| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,141.72 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the specific price level of $2,141.72 within a single 15-minute interval. Short-interval target markets matter because they isolate brief bursts of intraday volatility and event-driven moves.
ETH trades 24/7 and is known for rapid price swings driven by liquidity, macro news, and on-chain developments; a 15-minute target focuses on whether those forces align to push price to a precise level in a very short window. The market is offered on KALSHI, currently shows no traded volume, and the official close/resolution timing is listed as TBD on the market page.
Market prices reflect the aggregated views of participants about whether the target will be met during the specified 15-minute window; movements in the market price indicate how those views change as new information arrives or liquidity shifts.
The event resolves based on the official reference price as measured during the specified 15-minute interval; whether the price 'hits' the target depends on the platform's published resolution definition and the chosen price feed—check the market details for the precise rule used to determine a hit.
The interval is the single 15-minute window specified in the market rules; some markets use clock-aligned windows (e.g., HH:00–HH:15) while others use a specific start timestamp—consult the market page for the exact start/end times and time zone.
Closure and resolution scheduling will be published by KALSHI on the market page or via platform notifications; if the close is listed as TBD, monitor the event page for updates and the platform's announcements for the final adjudication timing.
KALSHI follows published contingency and resolution policies for data outages; common remedies include switching to an alternate feed, using delayed quotes, or applying an explicit void/adjournment procedure—review the platform's resolution policy for the exact fallback hierarchy.
A $0 traded volume indicates there have been no executed trades yet; low or zero volume implies limited liquidity, which can lead to wide spreads and significant price impact from even small orders, so consider order size, potential slippage, and the risk that a single trade can move the market price.