading cutoff has not been set or announced; trading will end at the closing time posted by Kalshi for this contract—participants should monitor the platform for the official close time and any amendments.
A reported $0 volume indicates no recorded trading activity yet; low or zero volume implies limited liquidity, wider bid/ask spreads, and that market prices may not reflect a deep consensus until activity increases.
Events that can move ETH within a short 15-minute span include large exchange market orders or block trades, sudden macro or crypto-specific headlines, cascading liquidations in futures markets, major on-chain transfers or whale activity, and exchange outages or price-feed anomalies.