| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $83.1273 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of Solana (SOL) will hit the $83.1273 level within a specific 15‑minute window; it matters because very short‑term outcomes reflect liquidity, microstructure, and event‑driven volatility in the crypto market.
SOL is a high‑throughput smart‑contract blockchain whose token has shown rapid intraday moves during periods of thin liquidity, news flow, or network incidents. Short time‑frame targets like this capture transient price dynamics driven by order‑book imbalances, large trades, bots, and exchange-level events rather than long‑term fundamentals.
Prediction market odds here aggregate traders' views about whether that price level will be reached during the declared 15‑minute window; because the interval is short, odds can shift quickly in response to live order flow, news, and settlement rules, so interpret them as a near‑term market snapshot rather than a structural forecast.
The event will be settled based on a specific reference price feed and the defined 15‑minute interval; whether touching, crossing, or closing at the level counts is governed by the market's official settlement rules—consult the KALSHI event details for the precise definition.
The market page will list the exact start time and the close time for trading; because this listing currently shows 'Closes: TBD', wait for KALSHI to publish the scheduled window—trading and settlement follow the published times on the platform.
The specific exchange(s) or consolidated index used for settlement are specified in the event's rules on the platform; check the KALSHI event documentation to see the authoritative price source for this contract.
Contingency procedures such as using alternate feeds, extending the window, or applying force‑majeure rules are set out in the platform's settlement policies; review KALSHI's official dispute and contingency procedures for how such incidents are resolved for this event.
Typical short‑window drivers include large market orders or liquidations, sudden news or announcements, low liquidity on settlement venues making prices jump, coordinated trading by large holders, and automated strategies or bot activity that amplify intraday swings.