| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $38.9555 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether a specified cryptocurrency price will hit the $38.9555 level within a 15‑minute window. Short, time‑boxed targets like this matter because they isolate high‑frequency price dynamics and test immediate market reactions to order flow and news.
Markets that target short time windows are common in crypto because the asset class often experiences rapid, sharp moves driven by concentrated liquidity and algorithmic trading. Historically, 5–30 minute target markets highlight how exchanges, large orders, and news pulses can produce outsized intraminute swings; outcome rules and the chosen price feed determine how those swings are measured and settled.
Market prices on the event page represent the crowd’s current view of whether the $38.9555 level will be reached in the 15‑minute window; they are dynamic signals, not guarantees, and can change rapidly as new information and order flow arrive.
The settlement rules require the referenced price feed to equal or cross $38.9555 at any point during the defined 15‑minute window. Consult the market’s official rules on the platform for whether a last trade, quote midpoint, or exchange quote is used and how ties or technical outages are handled.
The precise start and close times are set on the market page; if the page currently shows 'TBD,' the platform will publish the defined start/close before trading begins. Always refresh the event page for the authoritative schedule.
Kalshi specifies the official settlement feed or exchange in the event details. Review the market’s resolution section to see the named data source and any aggregation or snapshot method that will be applied at settlement.
Yes—low or zero volume means there is little traded information, so quoted prices (if any) may be driven by a small number of orders and can move sharply when trading begins. Low liquidity increases bid/ask spreads and makes the market signal noisier.
Traders watch order book depth and time‑and‑sales for large fills, exchange spreads, short‑term implied volatility, on‑chain flows and mempool activity, and any breaking news or social activity; strict risk limits are common because outcomes can flip in seconds.