| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,162.81 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This Kalshi market asks whether Ethereum (ETH) will reach the specific $2,162.81 price level during a single 15-minute interval; it matters because it lets traders express short-term views on ETH volatility and intraday order flow.
Short-interval contracts like this capture expectations about very near-term price action and react to order-book dynamics, large trades, and breaking news. Ethereum's short-term moves are driven by exchange liquidity, macro announcements, large on-chain flows or whale trades, and crypto-specific news such as protocol upgrades or regulatory developments.
Market prices on Kalshi summarize the balance of buy and sell interest about whether the target will be hit in the designated 15-minute window; with low or no trading volume, quoted prices may reflect thin liquidity rather than broad consensus.
Resolution follows the contract's settlement rules published by Kalshi: the specified price feed and the definition of the 15-minute interval determine whether the target level was reached. Consult the contract terms on the event page for the precise data source and resolution procedure.
The event currently lists 'Closes: TBD.' Kalshi will announce the trading close and the exact start/end timestamps for the 15-minute interval on the market page and in the contract terms; monitor the event page or platform notifications for that information.
The contract terms specify the start and end timestamps (UTC or exchange time) that define the single 15-minute window. The event page or rulebook will state whether the window is inclusive/exclusive at endpoints and which timestamp granularity is used.
A $0 traded volume indicates no executed trades so far; that implies limited liquidity, potentially wide bid-ask spreads, and higher price sensitivity to initial orders. Traders should be aware that early trades can move the market materially.
Kalshi's contract terms include fallback and dispute-resolution procedures that cover data outages or feed anomalies—common measures include switching to alternate feeds, using aggregated prices, or following a defined arbitration process. Check the event's official rules for the exact fallback steps.