| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $2,165.62 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Ether (ETH) will reach the price target $2,165.62 within a specified 15-minute observation window. Short‑term target markets matter because they isolate very near‑term price dynamics and liquidity-driven moves.
ETH is a highly traded, liquid crypto asset whose minute-to-minute price is driven by exchange order flow, algorithmic trading, and news. A 15‑minute target emphasizes microstructure and intraday volatility rather than longer-term fundamentals. Traders use these markets to express views on immediate catalysts or short bursts of momentum.
Market odds aggregate participants’ expectations about whether the target will be hit during that 15‑minute window and will update as new information arrives. For exact resolution mechanics and the authoritative price source, consult the market’s rulebook on KALSHI.
Resolution depends on the market’s specific settlement rules and the authoritative price feed listed on the KALSHI contract; typically it requires the reference price to meet or exceed the target within the defined 15‑minute observation window. Always check the market’s rule page for the precise condition and data source used for settlement.
This event currently lists its close as TBD; the platform will publish the exact start and end times for the 15‑minute window before trading or at market creation. Monitor the market page or KALSHI notifications for the official timeline and any updates.
The market’s rulebook names the definitive price feed or index used for settlement—this may be a single exchange feed, a consolidated index, or another agreed source. Refer to the contract details on KALSHI to see which source governs resolution.
Whether a momentary tick counts depends on the contract’s settlement criteria and the granularity of the chosen price feed (trade prints vs. mid‑quotes, tick rules, etc.). Check the market’s resolution specifications to see how instantaneous touches are treated.
Watch live order‑book depth, trade prints and volumes, large visible limit orders or cancellations, real‑time news/social feeds for sudden headlines, and on‑chain indicators (large transfers to exchanges). These microstructure signals most directly affect whether a short‑window target will be hit.