| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eduardo Ribeiro | 89% | 88¢ | 89¢ | — | $681K | Trade → |
| Nicolas Moreno de Alboran | 12% | 11¢ | 12¢ | — | $505K | Trade → |
This market lets traders take positions on which fighter will win the Ribeiro vs Moreno de Alboran matchup; it matters because market prices aggregate public information and can signal expectations ahead of the contest.
Ribeiro vs Moreno de Alboran is a head-to-head sporting contest between two named competitors; its outcome is determined by the official result from the event promoter or athletic commission. Interest and betting activity typically hinge on each athlete's recent performances, training camp reports, and any promotional context such as title implications or card placement.
Prediction market odds reflect the collective assessment of likely outcomes and will move as new information (injury reports, weigh-ins, lineup changes) becomes public. Use them as a real-time input, not a definitive prediction, and check the market's resolution rules for how final outcomes are defined.
This market lists two outcomes, corresponding to which named competitor wins the contest; consult the specific market description on KALSHI to confirm whether draws, no-contests, or other result types are handled separately.
The market close is listed as TBD; trading typically remains open until the platform sets a close time or the official start of the event, at which point positions stop trading and the market moves to resolution.
KALSHI resolves markets based on the official result as published by the event promoter, athletic commission, or other authoritative source specified in the market rules; check the market's resolution clause for the exact sources.
Last-minute developments can materially change expectations and liquidity; monitor official announcements, athletic commission reports, and weigh-in results, and consider using limit orders or reducing exposure until the situation is clarified.
Total volume traded reflects market activity and liquidity—higher volume generally means easier entry and exit and greater attention from traders—but volume alone does not guarantee the accuracy of prices or predict the eventual outcome.