| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CBJ Blue Jackets | 53% | 52¢ | 53¢ | — | $3K | Trade → |
| FLA Panthers | 48% | 47¢ | 49¢ | — | $477 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the head‑to‑head game titled "Florida at Columbus." It matters because market prices aggregate public expectations about the likely winner and react to news that affects the matchup.
The event is a single-game sports matchup between a Florida team and a Columbus team, presented as a binary outcome market on KALSHI. Head‑to‑head markets like this reflect pregame factors (team form, injuries, venue) and in some cases league‑specific resolution rules (overtime, shootout, postponements). Check the market page for the sport and any special settlement clauses.
Prices in this market represent the consensus valuation traders place on each outcome; changes in price reflect new information or changing trader sentiment rather than a fixed prediction from a single source.
This market presents two mutually exclusive outcomes corresponding to each team winning the game: one outcome for Florida to win and one outcome for Columbus to win. The market description will state how ties, overtime, or shootouts are treated if applicable.
The market closes and resolves according to the schedule posted on the market page; if a specific close time is marked TBD there will be an update before trading ends. The official resolution occurs after the game’s final result is confirmed by the designated settlement source.
Settlement follows the source specified on the market page—typically the relevant league or an official game box score—and KALSHI’s stated resolution rules. Consult the market description for the exact reporting source used for settlement.
Price moves are commonly driven by late injury or lineup news for key players, announced starting pitchers/goalies/quarterbacks, weather or venue changes, major roster transactions, and credible betting or analytical reports affecting perceived competitive balance.
Treatment of postponements, cancellations, and extra‑time resolutions is defined in the market’s settlement rules: some markets wait for a rescheduled official result, others void or adjust contracts if the game is canceled, and many count overtime or shootout winners as the official result—check the market description for specifics.