| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,160.30 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will meet the specified $2,160.30 price condition within a defined 15‑minute interval. It matters because short time‑frame targets capture high‑frequency price movements and can reflect near‑term market sentiment or event-driven volatility.
Ethereum is a liquid, globally traded crypto with prices that move continuously across exchanges; a 15‑minute target is sensitive to intraday flows, news, and order‑book activity. Markets like this are often used by traders to express views on immediate price action, by hedgers seeking short‑term protection, and by speculators betting on rapid moves around announcements or liquidity events.
Market prices here represent the consensus of traders about the likelihood of the specified 15‑minute price event and will change as new information arrives; because the horizon is very short, prices can shift rapidly in response to trades, news, or thin liquidity.
Resolution depends on the contract's official settlement rule on KALSHI; typically that rule specifies whether the reference price must touch, exceed, or close at the target within a defined 15‑minute interval. Consult the event's full terms on KALSHI for the precise language (touch vs. exceed vs. average, and any tie‑breaking rules).
The listing currently shows 'Closes: TBD,' so the settlement window and close time have not been set. Monitor the KALSHI event page for announcements; the platform will publish the scheduled resolution window before the market closes.
KALSHI will use the price feed specified in the contract terms (for example, a named exchange or an aggregated ticker). Check the event's settlement specifications on the platform to identify the exact reference exchange or data provider.
That depends on the settlement methodology: if settlement uses a high/low or any‑time touch rule, a brief spike can trigger the target; if it uses an averaged or end‑of‑interval price, brief blips may not. Review the contract's measurement rule to understand how transient moves are treated.
Low initial volume indicates limited liquidity and wider bid/ask spreads, which can make entering or exiting positions costly and cause market prices to be more volatile. If volume remains low, price updates may reflect sparse trading rather than broad market consensus—monitor order books and trade activity before participating.