| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fight goes the distance | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the scheduled Mario Pinto vs. Felipe Franco bout will go the full scheduled distance rather than ending by stoppage. It matters because finish-based outcomes influence match strategy and trading dynamics ahead of the fight.
This is a single-outcome event tied to a specific fight between Mario Pinto and Felipe Franco listed on KALSHI; the market will resolve based on the official result of that matchup. Background considerations include each fighter's recent activity, known tendencies toward early finishes or decisions, and any announced rules or round length for the bout. The market currently shows no trading volume and closes at a time to be determined by the exchange.
Market odds reflect collective expectations about whether the bout will reach the final bell, aggregating public information and news. To interpret them, watch how prices move in response to fight-specific news (injuries, weight issues, camp reports) rather than treating prices as fixed predictions.
Going the distance means the bout reaches the scheduled final bell and is decided by the official decision process rather than a stoppage. Specific edge cases (technical decisions, retirements between rounds) are resolved according to the exchange's settlement rules and the bout's sanctioning body.
The listing shows the close time as TBD. Typically the market will close at the start of the contest or at a time specified by KALSHI; check the event page for any official updates from the exchange as the fight approaches.
Resolution depends on KALSHI's published rules and the official result from the sanctioning body. In many cases a disqualification is treated as a stoppage (not going the distance), while technical decisions or no-contests may be handled according to pre-set exchange policies—confirm settlement rules on the event page.
Look for each fighter's recent fight outcomes and methods, round-by-round durability, strike or submission attempt rates, any late-round fade in past fights, and current camp reports about injuries or conditioning. Official weigh-in notes and sparring reports released in the days before the fight are also informative.
Zero volume means no public trades have occurred yet, which can indicate low liquidity. That can lead to wider bid-ask spreads and greater price impact for any individual trade; prospective traders should be cautious and monitor for increased activity or new information before committing funds.