| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $83.0962 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Solana (SOL) will meet a $83.0962 price target measured over a 15‑minute interval on the Kalshi platform. It matters because short, intra‑interval price moves capture acute volatility that matters to scalpers, hedgers, and volatility traders.
Solana is a high‑throughput blockchain whose token price can move rapidly in response to on‑chain activity, exchange order flow, and broader crypto market conditions. Kalshi-style short-duration contracts isolate very brief windows of price action, so outcomes depend on minute-by-minute liquidity and discrete events rather than longer-term trends.
Market odds reflect the consensus view of traders given available information and current liquidity; low trading volume or unclear resolution terms can make market prices less informative about the true likelihood of an outcome. Always consult the contract's resolution rules to interpret what a traded price represents in this specific market.
It denotes the length of the measurement window used to determine whether the price condition is met; the contract will specify the exact start and end times and how the price is sampled during that 15‑minute period.
The market's resolution source (for example a specific exchange ticker, consolidated index, or time‑weighted average) is defined in the contract text on Kalshi; refer to that resolution clause for the authoritative source and sampling method.
Zero traded volume indicates no executed activity so far, which typically means quoted prices (if any) are thin and can move sharply with small trades; low liquidity increases execution risk and reduces the reliability of any displayed market price.
Kalshi will publish the market's opening and closing times on the market page or in official notifications; check the contract details and any platform announcements for the precise timeline and any last‑minute changes.
Examples include a large single exchange order or block trade, cascade liquidations in derivatives markets, sudden high‑volume on‑chain transactions or token unlocks, significant network congestion or outages, and major macro or regulatory news that prompts immediate crypto flows.