| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,143.38 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ethereum (ETH) will reach the $2,143.38 price level during a specified 15‑minute observation window. It matters to traders who want to take or hedge very short‑term directional or event-driven risk in ETH.
Fifteen‑minute markets focus on intraday microstructure rather than long‑term fundamentals: minute‑level order flow, liquidity, and immediate news drive outcomes. ETH regularly experiences rapid intraday moves, so resolution depends on short‑term trading dynamics and the exact timing declared on the market page (the market currently shows closes as TBD).
Market odds aggregate trader expectations about whether the $2,143.38 level will be reached in that 15‑minute window; they update as new information, liquidity, and positioning change and should be read as a live indicator of short‑term sentiment rather than a fixed forecast.
Settlement is determined by the exact wording and data source listed in the event rules — commonly this means the ETH spot price must trade at or touch $2,143.38 on the designated feed during the 15‑minute observation window. Check the event page for the precise settlement language and data provider.
The '15 min' window is a contiguous 15‑minute period during which prices are observed for resolution. The market page or rulebook will specify the scheduled start and end times; because this market currently shows closes as TBD, verify the announced observation window before trading.
The event resolves to the data source named in the market details or Kalshi’s resolution policy; if the page does not name a feed, consult the market’s rules or contact support. Resolution typically uses a consolidated feed or a specific exchange explicitly listed in the event.
The market’s published resolution procedures outline fallbacks — options include switching to an alternate feed, using a different time window, or applying a dispute/voiding mechanism. Review the event’s resolution policy for the definitive protocol.
Yes; in very short windows a single block trade or targeted order can cause the price to touch the target. Traders should assess order‑book depth, monitor large transfers, and use position sizing or hedges appropriate for the higher manipulation and volatility risk of minute‑scale markets.